Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

ZOT!!! Speaking Freely in a Time of War
Barry Mauer's "Fair and Balanced" Page for Education, Entertainment, and the Arts ^ | 9/30/03 | Barry Mauer

Posted on 09/30/2003 11:58:31 AM PDT by bmauer

Speaking Freely in a Time of War

Abstract:
Anti-speech advocates have made several arguments aimed at critics of the Iraq War. Many of these anti-speech arguments are enthymemes. If the purpose of these rhetors is to deceive others into accepting a weak claim, then enthymemes are ideal forms because they hide the weakest parts of the argument. By exposing their hidden premises, the parts that are implicit but left unstated, I demonstrate that the anti-speech arguments used against critics of the war are not sound. In this essay, I address the logos, ethos, and pathos in these anti-speech arguments.

Essay:

"I think this war is an attempt by President Bush to concentrate his hold on power," said ----- -----, 37, an English Professor at the University of ------ -------. "This [war] is clearly a power grab." (Orlando Sentinel, 2003)

The day my quote appeared in the Orlando Sentinel, I received this response by email:

My father was a WWII Navy veteran. He served on an aircraft carrier (USS Enterprise CV6). He passed away 2 years ago, but NEVER forgot what he fought for over 50 years before. I was lucky enough to turn 18 during a peaceful time, and as the draft (and registration) were done away with. But I have NEVER forgotten what these brave soldiers sacrificed in order for me to live free. I played taps for Memorial Day and Veterans Day ceremonies. I played taps at Veterans' funerals. This was just a tiny payback to them for all they did for ALL OF US. At my father's funeral, I watched these feeble but proud WWII Veterans fold the American flag that they presented my mother. You are a disgrace to the memory of my father and all those who preceded him in death so that you would have the freedom to speak your mind.

Your assertion that "this war is clearly a power grab" shows your lack of rational thinking. Liberals are controlled only by emotions. Logic never comes into play. Facts only get in the way. You hide behind the veil of academic freedom. You have every right to speak your mind, but words have consequences. That is why I exercise my right to accuse you of being anti-American.
God Bless President Bush
God Bless America!! (Garry Eaton, personal communication, April 18, 2003)

This email is typical of several anti-speech responses I received, filled with arguments aimed at shutting up critics of the Iraq War. Many of these anti-speech arguments are enthymemes. If the purpose of these rhetors is to deceive others into accepting a weak claim, then enthymemes are ideal forms because they hide the weakest parts of the argument. By exposing their hidden premises, the parts that are implicit but left unstated, I demonstrate that the anti-speech arguments used against critics of the war are not sound. In this essay, I address the logos, ethos, and pathos in these anti-speech arguments.

Because the hidden premises I expose are unstated, I admit to a certain imprecision in describing them. This is a necessary part of the process, however, and any misrepresentations can be corrected should those making the arguments choose to step forward and re-state them.

Most deductive arguments do not use complete syllogisms--which are three-part arguments with a major premise, a minor premise, and a conclusion. Rather they use enthymemes, which are syllogisms with at least one part unstated. A classic enthymeme was used during a protest joined by Martin Luther King of garbage workers in Memphis. The workers held signs saying simply, "I am a man." (Turner, 2002) This proposition was the minor premise. The major premise and conclusion were left unstated.

Sample enthymeme:


Major premise (unstated): All men are created equal and are endowed by their creator with certain inalienable rights . . .


Minor premise: I am a man.
Conclusion (unstated): Therefore I deserve equal treatment and recognition of my rights.

The receiver of an enthymeme has to supply the missing parts. By doing so, the receiver completes a logical circuit and persuades himself.

Some of the best arguments are enthymemes, but so are some of the worst arguments. If the purpose of the rhetor is to deceive others into accepting a weak claim, then enthymemes are ideal forms because they hide the weakest parts of the argument.

Logos

Logical arguments appeal to the intellect of the audience. If the premises are true and the reasoning is valid, then the conclusion must be true. However, it is often the case in arguments that the premises are false, that the reasoning is invalid, or both. In the section below I present analysis of flawed logical arguments made by anti-speech advocates.

