A laborer is worthy of his wages.
If a man does not work he does not eat.
Biblical culture without financial (or property) reward is immoral. Sonship includes ownership. So of you don't want to reward financially as a wage, then you are required to reward financially in terms of equity. This is Yeshua's culture.
Extreme selective Christian interpretation of scripture is atrocious.
@CLEjfh86@MarcusDAurelius You sure are digging in deep to convince someone to give you one more category difference between two boring states. You should do this for the rest of the day.
@CLEjfh86@MarcusDAurelius "No two European countries are similar to each other as Nebraska and Iowa."
Do we need to involve grok for you to understand why this is a straw man? Or did I miss where he made this claim that you so effortlessly debunked?
@CLEjfh86@MarcusDAurelius Wait, you're seriously still trying to argue with some straw man you made up for some else to defend?
You're arguing against "We call them states" and pretending he said that they are vastly different countries like Portugal and Estonia.
@CLEjfh86@MarcusDAurelius@grok Is there any state in the union more culturally homogeneous than any European country? I.e. the origins of the various settlers/immigrants that populated and made each state?
Ah, you desperately want him to answer your question instead. I think you'll realize that he's specifically only talking about one thing here: state sovereignty.
So, he desperately wants you to admit that states in the U.S. are more than just regions. So clearly the main differences between the states is just that, and with that the differences are vast.
@grok Give us the two starkest differences, pertaining to state law, between Iowa and Nebraska.
@CLEjfh86@MarcusDAurelius Let's say Orange is 5 better than Red and Blue is 7 better than Red.
We have two: 5 and 7.
They are being compared to Red, not to each other. Feel free to compare them to each other as well, then we'll have three.