Originally posted by jdshock
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Mannatech made false claims about their product. Carson undeniably promoted the product. The connection between Carson and Mannatech deserved to be vetted. Calling anyone who wanted to vet the issue and find out the truth “propagandists” was ridiculous. The vetting process helped clear up any confusion or ignorance. It led us to see that while Carson did advertising, he wasn’t a part of the specific advertising that was taken to court. Any fair person would easily conclude that only those Mannatech employees/consultants/contractors/etc. who specifically worked on the false advertising deserved any of the guilt. Carson didn’t work on that, so he should be guilt free. It would have been that simple, but Carson bizarrely chose to instead go down the route of claiming he had zero involvement with Mannatech and started throwing out wild claims of propaganda. I disagree that reasonable minds can disagree here. Carson was involved in advertising for a company who was sued about their advertising. He did nothing wrong, but he was close enough to the situation to deserve vetting. I disagree that it is reasonable to say otherwise.
Regarding West Point, I think I’ve already posted my opinion pretty thoroughly. I think reasonable people can disagree about whether a high ranking general’s specific promises to a highly qualified ROTC kid should count as an “offer”. Also, unlike the Mannatech issue, where there could have been a true scandal if Carson truly was a part of false advertising, the West Point thing has no scandal potential. The absolute worst thing Carson could be reasonably accused of there is having poorly summarized a nearly guaranteed option as a fully guaranteed option. Either way, it was an option that a teenage Carson chose not to pursue.
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