If your point is that you aren't interested enough, then obviously you're entitled to that, but then I don't see why you made the original post.
Even in the specific case you cite, there is a truth to the matter and it has real world consequences.
Incidentally, I Silas Barta and/or I will hopefully eventually post to LW on that very topic (monetary economics).
everything has real world consequences. do you have any useful predictions?
I've long opposed discussing politics on Less Wrong. Elsewhere, however, I have been known to gaze into the abyss; and so it came to be that I wrote a handful of blog posts of the Oxford Libertarian Society Blog. I had the deliberate intention of bring a little bit of rationality into politics - and so of course ended up writing in something like Eliezer's style.
I wanted to establish some theory first, so the initial posts were about The Conservation of Expected Evidence and Reductionism, and then one particular Death-Spiral.
As you'll probably notice, one of my defences against the little-death has been to err on the side of attacking Libertarian positions; I provided an account of Traditional Socialist Values so we remember that our enemies aren't inherently evil, and then analysed an abuse of The Law of Comparative Advantage, showing cases where it didn't apply.
I can't promise I'll update at all regularly.
Post inspired by Will Newsome and prompted by Vladimir Nesov.
http://oxlib.blogspot.com/