a dwarf will press 300+lbs no problem
hey does this mean bench press is overrated? no it doesn't but here's an example for you anyway.
I'm not trying to spin anything. Since you haven't made a strong case I'm just trying to figure out why you keep making this claim. You've latched onto this concept of a deadlift being inferior. I assume it's personal. I don't know why deadlifting has given you so much unhappiness but sadly it's got nothing to do with the efficacy of the movement.
You made up an imaginary position for me that had nothing to do with what I said and then started arguin with it. If that's not spin...

Also, another bizarre counterpoint from you. Of course, shorter limbs have an easier time leveraging more weight on a bench press. How is this related to the videos I posted earlier? The videos featured men of normal height, skinny women in heels and old ladies. What biomechanical advantage did these people have that explained their big deadlifts?
My argument was never as shallow as a skinny person or a dwarf can do a deadlift, so it must not be a good exercise.My argument consisted of the following points:
1)DEADLIFTS ARE NOT A GOOD BODYBUILDING EXERCISE
Most people who posted in this thread admitted to this, though many felt that it was still the king of "functional exercises".
2)DEADLIFTS ARE NOT A PARTICULARLY GOOD GAUGE OF STRENGTH
Improving your deadlift doesn't have much effect on other back or leg lifts. This kind of strength transference to different exercises for the same bodypart is true of almost no other power movement.
3)ONE CAN PERFORM DEADLIFTS REGULARLY WITHOUT THE RESULTS SHOWING UP IN ONE'S PHYSIQUE
Posted multiple video examples of this.
All of these things are true and in one way or another, most people have acknowledged these points at some point in the thread. Most of the resistance to the concept as a whole is conditioning, to a certain extent. I get that. That's why I started the thread, to challenge that notion. Like most deadlift proponents, your argument just came down to buzzwords (or lying) . It was the same vague "grip strength, posterior chain, other applications argument" with "3d look" thrown in.
etaIf someone asks me what the benefits of a bicep curl or squats or bench press are, I can give them a very clear answer. I will tell them the advantages and limitations and what they won't do. This is not how deadlift proponents answer questions about deadlifts. This is not how anyone explained what the benefits of the deadlift are in in this thread. If you get someone to admit that the deadlift is not a good bodybuilding exercise ( which happens frequently) then they resort to the "posterior chain, grip strength, etc" thing. This would be like if someone asked me about the benefits of bicep curls and I said "they give you arm flexibility, the strength the uptake on chinups and they also increase your ability to supinate your wrist in daily life. "