The author of the above letter claims that his father sacrificed so that I may speak my mind. His claim is built upon the assumption that only troops can defend freedom of speech.

Argument 1: Soldiers Defend Free Speech


Major premise (hidden): Only soldiers can defend the rights of all to free speech.


Minor premise: You are not a soldier.


Conclusion: You cannot defend the rights of all to free speech.

Analysis: In this argument, the major premise is clearly false. Only if soldiers in all cases defended others' freedom of speech would it be true. Although I am not a soldier, I could defend a co-worker's freedom of speech by creating a forum for her to express her view. Therefore, we must conclude that the argument above is not sound.

One anti-speech advocate wrote to me: "the troops are risking their lives to give you the very right which you are so ironically, (sic) now using to attack the very government that sent them to protect this right in others." (Ryan Gibbons, personal correspondence, April 23, 2003)

Should we think it "ironic" to use a right that we have? It would be ironic indeed if we did not use our right to free speech when it most counted.

Argument 2: The Effectiveness of Soldiers
Major premise (partially hidden): Since U.S. soldiers defend our right to speak freely, anything that weakens the effectiveness of soldiers undermines our free speech.
Minor premise: Criticism of the military or the administration in control weakens the effectiveness of soldiers.
Conclusion: Critics of the military or the administration must be isolated, vilified, and intimidated because they undermine our free speech.

Analysis: The major premise is false because it presumes that the primary purpose of soldiers' activities is to defend free speech. In the case of the Iraq war, there was no clear connection between the actions of U.S. soldiers in Iraq and the defense of free speech in the U.S. Rather, the opposite was true. We heard a demand to suppress criticism of the Bush administration and "Support our troops!" The massive PR campaign spouting this slogan was an effective effort to divert attention from the policy itself. If the slogan were honest, it would have stated, "Support our policy!" or "Support our war!"

The minor premise is false because there are many cases in which there is no causal relation between criticism of the military or critics of the administration and any weakening of military effectiveness. Some criticism may even improve military effectiveness: one example would be the claim that U.S. chemical warfare suits were of poor quality. (Donnelly, 2002) Although it turned out that the Iraqis had no chemical weapons, a point that U.N. inspections and defectors' statements had made somewhat obvious, (UNCOM, 1995) if there had been a chemical weapons attack, many U.S. soldiers would have become casualties because of their faulty suits. Many anti-war critics pointed out that soldiers are most effective when they are not used in combat; such was the case in the months before the U.S. and British troops attacked Iraq, when these troops backed up the U.N. inspections teams with the threat of force.

We heard from many anti-speech advocates that criticism of the U.S. government was tantamount to sympathizing with the enemy and thus endangering our troops. (Horowitz, 2002) This view represents a failure of imagination, however, for it is possible to sympathize with the people of Iraq, who are victims of Saddam Hussein and of American bombing, without sympathizing with Saddam Hussein. It is also possible simultaneously to sympathize with American troops, many of whom will die needlessly in a war that may have little justification other than the greed of a few powerful people tied to Bush.

The greatest threat to military effectiveness has not come from critics of the war but from the Bush administration itself. Among the charges against the Bush administration on these counts is the following: "Issues of principle aside, the invasion of a country that hadn't attacked us and didn't pose an imminent threat has seriously weakened our military position. Of the Army's 33 combat brigades, 16 are in Iraq; this leaves us ill prepared to cope with genuine threats. Moreover, military experts say that with almost two-thirds of its brigades deployed overseas, mainly in Iraq, the Army's readiness is eroding: normal doctrine calls for only one brigade in three to be deployed abroad, while the other two retrain and refit." (Krugman, 2003)

Anti-speech advocates sometimes use the argument that critics of the war "demoralized" the soldiers. Perhaps criticism of the war does demoralize some soldiers, though that is not its intent. Is demoralizing soldiers somehow worse than sending them to die and kill in an unjust war? None of the 200+ U.S. soldiers killed in Iraq so far have died as a result of any anti-war criticism. It is rare to hear anyone state the conclusion to this argument--that critics of the military or the administration must be isolated, vilified, and intimidated because they undermine our free speech--because it is clearly contradictory; one cannot intimidate critics and claim to uphold free speech at the same time.

