Comment by AnthonyMouse
14 days ago
> Is a model biased when it tells you that the earth is more than 6000 years old and not flat or that vaccines work? Not everything needs a "neutral" answer.
That's the motte and bailey.
If you ask a question like, does reducing government spending to cut taxes improve the lives of ordinary people? That isn't a science question about CO2 levels or established biology. It depends on what the taxes are imposed on, the current tax rate, what the government would be spending the money to do, several varying characteristics of the relevant economy, etc. It doesn't have the same answer in all circumstances.
But in politics it does, which is that the right says yes and the left says no. Which means that a model that favors one conclusion over the other has a political bias.
> But in politics it does, which is that the right says yes and the left says no.
That’s not accurate, tax deductions for the poor is an obvious example. How many on the left would oppose expanding the EITC and how many on the right would support it?
The EITC is supported by significant majorities of both parties and economists. It's opposed by politicians because it's a tax expenditure that doesn't provide any opportunity for graft.
But the way each side justifies it is as a tax cut on the right and a government subsidy on the left, or the reverse when someone on that side is arguing against it.