Dan Geer: Politicians know that the surest way to win an argument is, as they say, to "frame the question", by which they mean painting a picture that their opposition has to work to overcome. Every time there is a televised debate where some self-important interlocutor asks a question that is impossible to answer succinctly, and then gives the candidate sixty seconds of airtime, painting into a corner by way of selective disclosure is what is happening.
Decius: I like the judicial process -- it enables a discussion of issues in a forum where there isn't as much room for bullshit as there is in the legislature.
Yaniv Bernstein: It's amazing the amount of difference a cultural intolerance to bullshit can make.
Henry Farrell and Martha Finnemore: Few U.S. officials think of their ability to act hypocritically as a key strategic resource. Indeed, one of the reasons American hypocrisy is so effective is that it stems from sincerity: most U.S. politicians do not recognize just how two-faced their country is.
Turkeys Voting for Christmas: In contemporary politics, if you can fake sincerity, you have got it made.
John Horgan on the theories of Robert Trivers: The more we believe our own lies, the more sincerely, and hence effectively, we can lie to others.
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