One anti-speech advocate, however, did just that. He wrote: "You are right in concluding that critics of the military or the administration must be isolated, vilified and intimidated . . . because we as free speakers have the right to do this as a majority. If you do not like the government, that is fine with all of us. You just need to be prepared to take the 'intimidation' from us when it comes flying at you." (Ryan [last name unknown], personal correspondence, April 23, 2003)

I find intimidation and the atmosphere it produces to be incompatible with free speech values. The case articulated here--that the intimidation tactics practiced by members of the majority constitute a form of free speech--is clearly flawed. This form of "speech" flows only in one direction: from the powerful to the less powerful. The email I quoted above accuses me of being "anti-American." This term is used against critics of administration policies. Critics of the war love America, however, and don't want to see it hurt by false patriots. Only in a repressive state would this kind of accusation be heard routinely. At times, such as the civil rights era, the government enacted legislation to protect the speech of the less powerful. This is not one of those times. In these times, even Republicans are attacked viciously for straying from the party line even slightly. (AP, 2003)

The anti-speech advocate continues:

Criticism . . . needlessly undermines the government. Our nation cannot be run without the support of its citizens. The voice of one influences many, and fools are prone to listening to and acting upon rebellious voices they hear when they would otherwise have a simple void where that undermining voice takes hold. In light of this, it is a needless endangerment not to our troops, but to our nation itself to criticize the government and its worthy officials in such a way. (Ryan [last name unknown], personal correspondence, April 23, 2003)

The undemocratic sentiments in this remark are stunning. Does one "undermine" our government by trying to keep it honest? It is my understanding that in a democracy the people lead and the government must be responsive to them. To prevent tyranny from developing in a democracy, people must be free to criticize their government. I will also note the dangerous conflation of the "nation" and the "government" in this writer's remark, a common move in totalitarian countries. My primary focus, however, is on the writer's notion of "fools" following rebellious voices. Such an argument implies that fools only follow but do not lead, though there are numerous examples of fools leading. It also implies that fools are only threatening when incited to action by rebellious voices, though never threatening when incited by the regimenting voices of those in power. Clearly there are cases of regimenting voices causing great harm to nations.

John Dean writes:

As Ohio's Republican Senator Robert A. Taft, a man whose patriotism cannot be questioned, remarked less than two weeks after Pearl Harbor, "[C]riticism in time of war is essential to the maintenance of any kind of democratic government.... [T]he maintenance of the right of criticism in the long run will do the country ... more good than it will do the enemy [who might draw comfort from it], and it will prevent mistakes which might otherwise occur." (Dean, 2003)

Argument 3: Enemies of Free Speech


Major premise (hidden): If the U.S. were to be invaded and occupied by an enemy who didn't believe in free speech, we would lose our free speech.


Minor premise: We are fighting an enemy who doesn't believe in free speech.


Conclusion: We must defeat this enemy in order to maintain our free speech.

Analysis: A true threat to U.S. sovereignty, such as the Axis powers during World War II, might make this argument sound. When anti-speech advocates used this argument earlier this year, they implied that the military of Iraq would invade and occupy the United States and then strip away our freedom of speech. By stating the implications of this premise so starkly, we are impressed with its absurdity.

The anti-speech advocate also made this comment:

Even if the threat (of weapons of mass destruction) was nonexistent, Saddam and his regime need to be ousted and replaced by a government that does not suppress its religious majority, gas a hated minority and oppress its people in other such ways. (Ryan [last name unknown], personal correspondence, April 23, 2003)

This writer apparently missed the irony produced by his statements; he believes it is necessary to support the voices of dissent in Iraq and to suppress the voices of dissent in the U.S.

Argument 4: Needless Endangerment
Major premise: Speech that needlessly endangers other people, like yelling "fire" in a crowded theater, is not protected speech.
Minor premise: Criticism of the war needlessly endangers the troops.
Conclusion: Criticism of the war is not protected speech.

Analysis: In this argument, the minor premise is questionable at best. If the war itself is needless, then the war itself certainly endangers the troops needlessly. It is not criticism of the war that endangers the troops, it is the war itself, an unnecessary war at that.

