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- Whataboutism abstract "Whataboutism (or whataboutery) is, according to British journalist Edward Lucas, a rhetorical tactic which attempts to discredit the opponent's position by asserting the opponent's failure to act consistently in accordance with that position, without directly refuting or disproving the opponent's initial argument. It is an example of the tu quoque fallacy.The term \"whataboutism\" was coined during the Cold War by western commentators. Edward Lucas, writing in the The Economist in 2007, noted it as a tactic he had observed in student debates at the London School of Economics in the early 1980s. He recalled it was an \"approach by the Kremlin's useful idiots [...] to match every Soviet crime with a real or imagined western one. It was called 'whataboutism'\".Lucas wrote in 2008 that \"Soviet propagandists during the Cold War were trained in a tactic that their western interlocutors nicknamed 'whataboutism.'\" He said it was a common rhetorical tactic used by the Soviet Union in dealing with criticism originating within the Western world, so that the common response to a specific criticism would be \"What about...\" followed by the naming of an event in the Western world..Lucas writes that at the end of the Cold War the usage of the tactic began dying out, but that it saw a resurgence in post-Soviet Russia in relation to a number of human rights violations and other criticisms expressed to the Russian government. The Guardian writer Miriam Elder commented that Vladimir Putin's spokesman Dmitry Peskov used the tactic and that most criticisms on human rights violations had gone unanswered. Peskov's response to this was again accused by Elder of being a whataboutism, as it called into question the difficulty Russians experience in obtaining a visa to the United Kingdom. In July 2012, RIA Novosti columnist Konstantin von Eggert wrote an article about the use of whataboutism in relation to Russian and American support for different governments in the Middle East.The term received new attention during the 2014 Crimea crisis and 2014 Russian military intervention in Ukraine. It was also used by the American governmental RFERL in reference to Azerbaijan, claiming its parliamentary hearings on issues in the United States were a response to American criticism of its human rights record.".
- Whataboutism wikiPageID "35842043".
- Whataboutism wikiPageLength "6109".
- Whataboutism wikiPageOutDegree "30".
- Whataboutism wikiPageRevisionID "706703439".
- Whataboutism wikiPageWikiLink And_you_are_lynching_Negroes.
- Whataboutism wikiPageWikiLink Annexation_of_Crimea_by_the_Russian_Federation.
- Whataboutism wikiPageWikiLink Azerbaijan.
- Whataboutism wikiPageWikiLink Category:Cold_War_terminology.
- Whataboutism wikiPageWikiLink Category:Propaganda_in_the_Soviet_Union.
- Whataboutism wikiPageWikiLink Clean_hands.
- Whataboutism wikiPageWikiLink Cold_War.
- Whataboutism wikiPageWikiLink Dmitry_Peskov.
- Whataboutism wikiPageWikiLink Edward_Lucas_(journalist).
- Whataboutism wikiPageWikiLink Human_rights.
- Whataboutism wikiPageWikiLink Hypocrisy.
- Whataboutism wikiPageWikiLink London_School_of_Economics.
- Whataboutism wikiPageWikiLink Middle_East.
- Whataboutism wikiPageWikiLink Miriam_Elder.
- Whataboutism wikiPageWikiLink RIA_Novosti.
- Whataboutism wikiPageWikiLink Radio_Liberty.
- Whataboutism wikiPageWikiLink Russia.
- Whataboutism wikiPageWikiLink Russian_military_intervention_in_Ukraine_(2014–present).
- Whataboutism wikiPageWikiLink Soviet_Union.
- Whataboutism wikiPageWikiLink The_Economist.
- Whataboutism wikiPageWikiLink The_Guardian.
- Whataboutism wikiPageWikiLink The_Mote_and_the_Beam.
- Whataboutism wikiPageWikiLink Tu_quoque.
- Whataboutism wikiPageWikiLink United_Kingdom.
- Whataboutism wikiPageWikiLink United_States.
- Whataboutism wikiPageWikiLink Useful_idiot.
- Whataboutism wikiPageWikiLink Visa_(document).
- Whataboutism wikiPageWikiLink Vladimir_Putin.
- Whataboutism wikiPageWikiLink Western_world.
- Whataboutism wikiPageWikiLinkText "Whataboutism".
- Whataboutism wikiPageWikiLinkText "emphasizing foreign disasters".
- Whataboutism wikiPageWikiLinkText "whataboutism".
- Whataboutism wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Deadlink.
- Whataboutism wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Dubious.
- Whataboutism wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Neologism.
- Whataboutism wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Propaganda.
- Whataboutism wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:R.
- Whataboutism wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Whataboutism subject Category:Cold_War_terminology.
- Whataboutism subject Category:Propaganda_in_the_Soviet_Union.
- Whataboutism comment "Whataboutism (or whataboutery) is, according to British journalist Edward Lucas, a rhetorical tactic which attempts to discredit the opponent's position by asserting the opponent's failure to act consistently in accordance with that position, without directly refuting or disproving the opponent's initial argument. It is an example of the tu quoque fallacy.The term \"whataboutism\" was coined during the Cold War by western commentators.".
- Whataboutism label "Whataboutism".
- Whataboutism sameAs Q4053075.
- Whataboutism sameAs Whataboutism.
- Whataboutism sameAs Whataboutism.
- Whataboutism sameAs m.0jw_49z.
- Whataboutism sameAs Whataboutism.
- Whataboutism sameAs Whataboutism.
- Whataboutism sameAs Q4053075.
- Whataboutism wasDerivedFrom Whataboutism?oldid=706703439.
- Whataboutism isPrimaryTopicOf Whataboutism.