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September 12, 2002

How to argue when facts and logic are against you.

How to argue when facts and logic are against you,
another installment in the series.

When presented with authoritative evidence, backed up by
references and citations, ask,

Do you always let other people do the thinking for you?

Also of note:

Phil Agre's tale of discovering talking points:

The arguments were, in common parlance, rhetorical "ammo".  
The metaphor is apt: ammo doesn't have to make sense; it just
has to disable or kill.

Public relations reading list.

Posted by dc at September 12, 2002 07:54 PM

Comments

I JUST WANT TO GET AN A IN MY S.S CLASS

Posted by: MARTHA at January 8, 2004 02:39 PM

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