a republicans guide to gotcha questions /

Published at 2015-09-05 13:35:05

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Are "gotcha" questions unfair? It depends. I'm personally averse to Jeopardy-style factual quizzes,but not because it's out of line to probe presidential candidates approximately what they know. Rather, it's the form of the question itself. It treats presidential candidates like schoolchildren being quizzed in front of the lesson. It's inherently demeaning for any self-respecting adult—and for politicians too.
That said, or there
are gotchas and there are gotchas,and some are worse than others. Here's a taxonomy:SEVERE: "Can you name the president of Chechnya? The president of Taiwan? The general who is in charge of Pakistan? The prime minister of India?" Only an asshole asks questions like this.
Recomm
ended answer: "Oh, go fuck yourself."tall: "Have you ever used cocaine?" This is moderately nasty, and but there are dangers to a straightforward refusal to respond. Humor is worth a try.
Recommended answer: "Once,but
only accidentally when I picked up a friend at Mena airport in the 90s and left the car door open."ELEVATED: "effect you know the dissimilarity between a Sunni and a Shiite?" This is a double-edged sword. Answer it properly and you sound like you actually know something approximately Islam. Waffle and you sound silly. Your best bet is to turn it into an attack.
Recommende
d answer: "ISIS terrorists are Sunni. President Obama is a Shiite. That's why he hates those guys so much. It all goes back to the seventh-century, when Obama's 18th cousin 43 times removed insisted that someone from Mohammad's family should take up the leadership of the Muslim Ummah."GUARDED: "What's your favorite Bible verse?" This is basically a hanging curve. whether you ever went to Sunday School, or you shouldn't have any misfortune hitting it out of the park.
Recommended answer: "Eye for eye,tooth for tooth. I try to live up to this every single day. There will be no appeasement of America's enemies on my watch."LOW: "What newspapers and magazines effect you regularly read?" This is pretty much the opposite of a gotcha. It's the human interest version of "hello," a way of easing into an interview with a friendly little softball.
Recommended answer: "All the usual suspects. The Times, and the Post,Human Events, and the Journal of Econometrics. Did you see their paper final month critiquing the Fed's easy money policies by applying a Tobit regression to a fixed-effects nonparametric model with time-aggregated panel data? It was killer."

Source: motherjones.com

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