I find your reply disturbing, as I took you at face value to have at least put in the work necessary to understand bitcoin at the protocol level.
My understanding of Bitcoin is fine, thanks. Are you disputing my claim? Where in Satoshis paper is economics addressed?
I said the website is useless, not that page specifically.
Let's see how a casual reader might approach learning about Bitcoin. Bear in mind, they are not very motivated, maybe they figure they have five minutes to take a quick look at this thing they heard about.
Go to bitcoin.org. Click "learn about Bitcoin". That sounds reasonable, doesn't it? See some entirely superficial and nerdy information that is hard to understand, like what does "Double spending is prevented using a block chain" mean? Maybe, they spot the "Bitcoin Wiki" link in the top right corner - not that it's very easy to see. Click it. Get dumped into an un-organized index of all topics with the Technical category applied. Stop.
How about another attempt?
Go to bitcoin.org. Maybe spot the link that says, rather mysteriously, "We use coins! Start here". This is a statement, not a description of what you might find there. OK, so we click and arrive at the site. Click questions/answers. This is better. The 2nd-to-top question on the economics section is "Does hoarding really hurt Bitcoin" But the answer is a, again, a wall of text that superficially might appear to be an official answer of the project, but in reality is just a random opinion from David Schwarz/Joel Katz. It's not a badly thought out argument or opinion, but it's got some very deeply questionable things in it, and the answer doesn't provide any references or citations. For instance it tries to claim that hoarding is usually bad and studies have shown it's bad, but Bitcoin is special.
Actually, "hoarding" or what you may call deflation has been shown in studies to be uncorrelated with depression. That's a critical, key point that should be top and center with a link to the study itself. But there's no mention anywhere to be found.
Finding the myths page requires a lot of clicking around disorganized and unprofessional looking websites. But even if you manage to find the Bitcoin Myths page, the question addressing deflation (which is one of the most common topics you see raised) is buried in question 17, which simply links to the deflationary spiral page, which is enormous and doesn't provide any explanation that fits into a 5 minute browsing session.