Political illogic
POLITICALLY motivated: the omnibus catch phrase that has become a convenient and uniform, albeit foolhardy, escape clause of elected officials haled to the Ombudsman or the courts on charges of graft and corruption.
Politically motivated, in thus mintage, makes a mockery of reason if not a negation of logic. For, it seeks to compensate with trivialized emotions what it sorely lacks in intellectual discourse; opting for high drama over cold reason.
So, rather than reasoned arguments to disprove the charges ranged against them, the accused resort to all means of (ir)rationalizations that comprise the body of Material Fallacies of Reasoning any student of my day learned in Philosophy 101. (With the reason and logic so uncommon nowadays, I wonder if they still teach this course.) It goes thus:
Item A: “I do not want to stoop to their level by dignifying with any comment the allegations against my person.”
Classic argumentum ad hominem -- a shift from the issues to the personality of the accuser, even to the point of ridicule.
Item B: “Will you believe this communist raising all these allegations against me, a democratically elected official?
The fallacy of emotive language is exampled here – communist meant to cast aspersion, to refer to the accuser with contempt. Not only before the recently resigned Major General Jovito Palparan but also the general public.
Item C: “After all my sacrifices – foregoing with my highly lucrative profession, neglecting my family just so I can be an exemplary public servant – this (graft case) is the gratitude I get!”
An appeal to pity, to gain public sympathy, deftly skirting the main issues – this is argumentum ad misericordiam.
At the political hustings, Mabalacat’s John Santos mastered this fallacy thus: “Sinawa na ku pung masasambut. Malunus na ko pu kanaku. Patakmanan yu na ku mang panyambut.” (I am fed up with losing. Have pity on me. Please, give me a taste of victory.) The three consecutive terms at the provincial board of the man popularly referred to as “Richard Gomez” makes a very strong argument, if not a solid testament, to the electoral efficacy of this fallacy.
Item D: “I would have not have been elected to the House if I was corrupt as mayor.”
This is argumentum ad verecundiam – the appeal to respect, or prestige being equated with evidence.
The implication in the item cited -- that a corrupt official cannot get elected to Congress – falls under another fallacy: contrary to fact conditional error. It alters reality and then draws conclusion from this alteration. Congress incorruptible? Cow dung!
Item E: “They filed these cases against me because I will wrest the mayorship from them in the coming elections.”
The post hoc fallacy or finding consequence in sequence. It is made to appear that an announcement of an impending run in the next elections triggered the filing of the cases against the accused, a false cause really. In a local incident though, the cases were filed before the announcement was made. Still, the fallacy stands.
Item F: “They are accusing me of stealing the people’s money. How about the bank loan they secured?”
Offense as the greatest defense. The accused turned accuser – appending similar allegations of wrongdoing to his nemesis. This is the fallacy of tu quoque -- “you yourself do it.” As in pare-parehu tamu mu king akbak nang Hudas (we are all the same in Judas’ skewer.)
Item G: “This (graft case) is what I get for being the best mayor this city ever had.”
Two fallacies interplay here: irrelevance or ignoratio elenchi, and contradiction. At issue is the graft case, so arguments must focus on that. And being the “best mayor” is highly debatable. Where did that title come from?
The above are but a sampling of erroneous ways of reasoning that have assumed a semblance of validity, given the pervasive system of idiotization in the country today.
And what idiot can be worse than one in Congress who admitted to lapses in the observance of governmental rules and procedures, rationalizing them as necessary to ensure smooth government operations and service delivery!
To him the appellation solon is most misappropriated. A wise lawgiver in a law circumventor! More than dialectical contradiction, there is sheer illogic here.
Politically motivated, in thus mintage, makes a mockery of reason if not a negation of logic. For, it seeks to compensate with trivialized emotions what it sorely lacks in intellectual discourse; opting for high drama over cold reason.
So, rather than reasoned arguments to disprove the charges ranged against them, the accused resort to all means of (ir)rationalizations that comprise the body of Material Fallacies of Reasoning any student of my day learned in Philosophy 101. (With the reason and logic so uncommon nowadays, I wonder if they still teach this course.) It goes thus:
Item A: “I do not want to stoop to their level by dignifying with any comment the allegations against my person.”
Classic argumentum ad hominem -- a shift from the issues to the personality of the accuser, even to the point of ridicule.
Item B: “Will you believe this communist raising all these allegations against me, a democratically elected official?
The fallacy of emotive language is exampled here – communist meant to cast aspersion, to refer to the accuser with contempt. Not only before the recently resigned Major General Jovito Palparan but also the general public.
Item C: “After all my sacrifices – foregoing with my highly lucrative profession, neglecting my family just so I can be an exemplary public servant – this (graft case) is the gratitude I get!”
An appeal to pity, to gain public sympathy, deftly skirting the main issues – this is argumentum ad misericordiam.
At the political hustings, Mabalacat’s John Santos mastered this fallacy thus: “Sinawa na ku pung masasambut. Malunus na ko pu kanaku. Patakmanan yu na ku mang panyambut.” (I am fed up with losing. Have pity on me. Please, give me a taste of victory.) The three consecutive terms at the provincial board of the man popularly referred to as “Richard Gomez” makes a very strong argument, if not a solid testament, to the electoral efficacy of this fallacy.
Item D: “I would have not have been elected to the House if I was corrupt as mayor.”
This is argumentum ad verecundiam – the appeal to respect, or prestige being equated with evidence.
The implication in the item cited -- that a corrupt official cannot get elected to Congress – falls under another fallacy: contrary to fact conditional error. It alters reality and then draws conclusion from this alteration. Congress incorruptible? Cow dung!
Item E: “They filed these cases against me because I will wrest the mayorship from them in the coming elections.”
The post hoc fallacy or finding consequence in sequence. It is made to appear that an announcement of an impending run in the next elections triggered the filing of the cases against the accused, a false cause really. In a local incident though, the cases were filed before the announcement was made. Still, the fallacy stands.
Item F: “They are accusing me of stealing the people’s money. How about the bank loan they secured?”
Offense as the greatest defense. The accused turned accuser – appending similar allegations of wrongdoing to his nemesis. This is the fallacy of tu quoque -- “you yourself do it.” As in pare-parehu tamu mu king akbak nang Hudas (we are all the same in Judas’ skewer.)
Item G: “This (graft case) is what I get for being the best mayor this city ever had.”
Two fallacies interplay here: irrelevance or ignoratio elenchi, and contradiction. At issue is the graft case, so arguments must focus on that. And being the “best mayor” is highly debatable. Where did that title come from?
The above are but a sampling of erroneous ways of reasoning that have assumed a semblance of validity, given the pervasive system of idiotization in the country today.
And what idiot can be worse than one in Congress who admitted to lapses in the observance of governmental rules and procedures, rationalizing them as necessary to ensure smooth government operations and service delivery!
To him the appellation solon is most misappropriated. A wise lawgiver in a law circumventor! More than dialectical contradiction, there is sheer illogic here.
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