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HPSHELTON

Programming, Privacy, Politics, Photography

Oct 7, 2012

Debate Pivots: How Politicians Get Away With Dodging The Question →

If you have watched a debate, you have watched a pivot. "The pivot is a way of taking a question that might be on a specific subject, and moving to answer it on your own terms," [Brett O'Donnell] says.

Pivots, dodges, or whatever you want to call them are a fundamental part of debate. They're also annoying. A new study on the technique reveals how politicians exploit our cognitive biases when using them.

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H. Parker Shelton

I'm just an ordinary thirty-something who's had some extraordinary opportunities. I graduated from Johns Hopkins University, work for Microsoft in Silicon Valley, code websites and applications, take the occasional photograph, and keep a constant eye on current events, politics, and technology. This blog is the best of what catches that eye.

 
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