It is justifiable to yell "fire" in a crowded theater if there really is a fire. In fact, even if a person thinks there is a fire, he is justified in yelling "fire" because of the precautionary principle, which indicates that it is less risky to yell "fire" and be wrong than it is not to yell "fire" and be right. For example, if you smell smoke in a crowded theater, you are justified in yelling "fire." It is unjustified and malicious to yell "fire" in a crowded theater if you have no evidence that there is a fire.

Let us test this argument in relation to the Iraq war. Several U.S. intelligence experts stated that the Iraq war would pose a threat to Americans; they argued that instead of reducing the threat of terrorism, the Iraq war would increase the threat of terrorism. (Slevin, 2003) Their warnings are similar to that of the person who smells smoke and yells "fire" in a crowded theater. They had evidence--the "smoke"--that al-Qaeda was using the Iraq war as a recruiting tool. On May 12, 2003, within weeks after the conclusion of major hostilities in Iraq, al-Qaeda suicide attackers struck again, this time in Saudi Arabia, killing dozens of people, including eight Americans, and wounding dozens more. The intelligence agents' warnings were accurate. (Norton-Taylor, 2003) They were certainly within their rights to warn others about the threat of "fire"--impending terrorist attacks as a result of the Iraq war.

In contrast to the intelligence agents, George W. Bush is like the person without evidence of a fire yelling "fire" in a crowded theater. For example, Bush said that Iraq was an imminent threat to the United States because the Iraqi regime was acquiring enriched uranium, a key component in the development of nuclear weapons. The "evidence" for this claim was a forged document. It appears that the Bush administration knew their claims were phony. (Wilson, 2003, Waxman, 2003) Also, both Bush and Colin Powell have stated that the Iraqi regime was allied with al-Qaeda, a claim made without evidence and one that most American intelligence agencies did not support. (Risen, 2003, Kristoff, 2003) Falsifying and exaggerating threats in order to take a country into war qualifies as an unjustified use of speech, analogous to yelling "fire" in a crowded theater. The Iraq war endangered U.S. troops, Iraqi citizens, (Jeffery, 2003) and American citizens who now face greater risk of terrorist reprisals as a result of the war.

(Excerpt) Read more at pegasus.cc.ucf.edu ...


TOPICS: War on Terror
KEYWORDS: antiwar; breachbirthanoxia; enthymemesrgay; freespeech; igotmyphdinzot; iraq; ozonealert; sandwichshyofpicnic; syphilliticdementia; takeyourmeds; war; zot
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-2021-4041-6061-63 next last

1 posted on 09/30/2003 11:58:32 AM PDT by bmauer
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | View Replies]

To: bmauer
In contrast to the intelligence agents, George W. Bush is like the person without evidence of a fire yelling "fire" in a crowded theater. For example, Bush said that Iraq was an imminent threat to the United States because the Iraqi regime was acquiring enriched uranium

Yo, professor, perhaps you want to check the veracity of statements in your posts before you put them in FR. Bush never said the threat was imminent, which calls into question the validity of this entire article.

2 posted on 09/30/2003 12:03:02 PM PDT by dirtboy (CongressmanBillyBob/John Armor for Congress - you can't separate them, so send 'em both to D.C.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: bmauer
Major premise: Someone emailing me negative comments about an article I wrote has anything to do with limitations on free speech.

Minor premise: I am a thin-skinned idiot, but I have the ability to write several thousand words about it, so that makes me an educated thin-skinned idiot.

m1911s conclusion: The major premise is false, but the minor premise is true. Neither one is very interesting.
3 posted on 09/30/2003 12:05:21 PM PDT by m1911
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: bmauer
Dear Nutty Professor;

We are at war. Lose Lips Sink Ships. They provide aid and comfort to our enemies.

don't be a jerk.
4 posted on 09/30/2003 12:05:29 PM PDT by camle (no fool like a damned fool)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: bmauer
From an earlier post of yours:

The key to success in academia is to support your claims with good evidence and good reasoning

Well, you just used a lie as evidence. Follow your own advice, doc.

