This always feels like a bad faith argument. Nobody says that with static types, you don't need any unit tests.
And your suggestion that people who like static types "don't know how to write unit tests" is further bad faith.
Perhaps it's dynamic typing programmers who don't know how to write sound programs? Except I'm not making that claim, because I'm giving you all some benefit of the doubt, a degree of respect you are not giving others.
Static typing doesn't have much value if there are proper unit tests. So it's fairly obvious that if people think there is value in static typing then they are shipping broken code to their customers.
And your suggestion that people who like static types "don't know how to write unit tests" is further bad faith.
Perhaps it's dynamic typing programmers who don't know how to write sound programs? Except I'm not making that claim, because I'm giving you all some benefit of the doubt, a degree of respect you are not giving others.