Yes, I understand that. What I don’t understand is how you get from “Gunnar approves of economic stimulus and I don’t” to “Gunnar is engaging in wishful thinking”. Nor for that matter why you pick out Keynesian and Reaganite economics in particular, since so far as I can tell liking the idea of economic stimulus is pretty much universal. (Though clearly you don’t share it.)
Wishful thinking is (necessarily) a thing people do, not a properties of ideas themselves. But I take it what you mean is that when you wrote, in response to Gunnar’s comment, “That line of reasoning falls somewhere between the worst elements of Reaganomics and Keynesian economics. It’s wishful thinking about something somebody already supports.” you meant not that Gunnar in particular was engaging in wishful thinking, but that … some unspecified other people advocating UBI for the sake of economic stimulus are engaging in wishful thinking.
Fair enough. It might have been worth making it clearer, but of course hindsight is always 20⁄20.
Yes, I understand that. What I don’t understand is how you get from “Gunnar approves of economic stimulus and I don’t” to “Gunnar is engaging in wishful thinking”. Nor for that matter why you pick out Keynesian and Reaganite economics in particular, since so far as I can tell liking the idea of economic stimulus is pretty much universal. (Though clearly you don’t share it.)
I don’t think Gunnar is doing either of those things, and didn’t when I wrote that. I said the idea exhibits those properties.
Wishful thinking is (necessarily) a thing people do, not a properties of ideas themselves. But I take it what you mean is that when you wrote, in response to Gunnar’s comment, “That line of reasoning falls somewhere between the worst elements of Reaganomics and Keynesian economics. It’s wishful thinking about something somebody already supports.” you meant not that Gunnar in particular was engaging in wishful thinking, but that … some unspecified other people advocating UBI for the sake of economic stimulus are engaging in wishful thinking.
Fair enough. It might have been worth making it clearer, but of course hindsight is always 20⁄20.