articlecrossroad.com articlecrossroad.com
   Home Page :> About Us :> Privacy Policy :> ToS :> Add Your Link :> Submit Article
Search:   
Get Free Links
 
   

Garden & Home

   

Cooking & Drinking

   

Business & Services

   

Automobiles

   

Relationship & Lifestyle

   

Policies & Law

   

Finance & Banking

   

Education & Reference

   

Internet & Computers

   

Society & Issues

   

Self Enhancement

   

Sports & Adventure

   

Property & Agents

   

Technology & Science

   

Fitness & Health

   

Tour & Travel

   

Healthcare & Treatment

   

Issues & News

   

Jobs & Careers

   

Recreation

   

Culture & Art

   

Teens & Kids

   

Malls & Shopping

   

Online & Board Games

 

Home Page › Issues & News › Politics
 

The Bush "There Or Here" Fallacy and the War in Iraq

 

Author: Carson C. Day

Today we wish to examine a fallacy, or error in reasoning, which we have found springing up now and again in today's popular discourse about the so-called War On Terror. This one comes straight from the top -- well, not the VERY top -- but from Washington D.C. You have heard the President say it on national teevee, and so have we: "We either have to fight them [the terrorists] over there [i.e. Iraq], or we have to fight them over here [i.e. inside the U.S. border]."

Now we have chosen to examine this particular Bushism because, here, Mr. Bush has offered quite the textbook example of what informal logic-addicts call, a "false disjunction," or simply the "either-or" fallacy. To commit this error in reasoning, you only need to oversimplify a range of many options, reducing it to a pretended range that limits them to two logically-possible options only.

For instance, isn't possible that, if the U.S. pulled its troops from Iraq, using many of them to assist with border patrol duties, that we could avoid fighting "them" here by not letting them in, and yet not fight them "there" either? Now, to be sure, many will hasten to point out that they see this as impractical, ill-advised (for whatever reason), etc. My only point remains this: the option I have mentioned is logically possible. And I could imagine quite a few others.

For instance, the U.S. could spend a handsome little sum on policing our domestic internal affairs, and arrest all terrorists before they can do any harm. We have already arrested quite a few of them here without any fight whatever. One might argue that bloodless arrests seem much better, not to mention a good deal cheaper, than national invasions where the whole countryside gets shot up.

Now, if the U.S. can act with pre-emptive success in Iraq (for the president has suggested many times that it can), why can it not do so also much closer to home? But if the U.S. cannot do so on its home turf, why should anyone think they can do it in Iraq?

Remember, I do not mean to argue here against the U.S. presence in Iraq, but only to critique one particular reason offered for it by the president. He has, after all, listed quite a few different reasons for the invasion, at different times -- which may or may not be a good thing.

For today, then, let the reader take away this lesson in the logic of popular discourse -- never reduce a range of many possible options to two only, unless you prepare well enough to show that the others do not represent truly logical options. Otherwise, you will have committed the either-or fallacy.

Author Bio:
Carson C. Day is a champion in this field. Carson has written several articles in the past on this topic.
You can also reach this article by using: political issues, political news, current political issues, latest political news
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
On Existence 2
 
Flood Damaged Cars Still Around
 
Chinese Ministry of Information Internet Registration Laws
 
God, Country, and the Pledge of Allegiance
 
White Sun - Tao of Heaven. Showers of Wisdom ( Part 3 of 3 )
 
Our Dead Are Not Milestones
 
Congress Considers National Data Privacy Law
 
Super Bowl Harbinger of Problem Drinking
 
Measuring God's grace
 
Murder City; The Nation's Capital
 
 
 
Home Page :> Privacy Policy :> ToS  
Copyright © 2008 www.articlecrossroad.com