Keep reading. It gets better. Hyperbole to show logical fallacy is just one of the tools in my belt. You could learn something.
Not this time.

Bring in your jump-shot comparison about 25-30 ft and you're in business, although still very successful. lol
Don't know. But Blake doesn't do much that he's not good at--like shooting 41.8% for your career on long jumpers and instead of thinking "Let me use my awesome post game b/c I'm the best PF in the NBA" you decide "I'm going to take the most inefficient shot in the NBA more than anyone else in the NBA, and more than double every other player 6'8 or above in the NBA". And perhaps if we had someone like Chris Paul to tell LMA that he'd get frozen out the next time he took a stupid effing fadeaway J instead of getting his ass into the paint, LMA would be a 26/12 player and all-NBA first team. But, alas...
You're making my point. With all those stats, he's still more efficient than LMA on offense.
I'm really not making your point at all. I'm talking about a post game, not an ability to dunk or run down an open lane for a dunk, ally-oop, or lay in.
"The most inefficient shot in the NBA", which LA makes at nearly the exact same clip that he does from inside the restricted area. So you are incorrect in saying that he would be more efficient at the rim. Clearly, he is as efficient from both spots. See for yourself:
Look at
LA’s shot chart.
31 FGM were assisted by Dame, 70 by the rest of the team combine, 101 total
63% of LA buckets outside the paint are assisted. 40% in the restricted area are assisted.
Look at
Griffins shot chart.
68 FGM were assisted by Chris Paul, 47 from the rest of the team combined, 115 total
95% of Blake buckets outside the paint are assisted. 72% in the restricted area are assists.
Stop ignoring the obvious which I’ve already said. Griffin plays with the best PG in the NBA. He’s athletic, which enables him to jump high, run fast, and get rebounds and dunks. Where is the skill in that?
Check out what kind of shots Blake gets at the bottom of the page, and you see it’s even more apparent that Blake’s “post game” is all about being athletic and not so much about any post game.
LA shoots as well from “his spot” as he does from under the basket. In fact, LA is shooting 17% higher than the league average from “his spot” just outside the left block. Consider the Volume he shoots and the double teams he draws. It's not even debatable.
Perhaps the most compelling argument is that when the Blazers need a bucket, they go to LA and his mo money, wet as the ocean, post moves. He could do that at 5 ft from the rim, but then he runs the risk of help defense being able to cheat over. By shooting away from the basket, opponents have to fully commit to a double team, stay away, or get called for illegal defense.
Small sample size, but the opponent is a constant, and you can make a fair and equal comparison:
Did the LAC beat Indy? No
Griffin 16/12 (6/13 shooting, 4-5 FTs), 2 ast, 1 stl, 5 to
Did Minn beat Indy? No
Love 20/17 (6-20 and 1-5 from 3 shooting), 2 ast, 1 stl, 5 to
Did Portland beat Indy? Yes
LA 28/10 (11/19 shooting), 3 ast, 1 stl, 1 blk, 0 PF, 0 to
Five turnovers a piece, and either low shot attempts or poor shooting for Blake and Love. Make excuses for Love and Griffin all you like (it was an off night, or he took less shots because… you still don’t have a compelling answer for the last one), but LA is clearly the better player getting off more shot attempts and making them versus the same competition.
"We shot the ball poorly, plain and simple, and you are not going to win that many games doing that," Love said.” Face it, Love is the best player and HE shoots poorly, as does Griffin.
Everyone who plays Portland, and loses, talks about how the Blazers make impossible shots. It’s a classic cognitive dissonance to avoid accepting that LA is simply that good. That’s his game.
You can split hairs over where LA chooses to set up his post game, but at the end of the day, he burns opponents with post moves better than anyone in the NBA right now. It’s an unwillingness to accept LA for what he is, that his post game isn’t at the rim, and he’s not an athletic freak or elite rebounder. He’s a good rebounder, with an elite post game. Love and Griffin and elite post game are practically antonyms.