Monte wrote:
Diamondeye wrote:
Monte wrote:
As in, do I have faith in him? Do I worship him as some sort of all powerful, all knowing deity without any evidence to support that belief? Or are you trying to draw a false equivalence between belief in general and faith specifically?
There is no such thing as a "false equivalence".
Yes, there is. It's a pretty common fallacy, especially with conservatives.
Here is how it works.
"Obama is just like hitler!"
"How?"
"Hitler had health care! Obama is doing health care! Obama is hitler!"
That's false equivalence. Here is another way it works -
"Affirmative action is just like racism"
"No, it isn't. Affirmative action is a program designed to help mitigate the damage done by institutional racism. It's nothing like the hate-motivated racism of groups like the National Socialist Party or the KKK"
False equivalence is all over the place, especially in conservative circles. It's how people like Andrew Breitbart can accuse the NAACP of racism by doctoring a tape that in no way shows an iota of actual racism. It's how Rush Limbaugh can convince millions of listeners that the Black Man is stealing the White Man's god given right to a job. It's how Glenn Beck can compare ACORN to brown shirts.
Except that no one makes the argument that because Obama has a healthcare plan and Hitler had a healthcare plan (supposedly) that they're therefore identical. People argue that they're similar
in that respect (if, indeed, Hitler did actually have some sort of health care program). That is not a false equivallence at all.
Undistributed Middle is the fallacy you are actually describing in your example, but your example is not the way you use the term "false equivalence". When you use it, it simply means "any comparison I don't like." All you're really doing is the opposite:
"Brownshirts have certain properties"
"ACORN does not share each and every one of these properties"
"Therefore, they must not share ANY qualities... and you're making a false equivalence!"
It's just a fake fallacy you've invented to try to give more weight to your complaints when you don't like something.
The only reason it appears "common among conservatives" is that you don't like their comparisons. You make comparisons that are no different, but mysteriously they aren't "false equivalence". That's because the term serves no purpose except as an argument tactic by which you convince yourself you're making some sort of actual point.