JoeTheJuggler
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Jun 7, 2006
- Messages
- 27,766
On top of the considerations already mentioned, who gets to determine what is a lie in these political ads and how to distinguish them? If intent to deceive is all it takes, couldn't any spinning of a situation to put your candidate (or yourself) in a favorable light or the opponent in an unfavorable light be considered an intent to deceive?
And what about those statements that are technically true but completely mischaracterize things? I recall one example from around here. One campaign season Jim Talent had an ad that claimed he voted to increase the federal minimum wage x number of times. In fact, though, he was on record as being opposed to federal minimum wage increases, but he voted in favor of huge budget resolutions that often had minimum wage increases that were incorporated as a compromise with his political opponents. Lie or not a lie?
Fraud is a different issue. It's illegal to take people's money through deception. To win a case of fraud you have to prove that that's what happened.
And what about those statements that are technically true but completely mischaracterize things? I recall one example from around here. One campaign season Jim Talent had an ad that claimed he voted to increase the federal minimum wage x number of times. In fact, though, he was on record as being opposed to federal minimum wage increases, but he voted in favor of huge budget resolutions that often had minimum wage increases that were incorporated as a compromise with his political opponents. Lie or not a lie?
Fraud is a different issue. It's illegal to take people's money through deception. To win a case of fraud you have to prove that that's what happened.
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