<BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-title">quote:</div><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-content">Originally posted by erwos:<BR>That is to say, you clearly want some sort of univeral broadband access. You then used a shaky finding (being generous on the "shaky") to justify it. </div></BLOCKQUOTE><BR>erwos, how the hell do you get from "it's a possibility that more broadband might mean more job creation", for some sectors at least, to saying that I am in any way endorsing this study or using it to justify anything? I certainly do neither, I was merely commenting on the slant of comments which far from calling for more investigation strongly appear to deny even the possibility. I support <em>near</em>-universal broadband for various reasons that are unconnected to job growth per se, so this would merely be a subject of interest. I specifically said that I understood that correlation and causation aren't <em>necessarily</em> related, in an attempt to make clear that much further serious study would be needed to make any serious results out of this. But I have worked in various research labs for a number of years, and as Ozy said often the first step of a set of real experiments is noticing some correlation. Obviously, that's only step one, and figuring out hypothesis, valid experiments, etc all must come after and be done well to get useful information. But the motivation must start somewhere, even if it doesn't pan out (and there isn't anything wrong with that). People who simply put down the possibility deny future investigation, and that is not the same thing as being neutral about the subject. I find your presumption of my goals and motivations from such a limited context gross and offensive sir.