Plus it would generate sympathy for the candidate who was being exceedingly dishonest.Meadmaker wrote: ↑Thu Sep 12, 2024 3:35 amImagine an undecided voter.President Bush wrote: ↑Wed Sep 11, 2024 10:47 pm
You said that people who haven't decided, tune in to hear what the candidates have to say... in this case things like illegal immigrants eating people's cats and dogs.
You apparently don't believe moderators should point out such factual inaccuracies in candidates’ comments during a debate. I was under the impression that was part of their role in these debates.
What if Trump, again, had said last night that he'd won the 2020 election? Nobody could have said "uh, no you didn't" because it might suggest moderator bias and making it look as if Trump were being treated unfairly?
You are saying that objectively fact checking somebody as prone to spreading falsehoods as Trump shouldn't be done because that will make it look - to the independently thinking voting public - as if that fact checker were against Trump? Which could, uh oh, throw the election?
I mean, c'mon.
Donald Trump says, "They're eating dogs!"
The undecided voter thinks, "Whoa! That's really awful. Someone needs to do something to stop it!"
Then, David Muir says, "The city manager says there's no evidence."
And the undecided voter thinks...."Oh....well that's good. Trump should stop making stuff up like that."
I think the last step (i.e. the point where the undecided changes his mind because of what David Muir says) is totally implausible.
Undecided voters sometimes prefer a little theme music.
https://x.com/NoahGarfinkel/status/1833708370974695574
Not sure what theme music would be appealing to undecided voters when a candidate claims his opponent supports killing babies after they're born.