: Click or tap on any technique - the definition will be displayed here. that appears in bold to show its definition.
: straw man - misrepresenting an opponent's position or argument to make it easier to attack, usually by exaggerating, distorting, or just completely fabricating it. : While Kelly has supported most Biden policies, he hasn't backed Biden every single time.[1]
: straw man - misrepresenting an opponent's position or argument to make it easier to attack, usually by exaggerating, distorting, or just completely fabricating it. : While Masters once brought up social security privatization as an option for future generations, he never suggested doing it now.[2]
: common folk - establishing a connection with an audience based on being just like one of them and therefore being able to empathize with their concerns.
: straw man - misrepresenting an opponent's position or argument to make it easier to attack, usually by exaggerating, distorting, or just completely fabricating it. : While Masters once brought up social security privatization as an option for future generations, he never suggested doing it now.[2]
: half truth - a statement that is essentially true, but lacking critical information and presented as the whole truth. : Masters mentions Biden policies for giving rise to inflation, while ignoring the greater stimulus spending that occurred under Trump.[3]
: half truth - a statement that is essentially true, but lacking critical information and presented as the whole truth. : Masters mentions Biden energy policies for oil prices surging, while ignoring greater contributing factors like Covid and the war in Ukraine.[4]
: half truth - a statement that is essentially true, but lacking critical information and presented as the whole truth. : Masters mentions stimulus spending under Biden for giving rise to inflation, while ignoring the greater stimulus spending that occurred under Trump.[3]
: passing the buck - shifting blame onto someone else for self-exoneration or to direct attention away from those really at fault. : For inflation only to Covid, when many economists say the decision to flood the economy with stimulus money helped fuel inflation.[5]
: straw man - misrepresenting an opponent's position or argument to make it easier to attack, usually by exaggerating, distorting, or just completely fabricating it. : While Masters once brought up social security privatization as an option for future generations, he never suggested doing it now.[2]
: straw man - misrepresenting an opponent's position or argument to make it easier to attack, usually by exaggerating, distorting, or just completely fabricating it. : While Kelly has supported most Biden policies, he hasn't backed Biden every single time.[1]
: misleading claim - a statement with a few elements or kernel of truth, which can easily be proven deceptive or fundamentally untrue. : If the IRS uses the funds to hire new agents, it won't be immediate, but over 10 years, to replace 50,000 IRS agents who will be retiring.[6]
: false claim - a statement that is directly contradicted by fact and can be easily proven untrue. : While Mark Kelly voted for stimulus checks under the American Rescue Plan, he never voted to send those checks to illegal aliens.[7]
: FUD - making dire warnings or raising doubt about an issue, while provided little or no specifics or evidence to support the claims. : Warning that all the IRS agents hired will be indiscriminately auditing everyone by this time next year.
: misleading claim - a statement with a few elements or kernel of truth, which can easily be proven deceptive or fundamentally untrue. : Kelly "said no" to a GOP proposed amendment that required hiring 18,000 border patrol agents before a single IRS agent could be hired.[8]
: exaggeration - stretching the truth, to make something seem more powerful or meaningful than it actually is. : While roughly $1 billion was granted for Customs and Border Protection, only about 10% went toward increasing border patrol agents.[6]
: misleading claim - a statement with a few elements or kernel of truth, which can easily be proven deceptive or fundamentally untrue. : Kelly voted against an amendment that required hiring 18,000 border patrol agents before a single IRS agent could be hired.[8]
: false claim - a statement that is directly contradicted by fact and can be easily proven untrue. : Record numbers of illegal aliens, when they come here, are arrested and over 1/3rd are deported.[9][10]
: false claim - a statement that is directly contradicted by fact and can be easily proven untrue. : Undocumented immigrants are not treated better than U.S. military service members.[11]
: false claim - a statement that is directly contradicted by fact and can be easily proven untrue. : Arrests along the southern border for 2022 are the highest ever recorded and about 36% of those crossing the border are deported.[9][10]
: false claim - a statement that is directly contradicted by fact and can be easily proven untrue. : Kelly's action taken while in office indicate he does not support open borders and has pushed Biden to do more.[12]
: guilt by association - using an opponent's links to another to assign the other's beliefs, misdeeds, or other unattractive qualities to the opponent. : Masters uses the false claim that the border is "wide open" to link Kelly to terrorist narcos.
