"According to the book. The difference between a Walk in the Quickstep. The step will be slightly shorter than in the Foxtrot owing to the quicker music.For the same reason the knees will not relax quite so much as in the slower tempo. I wont give what page that is on Because you have a reading problem."
That's one of the more obvious differences, yes. But if you really understood the dancing that is described in your book, you'd understand that it's only the start of the difference between the way a step is taken for these two different purposes.
"In the Waltz it must be understood that a complete circle in six steps is never danced the construction being based on diagnal lines which require only 3/8ths of a turn on each THREE Steps. So then if we are an intelligent person we will then find out if the very first step is straight to the end of. What does the written words say and the charts show."
You apparently haven't noticed, but no one is disagreeing with you about the step needing to be straight. The differences we are talking about are mostly in the vertical plane. I'm sure things are slightly different in the horinzatonal too (don't forget that there is plenty of rotation during step one, even as the direction of movement remains unchanged), but nobody here has yet chosen to argue for a difference in how this should be done, so there's no need for you to keep refuting an argument that simply hasn't been made.
"You have been arguing with Alex Moore for weeks and weeks without knowing it."
No, in fact what I have been trying to do is to explain to you what that book you love to misquote actually says, and what it means when you understand not just the individual words, but their combined effect.
"What I have given you is most of the time word for word is from the technique book."
Sometimes, but quite often divorced from the context about which it was written. I can take the book and a pair of scissors and construct any quote I want... you've come pretty close to that with your random selection of out of context quotes.
"Are you still teaching that the left shoulder leads into the first step of a Reverse Turn Foxtrot"
Am I trying to do it? You bet. You think I'm going to argue with the Blackpool champ who put me onto that idea? I sure don't.