> I think the better approach to handle truthiness issues is to give the other party/candidate/candidates a chance to post a rebuttal.
I disagree. That's effectively how modern journalism works where the news is "objective" by letting each side say its piece.
The end result is that the media is easy exploitable. The fundamental problem is that manufacturing lies takes less effort than explaining the truth. The latter is hampered by requiring research, evidence, and consistency. The former has no such restrictions.
That means Party A can spend five minutes saying "Party B eats kittens!" Now Party A has to spend a week providing evidence that no, they do not in fact eat kittens. Meanwhile, Party A has already put out five more press releases about how Party B drinks the blood of infants, was responsible for Firefly being canceled, and wants to raise your taxes to buy bombs to drop on wildlife preserves.
The consequence is that whoever has the least respect for the truth has the greatest ability to control the narrative. See:
>I disagree. That's effectively how modern journalism works where the news is "objective" by letting each side say its piece.
Even that level of objectivity is rarely met these days. One advantage of this is that it's easy to mandate and enforce.
Honestly, this would probably kill off most false advertising, though. Who would run an advert saying that a candidate had died when on the same advert you could see a response on the same advert from the candidate that he's alive and well?
Even subtle lies would be easily countered by giving right of reply.
>The fundamental problem is that manufacturing lies takes less effort than explaining the truth.
This isn't a new problem and never was. The Spanish didn't destroy the USS Maine. There were no WMDs in Iraq.
That's such an important point. The two party system caused by plurality voting is so strong it even influences how we imagine policy debates. We imagine there would only ever be two points of view on any policy matter because no one wants to split the vote for the good guys.
Depends on the issue / election, because it's only hotly contested elections that have many candidates. (Assuming you're in the US, most elected offices only have a handful of people running, and other ballot questions are yes/no.)
In general, if you have many candidates / parties, there are some ways to handle the situation.
For example, you can limit it to the top parties in polls for that office, or only parties that get a certain percentage or higher in polls. (IE, top 5 candidates, or only candidates who, from polling, have 20% or higher.)
Or, if you have no limits, it just means that you're basically eliminating targeted political advertising. Whenever you advertise to a voter, everyone else gets to advertise, and whenever everyone advertises, so do you.
BTW, if you ever get to see a voter's guide in CA, take a look. I used to rely on them almost exclusively for voting, because they had statements (and rebuttals) from all the candidates.
I disagree. That's effectively how modern journalism works where the news is "objective" by letting each side say its piece.
The end result is that the media is easy exploitable. The fundamental problem is that manufacturing lies takes less effort than explaining the truth. The latter is hampered by requiring research, evidence, and consistency. The former has no such restrictions.
That means Party A can spend five minutes saying "Party B eats kittens!" Now Party A has to spend a week providing evidence that no, they do not in fact eat kittens. Meanwhile, Party A has already put out five more press releases about how Party B drinks the blood of infants, was responsible for Firefly being canceled, and wants to raise your taxes to buy bombs to drop on wildlife preserves.
The consequence is that whoever has the least respect for the truth has the greatest ability to control the narrative. See:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bullshit#Bullshit_asymmetry_pr...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Firehose_of_falsehood
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gish_gallop