I dispute both of your highly narrow arguments which do not hold water for "each and every" type of situation, then I'm labeled as a troll. Okay... continue to live your lives thinking that there is only one way of doing things. No sweat off my back, just don't try to convince everyone else that your way is the only way.
This isn't a problem with low concentration non-organic fertilizers used in controlled amounts in confined containers (which was my whole point). If you think it is, then you need to get your head checked. What you're arguing against is high concentration chemical fertilizers, and other harmful chemicals like pesticides (usually used by the acre) that can cause runoff.
My whole attempt was to allow you to understand that it's not simply a matter of Inorganic vs. Organic in every circumstance. Both can be good depending on the situation.
Plus, the primary point of organic gardening is to be friendly to the earth.
This isn't a problem with low concentration non-organic fertilizers used in controlled amounts in confined containers (which was my whole point). If you think it is, then you need to get your head checked. What you're arguing against is high concentration chemical fertilizers, and other harmful chemicals like pesticides (usually used by the acre) that can cause runoff.
My whole attempt was to allow you to understand that it's not simply a matter of Inorganic vs. Organic in every circumstance. Both can be good depending on the situation.