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.
If we have sitting officials who conspired to overturn the 2016 election, wouldn't you want them brought to justice? I don't care if they're replaced with other Republicans. I just want these scumbags brought to justice.
Again, the questioner is falsely accusing the person of beating his wife. That is where the lie is.
Not a lie. A presupposition. Redefinition fallacy.
I’ve known her far longer than yourself, so I have more history.
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.
Smoochie whoochieIrrelevant.
First, ask the person if he has been beating his wife before. Then ask him if he stopped.
Simple.
That's a double question.![]()
Presupposition fallacies.
WHY THE FUCK DO YOU KILL BABIES?
WRONG. It's a paradox. The question is irrational and therefore void.
Presupposition fallacy.
Not a truth. A supposition. Undefinition fallacy.
Void Nimrod fallacy.
Unsupposition unfallacy.
Mockery. Trolling.
Mimicry. Goblining.
Mockery. Trolling.
Mimicry. Gasfarting.