tyr_13
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Aug 8, 2008
- Messages
- 18,095
I don't see the problem. What's wrong with "ad hominem" attacks on a candidate for public office?
Character has always been an issue in such campaigns, because the public is being asked to trust that person's integrity, honesty, judgment, intelligence, etc.
If Candidate X is a convicted criminal who has embezzled public funds, tortured small children, and lied about it under oath, and I point that out, are you really going to cry "no fair! Ad hominem! Ad hominem! Personal attack!"
You would have a point if an election was a referendum on a particular issue: if X was simply a spokesperson for the "Repeal the Death Penalty" ballot proposition, then pointing out X's character flaws would be a logical fallacy because they don't bear on the appropriateness of having a death penalty.
Of course, if the charges are false, that's another story -- but then the problem is not the nature of the charges, but their falsity. It would be just as bad to lie about the merits of a candidate's policy positions.
And we have varying degrees of consensus that certain personal issues are "off limits" because they aren't sufficiently relevant to a candidate's fitness for office -- but again, that just means that certain attacks are considered inappropriate.
This.
I'd add that the number of Tea Party candidates this year make it a lot easier for the Democratic opponents to point out the gaping character defects.
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