5 posted on 09/30/2003 12:06:03 PM PDT by dirtboy (CongressmanBillyBob/John Armor for Congress - you can't separate them, so send 'em both to D.C.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: bmauer
Ideas so stupid only an intellectual could believe them.

Criticizing a war critic is not "anti-speech." Same concept as if you don't approve of me you hate me, another typical leftie tactic.

What this guy really hates is that in the marketplace of ideas he's a clear loser, so he's become a sore loser, trying to demonize the majority as "anti-speech."

6 posted on 09/30/2003 12:06:28 PM PDT by colorado tanker (The Quatermaster Corps and the 2 1/2 ton truck - unsung heroes in the victory in WWII)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: bmauer
Welcome back Prof. Why the return now?
7 posted on 09/30/2003 12:07:06 PM PDT by TheBigB ("Liberalism is a philosophy of sniveling brats." --P.J. O'Rourke)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: bmauer
Solipsism is sometimes expressed as the view that 'I am the only mind which exists', or 'My mental states are the only mental states'. However, the sole survivor of a nuclear holocaust might truly come to believe in either of these propositions without thereby being a solipsist. Solipsism is therefore more properly regarded as the doctrine that, in principle, 'existence' means for me my existence and that of my mental states. In other words, everything which I experience - physical objects, other people, events and processes, in short, anything which would commonly be regarded as a constituent of the spatio-temporal matrix in which I coexist with others - is necessarily construed by me as part of the content of my consciousness. For the solipsist, it is not merely the case that he believes that his thoughts, experiences, and emotions are, as a matter of contingent fact, the only thoughts, experiences, and emotions. Rather, the solipsist can attach no meaning to the supposition that there could be thoughts, experiences, and emotions other than his own. In short, the true solipsist understands the word 'pain', for example, to mean 'my pain' - he cannot accordingly conceive how this word is to be applied in any sense other than this exclusively egocentric one.

Get a clue.

8 posted on 09/30/2003 12:10:40 PM PDT by mrsmith
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: bmauer
Bet the FR Zambian message board is really hoppin'...
9 posted on 09/30/2003 12:11:10 PM PDT by hellinahandcart
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: bmauer
Ethos

Ethical arguments are appeals to the credibility (expertise and trustworthiness) of the person making a particular claim. Ethical arguments in general depend upon a syllogistic logic:

Ethical Argument
Major premise: People of good (expert and trustworthy) character only make good (true and virtuous) arguments.
Minor premise: The speaker is a person of good character.
Conclusion: The speaker must be making a good argument.

Analysis: Revealed in its stark form, the syllogism supporting ethical reasoning seems particularly weak. It is so weak, in fact, that science rejects it in principle (though scientists often resort to it in practice).

Leaving aside the obvious issue of human fallibility--even the most expert and trustworthy people are sometimes wrong--the ethical syllogism has numerous flaws. One obvious problem: a true statement remains true no matter who utters it. In other words, the soundness of a claim, or the validity of a chain of reasoning, has nothing to do with the character of the speaker. Truth claims must be tested independently of the speaker in order to be verified. Another obvious problem: the traits associated with credibility, such as expertise and trustworthiness, are not inborn traits; they are gained over time and can be lost. Also, these traits can be "faked" (such was the theme of the Spielberg film Catch Me If You Can). With these caveats in mind, consider the following arguments made by anti-speech advocates.

Argument 1: Secret Knowledge
Major Premise (hidden): Claims made on the basis of secret knowledge are true and invalidate other claims.
Minor premise: The Bush Administration had secret knowledge about Iraq's weapons of mass destruction.
Conclusion: The Bush Administration's claims about Iraq must be true and therefore must invalidate all other claims.

