A Phenom II X2 can be had for $88 and a Sandy Bridge i3 can be had for $125. For a 42% price premium, same performance doesn't cut it. Also, it's quite rare for a Phenom II X2 to not unlock to an X4 unless you are talking about the old AM2+ versions or using a board that doesn't allow you to change the voltages. You can unlock and do some overclocking with the stock cooler but there's nothing wrong with those who want to use better coolers even for stock settings on either CPU.
Many review sites make benchmarks that use DDR3-1600 with an overclocked CPU speed but stock CPU-NB on their Phenom IIs to make you believe that an i3 can beat "overclocked" Phenom IIs. Even for DDR-1333, a higher CPU-NB does more more for frame rates or benchmark scores than 1 GHz of extra CPU speed.
"you are the one acting like an idiot by choosing to look at only the positives what you want to compare"
You brought up the 1100t vs. the 2500k for the purpose of a favorable comparison in a price range I never said AMD should compete it. "and what does AMD have to compete with the 2500k?" That's called a Red Herring. I was talking about mid low to low end value and you brought in performance crowns.
You compared the stock 1100t vs. a Core i3-2120. Even $125 is much for a non-OCable Dual Core CPU but you had to ramp it up to the $150 version.
Calling my scenarios silly and then coming up with silly stock-only scenarios of your own as if I would ever recommend a stock AMD over a stock Intel. I suppose any scenario that isn't approved by the poster "toyota" of anandtech forums is silly.