The Isaac Accords: Zionist Takeover Plan for Latin America

Donald John Trump – Zionist Trick 2 World Power & Control.

The sheep have been led to the slaughter again by these same lying evil pieces of filth called Zionist / Karzarrian
Mafia

Perhaps We People, Who Have Been Traumatized and are in Shock need a Big SLAP in the Face to WAKE UP or People are actually this dumb and stupid.

What Is Wrong with this Statement, Logically – “Gods Chosen People”

Logical fallacies: are errors in reasoning that weaken arguments, with common examples including Ad Hominem (attacking the person, not the argument, like calling an opponent a “hippie” instead of refuting their point), Straw Man (misrepresenting an opponent’s argument to make it easier to attack, e.g., “So you’re fine with all drugs if you support marijuana?”), Slippery Slope (claiming A will lead to Z without proof, like “If we allow same-sex marriage, people will marry cars”)

, and
Bandwagon
 (appealing to popularity, “Everyone supports this, so you should too”)
. Others include
Appeal to Pity
 (using emotion over logic, “Poor kids need phones gone due to anxiety”)
 and
Post Hoc
 (false cause, “Vaccine made me sick”)
Common Examples of Logical Fallacies
  • Ad Hominem: Attacking the person instead of the argument.
    • Example: “We can’t trust her climate plan; she cheated on her taxes once.”
  • Straw Man: Distorting someone’s argument to make it easier to knock down.
    • Example: “You want to reduce military spending? You must want to leave our country defenseless!”
  • Slippery Slope: Claiming one small step will inevitably lead to a chain of extreme events.
    • Example: “If we ban sugary drinks, next they’ll ban all food!”
  • Bandwagon (Ad Populum): Arguing something is true or good because many people believe or do it.
    • Example: “Millions of people use this product, so it must be the best.”
  • Post Hoc, Ergo Propter Hoc (False Cause): Assuming that because B happened after A, A caused B.
    • Example: “I wore my lucky socks, and my team won; my socks made them win.”
  • Appeal to Pity: Using emotion (pity, fear) to sway an audience instead of logic.
    • Example: “Please give me an A; I studied all night and my dog might die if I fail.”
  • Either/Or (False Dilemma): Presenting only two options when more exist.
    • Example: “You’re either with us or against us.”
  • Hasty Generalization: Drawing a broad conclusion from too few examples.
    • Example: “I met two rude people from City X; everyone from City X must be rude.”
  • Red Herring (Whataboutism): Introducing an irrelevant topic to distract from the original argument.
    • Example: “When criticized for pollution, a company says, ‘But look at all the jobs we create!'” 
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