I received this argument from an anti-speech advocate. He argued that Bush had secret knowledge about Iraqi weapons that antiwar critics didn't have and therefore Bush had credibility to warn us about Iraq and to make decisions about national security that others did not have. He wrote, "Does this also not constitute an appropriate warning since he undoubtably (sic) has more information than you or I?" (Ryan Gibbons, personal correspondence, April 23, 2003)

This kind of ethical argument appeals to secrets as a way to support a claim of expertise. Since the speaker claims to know of someone who has secret knowledge that justifies his argument, then all other arguments not based on this secret knowledge are necessarily invalid. The glaring flaw in this argument is that any evidence that remains secret cannot be independently verified. The Bush administration has resorted to defending a large number of secrets on the basis of "protecting national security." It is impossible to prove or disprove such claims and it is rather obvious that such claims are convenient ways to construct a false appearance of credibility. One should be suspicious of claims to credibility built on secrets.

Argument 2: Sacrifice
Major premise (partially hidden): Soldiers sacrifice themselves selflessly on behalf of the collective and are thus protected from criticism by a sacred force.
Minor premise: My father (brother, etc.) is a soldier.
Conclusion: My father (brother, etc.) sacrificed himself selflessly on behalf of the collective and is thus protected from criticism by a sacred force.

Every nation that has a military has a kind of civil religion devoted to honoring military service. In the U.S., the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier is a powerful symbol of sacrifice on behalf of the collective.

Self-sacrifice is the ultimate guarantor of trustworthiness. If a person has nothing to gain but in fact everything to lose from following a course of action, then it cannot be said that that person is acting out of self-interest. If anything can be called a sacrifice in modern times, the death of a soldier in combat is one of them. But the argument often gets over-extended. The first letter writer I quoted says his father served in World War II but died two years ago, nearly fifty years after his service. He did not die in combat yet he, and by extension the son himself, somehow become sacred and protected from criticism. There are at least two logical fallacies in the argument as well. First, those who do not die in combat are able to defend themselves from criticism. Thus, while it may be unfair to criticize those who died selflessly, the living are still fair game. Second, those who died in combat may have sacrificed themselves selflessly, but the people who sent them into combat--the president and his staff--sacrificed nothing but have much to gain.

Argument 3: Patriotism
Major premise (hidden): Owning a flag, military uniform, collection of John Phillip Sousa records, etc. guarantees that the owner of the patriotic symbol is a patriot and thus a trustworthy person.
Minor premise: I have a flag, etc.
Conclusion: I am a trustworthy person.

Analysis: It is highly problematic to claim that patriotism is a stable entity. It is even more problematic to claim that certain accoutrements make one patriotic. Nevertheless, nearly every car dealer profits from this logical fallacy. If patriotism means "committed citizenship," then our definition of citizenship needs to be redefined. It should include one's responsibility to the local community, the state, the nation, and the planet. Surely if I sell out my community, my state, and my planet in order to give total allegiance to the nation, I have betrayed my broader allegiances.

Argument 4: Military Credentials
Major premise: Only military credentials enable one to speak knowledgeably about war.
Minor premise: Most critics of the war in Iraq do not have military credentials.
Conclusion: Most critics of the war in Iraq cannot speak knowledgeably about war.

Analysis: The major premise might be true if the critics of the war in Iraq had limited their comments only to battlefield strategies and tactics. Most critics of the war in Iraq, however, raised a host of issues related to the war, including political, moral, and ethical issues. Surely there are people who do not have military expertise who are nonetheless qualified to speak about these issues. The logical fallacy behind this argument enabled the major media outlets to rely heavily upon military generals for commentary and to ignore other speakers who could have contributed much to the public discussion of the war.

Argument 5: Academic Freedom as a Veil
Major premise: Academics (meaning only those opposed to the war) hide behind special free speech rights that allow them to speak irresponsibly.
Minor premise: Dr. ----- is an academic.
Conclusion: Dr. ----- hides behind special free speech rights that allow him to speak irresponsibly.

Analysis: The major premise is false. Since a number of academics throughout the country have been suspended for speaking out against the war and face threats of intimidation and reprisal, any claim about their special free speech status must be questioned. (Keefe-Feldman, 2003) The major premise also assumes that any anti-war speech is irresponsible. As I argue throughout this essay, this is not the case.

Argument 6: Academics as Spoiled Elitists
Major premise: Academics (meaning only those opposed to the war) are elitist and spoiled, and thus are not credible experts.
Minor premise: Dr. ----- is an academic.
Conclusion: Dr. ----- is not a credible expert.