: false claim - a statement that is directly contradicted by fact and can be easily proven untrue. : Arrests along the southern border for 2022 are the highest ever recorded.[9][10]
: baseless claim - a statement that is presented as accepted or established fact, but no evidence could be found to support the claim. : 90% of border patrol agents would say they are disgusted with Mark Kelly.
: false claim - a statement that is directly contradicted by fact and can be easily proven untrue. : Arrests along the southern border for 2022 are the highest ever recorded.[9][10]
: false claim - a statement that is directly contradicted by fact and can be easily proven untrue. : Arrests along the southern border for 2022 are the highest ever recorded.[9][10]
: straw man - misrepresenting an opponent's position or argument to make it easier to attack, usually by exaggerating, distorting, or just completely fabricating it. : While Masters does want a national abortion ban, even in cases of rape, the ban applies only to abortions after the 3rd trimester.[13]
: straw man - misrepresenting an opponent's position or argument to make it easier to attack, usually by exaggerating, distorting, or just completely fabricating it. : While Kelly did sponsor a bill that would allow abortion up until the moment of birth, it would be only if the life of the mother is at risk.[14]
: guilt by association - using an opponent's links to another to assign the other's beliefs, misdeeds, or other unattractive qualities to the opponent. : Masters uses Kelly's vote for the Women's Health Protection Act to link him to Warren, Sanders, AOC, China, and North Korea.
: projection - accusing an opponent of using the same underhanded tactics or committing the same misdeeds the accuser is guilty of. : Masters, who just recently changed his radical positions on abortion, accuses Kelly of lying about his positions, while he accuses Kelly of being a radical on abortion.[15]
: red herring - throwing an irrelevant fact into an argument to divert attention from the real issue at hand. : Masters defends the positions he has on his website now, which have no relation to the positions he had on his website two months ago.[13]
: straw man - misrepresenting an opponent's position or argument to make it easier to attack, usually by exaggerating, distorting, or just completely fabricating it. : While Kelly's legislation would allow abortion up until birth, it would be only if the life of the mother is at risk.[14]
: red herring - throwing an irrelevant fact into an argument to divert attention from the real issue at hand. : Masters brings up Arizona's 15-week law and Graham's bill on abortion, when both have no relation to the positions he held on abortion two months ago.[13]
: ad hominem - attacking the character or motive of the person making an argument, rather than attacking the argument itself. : Kelly attacks Masters' character, while not challenging the merits of his positions.
: straw man - misrepresenting an opponent's position or argument to make it easier to attack, usually by exaggerating, distorting, or just completely fabricating it. : While Kelly's policy would allow abortion up until birth, it would be only if the life of the mother is at risk.[14]
: misleading claim - a statement with a few elements or kernel of truth, which can easily be proven deceptive or fundamentally untrue. : The FBI warned Facebook and other big tech companies about amplifying Russian disinformation before the election and played no direct role in suppressing the Hunter Biden story.[16][17]
: misleading claim - a statement with a few elements or kernel of truth, which can easily be proven deceptive or fundamentally untrue. : The FBI didn't "work with" big tech and big media to censor the Hunter Biden laptop story. Big tech did that independently.[16][17]
: misleading claim - a statement with a few elements or kernel of truth, which can easily be proven deceptive or fundamentally untrue. : The FBI was not "working with" big tech or the media and played no direct role in suppressing the Hunter Biden story. Big tech did that independently.[16][17]
: honor by association - championing cultural sacred cows to assume the respect, authority, sanction, and prestige of those symbols. : Veterans, the military.
: appeal to compromised authority - insisting something is true because an expert on the issue says it's true, when that expert has a vested interest in the outcome. : 57% of Arizona vets and 72% of active duty military support Masters, according to his own "latest internal polling."
: appeal to tradition - suggesting that a long-standing practice must be better than newer alternatives and that abandoning it could have detrimental implications. : Of using gender pronouns strictly according to someone's assigned sex at birth.
Total number of techniques detected over the 56:53 runtime of this video clip:
PROPAGANDA TECHNIQUES
10 OCCURRENCES
ad hominem: appeal to tradition: common folk: FUD: guilt by association: honor by association: projection: red herring: