Into the Night
Verified User
Infinite question fallacy.
Mockery. Trolling. Discard of logic.
Infinite question fallacy.
Bulverism fallacy.
Mockery. Trolling.
Mimicry. House of Cards fallacy.
Mockery. Discard of logic. Trolling.
So, what you are saying is the Joke administration should go all-in on turning fascist and totalitarian to eliminate their political enemies using the power of the state that they control. How utterly authoritarian and dictatorial you are.
The lie is that you have been beating your wife.
Your opinion, not mine.
Not if the answers allowed are other than binary (yes / no).
"I have never beat my wife." That can be the answer if it isn't be forced as a binary. Even if the answer is a lie, the question isn't.
Again, the questioner is falsely accusing the person of beating his wife. That is where the lie is.
I’ve known her far longer than yourself, so I have more history.Yep, and an accurate one based on her answers here.
Wrong! The person is asking the recipient if they are doing something or not. That is not a lie. The answer might well be, as I pointed out, "I have never beat my wife..." It only becomes a complex question fallacy when the answer is demanded as a binary. Even then, the question itself isn't a lie even if the respondent has to tell one with the yes or no answer.
In order for the question to be valid the accusation has to be true.
If it was asked in a courtroom, the judge would have chewed the lawyer and spit him out.
No, it doesn't. It could be asked because the person asking doesn't know. If it were asked stand-alone and asking for a binary answer it would be a complex question fallacy. If the lawyer asking it were questioning a wife beater, it would be a valid question.
No, it doesn't. It could be asked because the person asking doesn't know. If it were asked stand-alone and asking for a binary answer it would be a complex question fallacy. If the lawyer asking it were questioning a wife beater, it would be a valid question.
Even the Bird Man agrees that it's a presupposition fallacy.
This guy?
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You know, he's a cartoon, right? (Disclaimer: That question is not a lie)
LOL!!! Didn't even think about him.
Don't you think, or don't you? (Disclaimer: That question is not a lie)
