Originally posted by Imran Siddiqui
Ah, the philosopher engages in a classic logical fallacy. Why am I not suprised?! He thinks that if I say some unions are corrupt, then I mean all unions suck. Isn't that like extrapolating the general from the specific or something? You're the philosopher, you should know what logical fallacy you are committing here.
And putting words in someone else's mouth (ie, you think all unions are bad and evil and should be abolished). Isn't that another logical fallacy?
Man, you must be a piss poor philosophy teacher with a track record for logical fallacies like this!
Listen to yourself: some unions are corrupt, therefore all unions suck.
Ah, the philosopher engages in a classic logical fallacy. Why am I not suprised?! He thinks that if I say some unions are corrupt, then I mean all unions suck. Isn't that like extrapolating the general from the specific or something? You're the philosopher, you should know what logical fallacy you are committing here.
And putting words in someone else's mouth (ie, you think all unions are bad and evil and should be abolished). Isn't that another logical fallacy?
Man, you must be a piss poor philosophy teacher with a track record for logical fallacies like this!
Go back and read your own posts. You acknowledged the possibility that some unions may be OK and then went on to the typical one sided railing against the institution as stealing from workers blah blah blah blah. In short, all the usual misinformed tripe that substitutes for reasoning and evidence among too many of those on the political right.
What is someone supposed to think? That deep down you have a fair minded, balanced opinion about unions? Give me a break...
Call me what you like, but I'd never in a million years hire you as a lawyer, nor allow you anywhere near legislation.
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