"The claim that loss records are frequently inaccurate is now gone, because he has no evidence of it."
Here you go shifting things again. Next you will say that in standard English, "frequently inaccurate" is interchangeable with "not a real result." Whoever claimed that loss records were "frequently inaccurate"? Not I. My argument rests merely on the proposition that loss claims were not reality or a real result as in accurate and without error.
"There is again no contradiction between "approximate" and "real" in the English language."
Nope, no semantics here. Your position distilled down to its core is that "approximate result" is the same as "real result." Your position is that the two are interchangeable. They are not, unless you work for the government. You criticized others for citing inaccurate numbers and in the same breath contrasted it with what you yourself termed the "real result." Now you say "real result" means the same thing as "approximate result."
Well Joe B, I will tell you again that I agree with your characterization of "approximate result" so to the extent that in your mind it means the very same thing as "real result", then in your mind, we don't really disagree.
You certainly act like there is a disagreement though. Have you considered that that might be because you yourself do not really believe that "approximate result" means the same thing as "real result"? Just a thought.
You know very well that actual combat losses which are "real results" can not "really" be known. They can be approximated though. To the extent that they are approximations, they are not actual or real.
I'm tired of restating myself over and over. You are also restating yourself but I would just point out that unlike you, my restatements have been consistent and haven't shifted from "real result" to "approximate result" with an explaination that they mean the same thing and an accusation that the other guy is playing semantics.
Here you go shifting things again. Next you will say that in standard English, "frequently inaccurate" is interchangeable with "not a real result." Whoever claimed that loss records were "frequently inaccurate"? Not I. My argument rests merely on the proposition that loss claims were not reality or a real result as in accurate and without error.
"There is again no contradiction between "approximate" and "real" in the English language."
Nope, no semantics here. Your position distilled down to its core is that "approximate result" is the same as "real result." Your position is that the two are interchangeable. They are not, unless you work for the government. You criticized others for citing inaccurate numbers and in the same breath contrasted it with what you yourself termed the "real result." Now you say "real result" means the same thing as "approximate result."
Well Joe B, I will tell you again that I agree with your characterization of "approximate result" so to the extent that in your mind it means the very same thing as "real result", then in your mind, we don't really disagree.
You certainly act like there is a disagreement though. Have you considered that that might be because you yourself do not really believe that "approximate result" means the same thing as "real result"? Just a thought.
You know very well that actual combat losses which are "real results" can not "really" be known. They can be approximated though. To the extent that they are approximations, they are not actual or real.
I'm tired of restating myself over and over. You are also restating yourself but I would just point out that unlike you, my restatements have been consistent and haven't shifted from "real result" to "approximate result" with an explaination that they mean the same thing and an accusation that the other guy is playing semantics.