Inventing History
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@taiwan_girl said in Inventing History:
That was weird. I had never heard that story before, so figured it was probably made up. Why she would think it was a good story to tell. Quite easy to check if true or not.
Candy Crowley would've called her out on it - nah, she's a Democrat.
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People see bias because they themselves are biased.
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Pretty much everybody thinks their person won the debate, and pretty much everybody thinks their person was unfairly treated by somebody or other.
Maybe the key to winning debates is to be unfairly treated.
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@Doctor-Phibes said in Inventing History:
Pretty much everybody thinks their person won the debate, and pretty much everybody thinks their person was unfairly treated by somebody or other.
Maybe the key to winning debates is to be unfairly treated.
Exactly.
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I only watched a few minutes.
Ms Harris went over her time and when she was warned about it she said she was going to keep going, so the moderator shut up.
Mr Pence went over his time and the moderator must have said "thank you" at least a couple dozen times before he stopped.
In that short exchange that I watched, Mr Pence was clearly treated unfairly.
Having said that, to be fair, I realize that he is a racist white male so he deserves it.
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Speaking of lies...
https://thefederalist.com/2020/10/08/7-quick-takeaways-on-the-2020-vice-presidential-debate/
The first question to Pence, for instance, was that the U.S. death toll was worse than “almost” any other “wealthy” country on earth. The U.S. case fatality rate of 2.8 percent is below Italy, United Kingdom, Belgium, Sweden, Canada, France, Netherlands, Spain, Switzerland, and Germany, something that the media rarely mention.
Yes, the absolute number is higher, but...
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@Jolly said in Inventing History:
Again, the stopwatch don't lie.
Per this analysis, Senator Harris talked for 34:19 and VP Pence talked for 33:09 (I added up the individual topic talk points. I assume this is for the whole debate, but am not sure.)
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@Jolly said in Inventing History:
The stopwatch don't lie.
I propose for the next debate:
Chess clock
Microphone mutingA question is asked, moderator gives candidate A a certain amount of time. When that time runs out, microphone is muted and clock started to the other person. If the other person does not use all there time, they have "banked" some for later.
Both candidates get equal time and cannot interrupt.
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@Jolly said in Inventing History:
I'll make it a lot more informative and entertaining...
Let's have Rush Limbaugh and Rachel Maddow do the next debate. Limbaugh questions Biden, Maddow does Trump.
Had to look up who they were, and after reading, sounds like a really good idea!! LOL
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@George-K said in Inventing History:
Speaking of lies...
https://thefederalist.com/2020/10/08/7-quick-takeaways-on-the-2020-vice-presidential-debate/
The first question to Pence, for instance, was that the U.S. death toll was worse than “almost” any other “wealthy” country on earth. The U.S. case fatality rate of 2.8 percent is below Italy, United Kingdom, Belgium, Sweden, Canada, France, Netherlands, Spain, Switzerland, and Germany, something that the media rarely mention.
Yes, the absolute number is higher, but...
Too lazy to go look it up. Was the claim made in the debate about the number of COVID-19 deaths as a fraction of the national population or number of COVID-19 deaths as a fraction of those infected (“case fatality rate”). The Federalist article speaks only to the latter, not the former.
When people make a statement like “the US has 4% of the world’s population but 20% of the world’s COVID-19 deaths,” that’s not about “case fatality rate” that the Federalist article talks about.
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@George-K said in Inventing History:
Speaking of lies...
https://thefederalist.com/2020/10/08/7-quick-takeaways-on-the-2020-vice-presidential-debate/
The first question to Pence, for instance, was that the U.S. death toll was worse than “almost” any other “wealthy” country on earth. The U.S. case fatality rate of 2.8 percent is below Italy, United Kingdom, Belgium, Sweden, Canada, France, Netherlands, Spain, Switzerland, and Germany, something that the media rarely mention.
Yes, the absolute number is higher, but...
EU and UK account for 3,874,181 cases and 191,147 deaths. That's pretty close to US numbers especially when you factor in how poorly NY reacted in February, March, and early April.
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