Well, the Dems say there's no denying the statistics that the Dems say support the validity of the election. And there's no denying that those same statistics make out that Biden's the most popular presidential candidate in history. But I think that most people will realize that Obama, Clinton, and several other presidential candidates of the past have been much more popular than the doddering, foggy incumbent ever was.mickthinks wrote: ↑Sun Jun 23, 2024 1:02 pm There it is!
Yes it is true that Joe Biden was not the most popular presidential candidate in history. But that isn’t evidence that Trump’s big lie isn’t a lie but instead must be true.
Not even close, actually. But it certainly is a paradox the Dem-supporters cannot rationally deny. Something was deceptive about that election; their own statistics make it glaringly obvious. And that's but one thing: there are lots more dodgy moments in that election, for sure. How about the suppression of the Biden laptop, which is now universally accepted, even by the Dem press, as being legit? Either they lied then, or they're lying now: but neither of us can rationally doubt they've lied.That’s your whole case, isn’t it Manny?
The principle is actually simple: if somebody does one thing one day, and does the exact reverse the next, then they manifest that either before or after, they made a mistake / lied. And it's not even a partisan principle: it applies equally to all.
But can I get you to admit that? Plausibly not. However, since you cannot help but see it, and I see it, here we are -- two adults having a conversation in which both know what's true, but one is pretending not to know, and the other is attempting to convince somebody who already knows what the truth is. How much more of that is sane...well, I doubt much more will prove fruitful. Better we should speak truth to each other than maintain the sham of disbelieving the evidence neither of us can actually disbelieve.