Monte wrote:
Diamondeye wrote:
Sorry, but none of that A) indicates that people beleive it because they are Fox news viewers,
There you go again. There is no way you can extrapolate that argument from what I have stated. You are claiming I have drawn a causal connection that I have not drawn.
1) Fox News is better and more effective
at spreading misinformation to it's viewers.
2) Fox News viewers are more likely to maintain those false notions given by Fox News.
No, there
you go again. That's not a strawman at all. I didn't say it was YOUR position that there was a causal relationship, I was stating MY position that there ISN'T a causal relationship, and further, that if you can't
show a causal relationship it doesn't matter what Fox is saying. I'm perfectly within my rights to formulate my own positions, even regarding your positions. Stop slinging the strawman accusation around. It is not a strawman for me to state my own position on the matter.
Straw ManYou should also note:
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Presenting and refuting a weakened form of an opponent's argument can be a part of a valid argument. For example, one can argue that the opposing position implies that at least one of two other statements - both being presumably easier to refute than the original position - must be true. If one refutes both of these weaker propositions, the refutation is valid and does not fit the above definition of a "straw man" argument.
In other words, if I point out that something follows from something you said, that isn't a strawman attack even though you didn't state that conclusion yourself. That's for future refernce though, not for this particular issue. Just keep that in mind since you seem to be slinging this fallacy around a lot.
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It *does* indicate they believe it. How can you reasonably conclude otherwise? The poll questioned them on what they believed about the health care issues like Death Panels and the like, and they answered it.
I didn't say that they didn't believe it; I said they believe it because they think it will be the eventual result of the plan even if it isn't what's written in it now. The plan opens the door for these things. The poll questions you cited are designed carefully to trick people into appearing uninformed because they only address what's in the plan as written right now, not what people think it will actually lead to.
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Nothing in the plan states that it would and there is no evidence to support that it would. The Administration has clearly stated that a government health care takeover is not what they want, not what they are seeking, and is in no way their goal.
There's plenty of reason to think it would. Khross has already pointed out the difficulty of competing with the government, which will lead to private insurance being forced out of buisness regardless of what the administration intends to happen. As for illegal aliens, if they come have children here, those children will be covered. That's coverage for illegals, because the expense is the parents' responsibility, even if the care actually goes to a child.
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It's a lie, spread by Fox News in order to rile up opposition to the plan. And fox viewers were 30% more likely to believe the lie.
It's not a lie except in a very narrow sense of "What does the exact wording of the plan say"? Furthermore, unless you can show that Fox is actually the cause of this, and it isn't a case of people who already believe this anyhow just preferring Fox news, then it's irrelevant. (See? Not a strawman. That's MY position, not a distortion of yours.)
In any case, saying the plan will "lead to" something can't be a lie because what will happen in the future isn't known yet. A lie is a misstatement of fact.
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Or in the president's stated intentions. Or in any plan in congress. There is no evidence to support that belief. None. They have been told by Fox News that not only are those things on the way, but that the bills specifically authorize those things.
You are not providing any evidence to contradict my argument, only your own thoughts on polling and opinion. That's not compelling.
You're not making an argument at all. Since you deny claiming a causal connection, all you're saying is that a poll said FOX viewers believe certain things. So?
I also am pointing out that just because the President and Congress are saying the plan right now doesn't have these things in it, that doesn't mean they won't happen in the future on the basis of the plan or as an unintended consequence. The President cannot predict the future, so really it's just a matter of what he thinks will happen.
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So, are you contending that these opinion polls were nefariously designed to create the impression that Fox News was misinforming it's viewers? If so, do you have any evidence of that?
The evidence is in the questions themselves. One was already specifically pointed out: The question asked if people think the plan will "lead to" a government takeover of healthcare. That's asking people to make a prediction. Even if they believe that because FOX made the same prediction, it's a prediction. Calling it a lie is disingenuous because you can't lie about a prediction; the event hasn't occured yet to be lied about.
This calls the entire poll into question. The question asks for predictions in one instance, but specifically about the plan in others. This can be confusing to those polled. Since it was conducted by a competing organization with its own agenda, and poll makers know about these effects well, there is good reason to think the poll was constructed to give the appearance that Fox news watchers thought these things were in the plan, when in fact the difference is because they think the plan will eventually lead to those things while watchers of other news organiztions do not.