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Club good: Revision history


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3 September 2024

2 September 2024

  • curprev 02:3302:33, 2 September 2024206.174.68.232 talk 15,961 bytes −997 One economist's contrived metaphor about a specific religious group's prohibitions in one particular country does not lend to understanding what club goods are. As it reads, the article says that these are examples of club goods: cable, gyms, pools, and ultra-orthodox Judaism in Isreal. No other religious groups or countries are mentioned. No other examples of non-monetary club fee are mentioned. Access to Judaism doesnt experience economic pressure. It's absurd. The section is irrelevant. undo Tags: Manual revert Reverted section blanking Visual edit Mobile edit Mobile web edit

30 August 2024

  • curprev 21:3921:39, 30 August 2024Avatar317 talk contribs 16,958 bytes +997 Undid revision 1243057063 by 206.174.68.232 (talk)Restored sourced statement. Your lack of understanding the source is not our problem. undo Tags: Undo Reverted
  • curprev 07:2207:22, 30 August 2024206.174.68.232 talk 15,961 bytes −997 The religion is not a club. Religious prohibitions are not fees or taxes. The quote is merely how one economist conceptualizes his own religion. It is a metaphor, not a description of actual economics. No other religions are mentioned despite having similar prohibitions. If a cardiologist likes cars and compares hearts to engines, would you put his quote on the article for the human heart? undo Tags: Manual revert Reverted section blanking Mobile edit Mobile web edit

29 August 2024

27 August 2024

  • curprev 06:2506:25, 27 August 2024206.174.68.232 talk 15,961 bytes −997 Why is there a section titled "In Isreal"? No other countries are listed. The section features one quote from an economist explaining religious traditions using economic metaphors. How is that relevant to the article or help readers understand the subject? undo Tags: Reverted section blanking Mobile edit Mobile web edit

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