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 Outside the Beltway 

Why Arguing From A Single Example Sucks

Ace of Spades guest Jack M. links a two-and-a-half-year-old story about U.N. peacekeepers committing sex crimes in Congo as part 1 in a 5 part series on “International Law: Why it sucks, why people shouldn’t buy into it, and why it should be abandoned.”

In that spirit, I will use his post as the first of an unlimited series on Logical Fallacies. Call this lesson “Hasty Generalization.”

About the Author: James Joyner is the publisher of Outside the Beltway and the managing editor of the Atlantic Council. He's a former Army officer, Desert Storm vet, and college professor with a PhD in political science from The University of Alabama. He lives just outside the Beltway in Alexandria, Virginia.

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James,

You can start the series of posts using this saying. "All generalizations are false, including this one."

Now try arguing about that one.

Cheers,

Bill

Posted by The Florida Masochist | August 28, 2007 | 10:21 am | Permalink
 

Ace of Spades guest Jack M. links a two-and-a-half-year-old story about U.N. peacekeepers committing sex crimes in Congo as part 1 in a 5 part series on “International Law: Why it sucks, why people shouldn’t buy into it, and why it should be abandoned.”

Dangit! Jack stole my idea! I was going to use the story about the cops in New York who worked as hitmen for the mafia as part of MY five part series: "Domestic Law: Why it sucks, why people shouldn’t buy into it, and why it should be abandoned."

Posted by Alex Knapp | August 28, 2007 | 10:23 am | Permalink
 

Reminds me of an old wisecrack: “90% of the lawyers give the rest a bad name.”

I think there's a good argument to be made in favor of the United Nations and in favor of UN peacekeeping missions although I recognize that there's a segment of the U. S. population that thinks that those arguments are closed and we should have pulled out of the UN decades ago.

The hardest part of the “pro” argument is the fiction, implicit to the UN (and IR, generally), that all countries should be treated as equals. That extends to their militaries, too. Not all militaries are equal. Many are just an organized rabble.

Posted by Dave Schuler | August 28, 2007 | 11:25 am | Permalink
 

Ummm... were you really expecting thought-out, researched, well-reasoned writing at Ace of Spades? It's not exactly a journo school blog, y'know...

Posted by legion | August 28, 2007 | 12:12 pm | Permalink
 

Bill
Yes your statement is logically flawed. Logically it could read something similar to “Most all generalities are wrong”, “some generalities are wrong” or “All generalizations are false, with the exceptions of this one or one with similar statement."

Which one is true is open to debate but at least they are logically feasible. Yours of course is not.

Posted by Wayne | August 28, 2007 | 01:54 pm | Permalink
 

Jack M. then goes on with several other logical fallacies.

Plus, I wanted to say that anyone who disagreed with me supported UN Peacekeepers who were pedophiles and rapists.

You don't support rape and pedophilia, do you?

Let me see, you have the either/or fallacy (you either agree with me/or you support UN Peackeepers). There is also the Guilt by Association Fallacy. If you support the UN Peacekeepers you also support rapists and pedophilia. Two sentences, two fallacies. Hard to top that.

Posted by Steve Verdon | August 28, 2007 | 02:09 pm | Permalink
 

Who are you?

I don't even know you people anymore.

Posted by Satire | August 28, 2007 | 04:00 pm | Permalink
 

Satire:

Who are you?

I don't even know you people anymore.

Thanks, that made my day.

Posted by Michael | August 28, 2007 | 04:12 pm | Permalink
 

Who are you?

I don't even know you people anymore.

I thought the whole thing might have been a joke at first, but I don't think so. Jack M.'s other comment in that thread didn't strike me as lending itself to satire.

Posted by Steve Verdon | August 28, 2007 | 05:00 pm | Permalink
 

The bit about wanting to commit an obviously dishonest debating tactic by associating international law with rape? Strikes me a bit intentionally absurd.

The post immediately below Jack M's post on the very same blog seems to be the target. It's titled:

International Law: What It Is, Why It Is Important, and Why We Should Stick To It, Part I
—Gabriel Malor

Posted by Satire | August 28, 2007 | 06:34 pm | Permalink
 

The line about not supporting rape is an inside Ace joke concerning one of the corniest lines by Horatio Crane in CSI:Miami.
I can't remember the line, but the sunglasses of justice were removed, the line said, then the sunglasses were put back on.

The line was similar to the set up above.
Satire - heh.

Posted by Stormy70 | August 28, 2007 | 07:49 pm | Permalink
 

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