Joe Klein: At 80 43%

By Joe Klein0%

7/10/2026, 8:21:40 PM

BS Summary: This article contains 2 faulty reasoning types, including Politically Right Leaning Bias, with Hasty Generalization as the most egregious example at 6.2% saturation with 23 hits. Analysis detected 46 faulty-reasoning hits from 371 analyzed words, generating a BS Score of 47.9% and a BS Rank of 43% (8,121 of 14,148 articles). This article is better (less manipulative) than 57.40% of the article peer group.

I am 80 years old, this year of our 250th anniversary, and I find myself a cliché. 
My life has been a common political journey, from left to center. 
I recently took the Pew Research Center’s  political typology” test and found that I was a “pragmatic and polite conservative,” which seemed a rather abstruse basket: 
A politically mixed (though Republican-tilting) group, they lean conservative on economics and the role of government, while tilting more liberal on issues related to race and foreign policy. 
They prize civility and cooperation in politics. 
Well, that sounds pretty mushy—and I find it hard to square with the strong opinions I have on many issues. 
I’ve voted for Democrats in federal elections, but I grow more Republican the closer I get to local politics. 
Democrats, I’ve found, simply aren’t very good at running things, especially school systems, where they are in the thrall of the teachers unions. 
My friends joke about my obsession with the unions. 
They know all my lines. 
If industrial unions are organized against the power of capital, who are the public employees organized against? 
But enough of that. 
I’ve ranted that rant too often, and my political journey has been more complicated than that one issue. 
It has been empirical, based on actual experience—on a lifetime of reporting and a lot of reading. 
An early example: I was a journalist with the underground press in Boston at the turn of the 1970s and considered myself a member of the antiwar and civil rights movements. 
The first big issue I covered was busing to achieve school integration. 
Yes, the white bigots were disgusting. 
But I couldn’t find any black parents who favored the plan to bus their children to schools outside their neighborhoods either. 
Black activists and politicians—and white liberals—were gung ho, but not actual parents of black kids in school. 
Busing was a form of social engineering imposed from on high, by a judge—W. 
Arthur Garrity—who lived in a wealthy liberal suburb. 
Wealthy liberal suburbs were not affected by his plan, of course. 
I began to see that there were limits to what government could do, especially when it came to changing a society’s culture. 
Read more 
Confirmation Bias
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Anchoring Bias
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Availability Heuristic
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Representativeness Heuristic
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Hindsight Bias
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Overconfidence Bias
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Framing Effect
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Loss Aversion
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Status Quo Bias
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Sunk Cost Effect
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Optimism Bias
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Pessimism Bias
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Negativity Bias
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Self-Serving Bias
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Fundamental Attribution Error
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Actor-Observer Bias
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In-Group Bias
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Out-Group Homogeneity Bias
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Halo Effect
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Horn Effect
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Dunning-Kruger Effect
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Recency Bias
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Primacy Effect
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Blind-Spot Bias
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Ad Hominem
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Straw Man
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Appeal to Authority
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False Dilemma
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Slippery Slope
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Circular Reasoning
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Hasty Generalization
6.2%
Red Herring
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Bandwagon
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Appeal to Emotion
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Begging the Question
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Post Hoc (False Cause)
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Tu Quoque
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Burden of Proof
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Appeal to Nature
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Composition/Division
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Anecdotal
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No True Scotsman
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Ambiguity (Equivocation)
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Gambler’s Fallacy
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Middle Ground
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Personal Incredulity
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Special Pleading
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Genetic Fallacy
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Unattributed Quote
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Quote-first Misdirection
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Biased Writer Voice
0%
Indoctrination
0%
Politically Left Leaning Bias
0%
Politically Right Leaning Bias
6.2%
Attempt to Sell a Product or Service
0%

371 words analyzed.

Speakers

No attributed speakers were identified in this analysis.

Analysis

Hover over highlighted words in the article to view the associated bias or fallacy analysis.