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No best answer has yet been selected by theleeroy55. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.i lose all respect for people who blunder on in arguments in which i know they are lying. its so pointless. its like someone arguing till they are blue in the face that MY hair is blonde when it is so blatantly brown - its pathetic.
some people resort to insults which just shows their fear and proves they know they are wrong and are desperate. As soon as that happens i know i've won.
when you are wrong its much better to just say something along the lines of - 'maybe you're right, you've raised an interesting point, i don't know whether i believe what you say, so i'll have to give it some thought'
people expect lies, deceit, sarcasm, mockery and blundering...when someone just says ok, they don't know how to respond.
I can't believe everyone has missed the oldest, and most useful method of winning an argument...
You simply change your point of view...ever so slightly. All you have to do is alter your argument to such an extent where you can win, without actually appearing to have changed your position.
If this fails, you can blatantly change the subject of the argument with the sanguine words, "Okay, well what about the time when you/he/she/it..."
Works every time.
There are ways. If you watch politicians or business people they do it all the time. Try watching a political program or a business program on TV and watch how the experts do it.
You can do it by changing the baseline of the argument or answering the wrong question (politicians do this all the time).
So if an interviewer says to a politician that "you promised to build 100 miles of new motorway last year but built only 20" the politician can say things like
"We only said we might", or "we decided to change our strategy to rail" or "that was before the Iraq war" or "building motorways was only part of a broad look at the integrated transport strategy".
In fact try to watch the comedy TV program "Yes Minister" or "Yes Prime Minister" for some wonderful examples of how to twist words around.
Of course the other option is to admit straight away that you have lost, but then find something to crow about.
For example if a politician is on TV on election night and his party have had a drubbing, they will admit they have lost straight away, and then move on to bash the opposition.
So they may say:
"Yes we have had a bad night, but the labour party must be more disappointed because they expected to win 200 more seats and they only won a 100".
So accept you have lost quickly early on, then spend more time talking about something else to deflect the questions.