From section 7 of worr's original post:
7) Target hand off. During the course of a thread suddenly switches targets to avoid a loosing argument. He uses substitute arguments that don’t address the original question, which he is loosing, and seeks to lure off some other kills before the other winning argument can finish him off.
Quoting section 9:
9) P-51 runstang. Generally finds an exit at the very point of loosing the advantage in the thread and will not return. The exit will usually be affected with some claim to victory like “you don’t know what you are talking about” or “I’m wasting my time with the likes of you” but generally looses credibility when the same exits are sought in various threads.
All four instances in bold above are incorrect. Each of them should be a variety of "lose".
From beet1e's reply:
My alt advantage, also enjoyed by Worr in this post, is the ability to write grammatically correct English with proper syntax...I can tell Worr is a guy who understands the difference between "loose" and "lose", and the difference between "affect" and "effect".
From worr's post I concluded that indeed he did not understand the difference between "loose" and "lose" because each use is incorrect. In your reply, you equate yourself to worr in regards to English grammar and syntax. I then argued that since worr had misused the words, and you had complimented him on his usage of those words, that you as well were mistaken in the difference between "loose" and "lose".
The evidence presented, and the conclusion drawn from it led me to post my reply defining the words "loose" and "lose".