The problem is that people have clarified. Over and over again. Eventually, they just get tired of saying the same thing in different ways.
I think every question you pose has already been answered. Just reread the replies to your prior posts.
Could you point me to where someone said "You thought I meant X, but I really meant Y"? I don't see many of the replies saying things like that. There are useful points being raised, but I really don't see a lot of clarification.
For example, above Paul said that a company would shield its owners from prosecution and liability. (Or at least that's how I understood it.) I then posted something showing how that doesn't apply when there was fraud committed. He should either have clarified that his claim was different from how I understood it, admitted it was wrong, or defended it, none of which were done.
I've read all the recent replies. There is a lot of "this is so obvious I'm not even going to tell you why", a lot of "you're stupid", and occasionally something that makes sense, which I usually acknowledge and respond to.
There does seem to be a lot of misinterpretation here, and combined with people always assuming bad faith, it makes for very bad communication.
How about this: whenever I feel that I might be misunderstanding something, I'll first post something along the lines of "I think X is what you mean, is that an accurate depiction of your argument", rather than argue right away. That way, if I've misinterpreted something you can tell me before I argue with a misinterpretation.
Paul would never say that
I was referring to https://bitcointalksearch.org/topic/m.10742449
I still don't see how that could mean something other how I interpreted it, but if he wants to he can clarify what he meant by that.
Wake up ikeboy, he said financial liability
Criminal is always personal, corporations don't fit in jails
Go read Enron