Analysis: The unfairness of the claim in the major premise is obvious. Professors who agree with administration policy never get labeled "elitist." Rather, they get labeled "expert." It is worth pointing out that the president, vice president, most of the cabinet, most of the congress are multi-millionaires with connections to powerful business and media elites. (The Straits Times, 2003) By contrast, most professors are anything but millionaires and have few connections to business and media elites. Academics are by definition experts in their fields yet few are consulted in the shaping of public policy. Public policy, like the Bush-Cheney energy plan, is shaped now largely by corporate executives in secret meetings. (NRDC, 2001)

Argument 7: Criticism as a Sign of Untrustworthiness
Major premise (partially hidden): Because critics use negative language and are willing to attack others, they must be untrustworthy.
Minor premise: Opponents of the war in Iraq (or other U.S. policies) use criticism.
Conclusion: Opponents of the war in Iraq (or other U.S. policies) are untrustworthy. Conversely, supporters of U.S. policies are trustworthy.

Analysis: War is far more "negative" than criticism, which can be understood as an alternative to physical conflict. Nietzsche claims that Socrates, by inventing the dialectic, "discovered a new kind of agon, that he became its first fencing master for the noble circles of Athens." (Nietzsche, 1895) In other words, Socrates envisioned the dialectic as a form of verbal combat in which the person with the best reasoning, rather than the person with the greatest strength, carried the day. The major premise above is false because one can criticize others truthfully and still be trustworthy. If we modified the major premise to state that false or unfair attacks make the critic untrustworthy, then it would be acceptable. The minor premise would then need to be revised to reflect this change; it would state: "Opponents of the war in Iraq (or other U.S. policies) use untrue or unfair criticism." Since much of the anti-war criticism has been truthful and fair, we must reject the minor premise as well. The conclusion is false because it doesn't follow from the revised premises. The converse is false as well; many supporters of the war in Iraq used negative language and attacked others, and many did so using untrue and unfair criticism. One example: Rush Limbaugh stated, "It is beyond me how anybody can look at these protesters and call them anything than what they are: anti-American, anti-capitalist pro-Marxists and communists." (Signorile, 2003)

A critic remains trustworthy, no matter how harsh her criticism of the government, if her criticism is true and fair. Supporters of the 2003 war against Iraq ought to agree that it would have been fair to criticize the Reagan administration in the 1980s for supporting Saddam Hussein; on Dec. 20, 1983, Current Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, then a special envoy for Reagan, visited Saddam Hussein to discuss U.S. support for Iraq in its war with Iran, after US intelligence had confirmed that Iraq was using chemical weapons "almost daily." (Borger, 2002) Pro-war advocates should accept the principle that criticism of one's government can be both truthful and fair and does not make the critic untrustworthy. Yet the intense fear of criticism within the Bush administration and their supporters makes even obvious statements of truth--like the statement that no weapons of mass destruction have yet been found in Iraq--suspect. The Bush administration's extreme paranoia about criticism has been satirized brilliantly by The Onion recently in their lead article, "Bush Asks Congress For $30 Billion To Help Fight War On Criticism." (The Onion, 2003)

Argument 8: Anti-war Critics are Controlled only by Emotion
Major premise: Anyone who is controlled by emotions cannot be a rational person.
Minor premise: Anti-war critics are controlled by their emotions.
Conclusion: Anti-war critics cannot be rational people.

Analysis: The major premise is false because emotions can be entirely rational. Isn't it rational to feel fearful if you see an oncoming car swerve towards you? Your fear helps you respond appropriately to the situation by alerting you to move out of the way. Sometimes emotions can be inappropriate to a situation: such is the case in common phobias like fear of heights and fear of spiders. The minor premise is false because critics of the Iraq war, in general, are not controlled by our emotions. Rather, our emotions have been appropriate to the situation. We were outraged that the Bush administration used forged documents and numerous big lies (Rangwala and Whitaker, 2003) to get the U.S. into a war. We were afraid that the Iraq war would cause needless suffering; this fear is being borne out every day as we see lootings and shootings in Iraq, terrorist attacks in the Middle East, and political repression here and throughout the world. By contrast, we saw pro-Bush supporters express inappropriate emotional sentiments at every turn; it was inappropriate for them to fear Iraq, a defeated and impoverished nation halfway around the globe under a huge U.S. enforced no-fly zone, UN weapons inspectors roving everywhere, a degraded military, no air force or navy, no known weapons of mass destruction, no connection to the 9/11 hijackings and no proven links to al-Qaeda. It was inappropriate for pro-Bush supporters to hate anti-war protestors who had done nothing to harm the nation. It was and still is inappropriate for anybody to feel pride when soldiers kill innocent civilians for no good reason.

