...Dude, chill. You notice how I linked directly to my sources that proved my point in my post? That's how you're supposed to do it. You don't say, "just look for it, it's there". That's now how citing your sources works in any setting.
Second off, if you notice from my previous post, running burns two to four times as many calories as lifting. When you're burning that much from an exercise, lifting weights to burn calories with your muscle isn't even a factor - And like I said, both lifting weights and running together burns the most calories.
That site only references itself, and it's the only site you seem to accept as fact. I referenced several sources that themselves reference several sources, and wrote ten times as much as you have proving my point. That's hardly lazy.
Also, just a simple Google search turned up several articles with citations that question what your site says. Turns out there's no reliable source for muscle burning so many calories a day, and it trends towards only being about two to three times what fat burns, landing at about 4 - 13 calories a day per pound, depending on the source. That's a far cry from what you're claiming.
That doesn't mean that weight lifting isn't important. I've mentioned I don't know how many times that the key to being in good shape is a well rounded exercise routine and a healthy diet. But muscle isn't the fat burning machine you're claiming it is.
I like how you specifically search stuff to refute my argument. You realise that it's very easy to refute ANY argument? Real problem is, I was once obsessed with dietary/workout shit and eventually, through clear evidence all of I am saying in this topic was thruth. Let's say for me, ok.
I was playing soccer for 3 years, I was slim, but have an average body fat, nothing ripped. It was a relaxed, pure cardio activity, but I never got anything substantial but pretty hefty quads and hams. My usual stint was 2-3 hours of playing (I love soccer). Quite a time investment, yes?
Then I went into weightlifting, at my early twenties I was at horrid 65 kg at 177cm height, basically a skeleton. In a half of a year I gained about 15kg, lost some fat, gained alot of muscle. I ate whey protein, plenty of eggs and chicken, trained 3 times a week * 1hour, big three (squat + deadlift + bench) usual route. Then I got bored, stopped exercizing and diet and you know what happened? I started to lose muscle. But fat loss was even higher. Body does not burn muscle as priority, I know that because I was seeing that. On myself. Not searching some google for refute.
Then later after ten years I again went into weightlifting stint. It was not about losing fat, I dont care about that, I had a severe back pain, so I went 3 times a week 6-12*3 reps with my meager 25kg*2 kettlebells doing trusty squat-deadlift-bench routine. After work, 45 mins tops, at home. After 3 months I stopped, back is not aching anymore, and surprise! I lost 8 kg. Untouched diet. 92->84 kg. And I didnt even cared about weight loss.
I am not going to change my mind because somebody found something on some page. It's worked to me. 45 mins at home vs 3-6-10 miles outside? No contest.
And you also forgot to mention the post effect of weight lifting. Burning energy afterwards. Completely relaxed. Which cardio doesnt have.