The appeal to religion in American politics can be reduced to a simple, if fallacious, argument: 1.
That is, people will mistakenly take a fallacious argument to provide good reasons to believe its conclusion.
It is easy to construct fallacious arguments by applying general statements to specific incidents that are obviously exceptions.
Kemp's writings have no more inaccuracies, misleading statistics, and fallacious arguments than those of most other politicians.
Such fallacious arguments have much in common with what are known as howlers in mathematics.
A fallacious argument, just as with a false antecedent, can still have a consequent that happens to be true.
The fallacy is in concluding the consequent of a fallacious argument has to be false.
Anecdotal Evidence, describing its use as a fallacious argument.
"Serious efforts to liberalize trade must not stop because a few people use fallacious arguments as subterfuges for protectionism."
Consensus gentium is a fallacious argument that concludes a proposition to be true because many or all people believe it.