10 posted on 09/30/2003 12:11:22 PM PDT by bmauer
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: m1911
hehehe - you just outdid the lying weasel at his own game, and without all the fancy non-marketable degrees...
11 posted on 09/30/2003 12:11:30 PM PDT by dirtboy (CongressmanBillyBob/John Armor for Congress - you can't separate them, so send 'em both to D.C.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 3 | View Replies]

To: dirtboy
Regretably, the key to success in academia these days is to toe the party line and suck up to all the right people.

That has always been the case to some degree, but never more than now.
12 posted on 09/30/2003 12:12:17 PM PDT by Cicero (Marcus Tullius)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 5 | View Replies]

To: mrsmith
What's your point about solipsism?

Thank you for the definition, by the way.
13 posted on 09/30/2003 12:12:54 PM PDT by bmauer
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 8 | View Replies]

To: bmauer
When are you going to answer for the lie in your article, prof?
14 posted on 09/30/2003 12:13:23 PM PDT by dirtboy (CongressmanBillyBob/John Armor for Congress - you can't separate them, so send 'em both to D.C.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 13 | View Replies]

To: dirtboy
When are you going to answer for the lie in your article, prof?

Um, maybe never (note the title change).

I never encountered bmauer before today, but I'm sure going to miss all those words (sob!).

15 posted on 09/30/2003 12:22:35 PM PDT by hellinahandcart
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 14 | View Replies]

To: bmauer
Well, FR does allow a few liberal posters. However, we ask that they be honest liberals and not resort to the lies we see all the time in the media and coming from the Democratic Party. When you claimed that Bush said that the threat from Saddam was immenient, you failed the honesty test ... and hence the FR longevity test as well. Go back and spoon-feed your lies to a captive room of students who dare not call you on it. Just realize that we're waiting to straighten them out with a good dose of the truth once they get away from your clutches.
16 posted on 09/30/2003 12:23:01 PM PDT by dirtboy (CongressmanBillyBob/John Armor for Congress - you can't separate them, so send 'em both to D.C.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: bmauer
Perhaps you should take a look at your major premises in light of the tactic commonly known as the "strawman". Numbers 3 and 7 in particular are the funniest damn things I've heard in a while. I'm sure you're a legend in your own mind.

By the way, what happened? I thought this thread was pulled.
17 posted on 09/30/2003 12:23:46 PM PDT by m1911
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 10 | View Replies]

To: m1911
By the way, what happened? I thought this thread was pulled.

I think the mods saw this as one of the finest examples of over-the-top liberal academic bullsh** and decided to keep it up as a museum piece.

18 posted on 09/30/2003 12:24:55 PM PDT by dirtboy (CongressmanBillyBob/John Armor for Congress - you can't separate them, so send 'em both to D.C.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 17 | View Replies]

To: bmauer
"I think this war is an attempt by President Bush to concentrate his hold on power," is no less an abuse of discourse than any example you cite.

Offer reasoned discourse and you will be entitled to it.

Get over yourself, grow up, good bye.

19 posted on 09/30/2003 12:26:11 PM PDT by mrsmith
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 13 | View Replies]

To: dirtboy
LOL. Good. The only person I see filling in unspoken arguments (read: putting words in the other side's mouth) is the author. I mean "Major premise (hidden): Only soldiers can defend the rights of all to free speech" - nice one, try leaving the "only" off the front and maybe you'll get within a mile of a real persons opinion.
20 posted on 09/30/2003 12:27:31 PM PDT by m1911
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 18 | View Replies]


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-2021-4041-6061-63 next last

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson