You can use an ad hominem against an argument from authority. It’s fighting fire with fire by showing that the authority isn’t such a good authority. Sure, that has no bearing on the truth of the statement, but the appeal to authority never did in the first place.
The point is that Churchill opposed democracy in a situation where the verdict of history is that opposing democracy was absolutely the wrong thing to do. A quote which shows Churchill being elitist and against democracy completely fits with that. That isn’t obviously a case of misattribution at all, it’s just Churchill being Churchill.
Of course, Churchill was known for speaking out in favor of democracy in the context of Britain, but don’t confuse that with wanting democracy for everyone.
The point is that Churchill opposed democracy in a situation where the verdict of history is that opposing democracy was absolutely the wrong thing to do.
What point would that be? True opposing independence for India turned out to be wrong, then again independence for the African colonies has been mostly a disaster.
You can use an ad hominem against an argument from authority. It’s fighting fire with fire by showing that the authority isn’t such a good authority. Sure, that has no bearing on the truth of the statement, but the appeal to authority never did in the first place.
The point is that Churchill opposed democracy in a situation where the verdict of history is that opposing democracy was absolutely the wrong thing to do. A quote which shows Churchill being elitist and against democracy completely fits with that. That isn’t obviously a case of misattribution at all, it’s just Churchill being Churchill.
Of course, Churchill was known for speaking out in favor of democracy in the context of Britain, but don’t confuse that with wanting democracy for everyone.
What point would that be? True opposing independence for India turned out to be wrong, then again independence for the African colonies has been mostly a disaster.