For argument based on knowledge implies instruction, and there are people whom one cannot instruct - Aristotle
Friday, 14 October 2022
Don’t Know Zone
Uncertainty – there is more of it around than we admit. It gives rise to a very familiar problem which never goes away – many people have fixed views about major social and political issues where uncertainty should be an important consideration. Too often we see a divisive impetus towards one heavily promoted official viewpoint versus sceptics trying to dodge censorship.
We may also see a neutral zone which includes the ‘don’t knows’, but this tends to seem rather an inadequate standpoint when invective rules the debate. Yet there are circumstances where the ‘don’t know zone’ has its attractions. Suppose we take the election of Joe Biden as an example.
The establishment consensus says Biden was elected legitimately. Asserted with diminishing enthusiasm perhaps, but rock-solid legitimacy is the establishment claim. Many Trump supporters and others say he was not elected legitimately, yet to a good approximation, nobody appears to know with any degree of certainty.
If there was extensive fraud and it occurred in a fragmented, low-level manner, then it is possible that nobody knows the extent of it. By its very nature it would be covert and if it was covert, fragmented and low level it could be impossible to quantify with a rational level of confidence. Vote counts could be insurmountably uncertain.
In spite of this, many people will cite sources to demonstrate the correctness of their viewpoint, pour scorn on their opponents and generally insist that Biden was elected legitimately. Others will declare with equal conviction that he was elected fraudulently. It mostly depends on political affiliation.
Yet there is considerable interest to be derived from the don’t know zone. There was electoral fraud, there is always electoral fraud, but nobody appears to know if it made a decisive difference. That there are two convinced camps suggests that nobody knows is not an unreasonable assumption.
The assumption is an example of the middle ground fallacy if we assume that one side or the other has the correct answer. The election cannot be both legitimate and not legitimate. Yet if we don’t know then it is at least worth taking a look at that middle ground as in this case the fallacy may not be resolvable.
If we chose the don’t know zone, then it’s 50/50, the toss of a coin. Heads says Joe Biden was elected legitimately, tails says he was not. This is surely sufficiently appalling for anyone, but apparently not. The democratic world is not sufficiently horrified by the uncertain nature of the Biden election.
There is no need to express the issue more strongly to bring out the underlying problem, which isn’t only the Biden election, but future elections too. We have wandered into a situation where democratic elections are not securely democratic because they are not transparently secure. That’s something we do know.
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6 comments:
Of course there was fraud - it was a US election and Dems were involved.
The question is whether the fraud changed the result. I don't know. But those who deny any fraud at all are obvs simply liars.
Ah... consider the benefits of 'certainty' (whether the matter is true or not).
If you believe that Joe Biden was elected fairly and without fraud, then you can rest happy in your bed believing that nothing more is required of you (like ensuring a valid election process is put in place, and that will take effort).
If you believe that Donald Trump was defeated by fraud then you can reassure yourself that THEY are to blame and nothing more is required of you (like formulating better policies, getting the vote out AND ensuring a valid election process is put in place, and that will take effort).
And since whoever you vote for the Government (or President) still wins... a rough rule of thumb (vote for my team) is probably good enough to satisfy your concerns.
The "don't know zone" appears to be heavily protected by certain politicians. It would be very easy to ensure that the chances of voter fraud in U.S. elections were minimised almost to zero. Old-fashioned low-tech processes like having clear rules and insisting that voters turn up in person and get their names crossed off a list. I'm pretty sure that if it works for the local tennis club, then America could make it work if the stakes are so high.
But doing this would be racist and discriminatory. It would discriminate against those who can't be bothered to vote, but whose support is somehow important in a wider struggle about culture. In America, the democrats (with a small 'c' - those who support democracy) have been outgunned by the social justice activists.
dearieme - shortly after the election result, when Trump claimed the result was fraudulent, the BBC reported his claim as false, even before they could possibly know that. It was clear enough that simple lies were to be the core of the mainstream narrative.
DJ - yes, there are benefits to 'certainty' which seem to drive us towards conclusions which would be better treated as uncertain. It seems to be a fundamental aspect of what we are.
Sam - I agree, those who support democracy have been outgunned by social justice activists. It is a major problem, but voters aren't likely to vote for a solution.
Yes you're right AK. After the elections the BBC said that Trump had claimed the result was fraudulent 'with no evidence'. How did they know he had no evidence? Mark, they did not say he hadn't yet proffered any, they said he had made the allegations without any!
Tammly - that's right, it was a straightforward lie. Even though the BBC is what it is, I recall being surprised that it published such a claim.
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