Can you repeat the question?
“Mueller
was frequently tripped up and forced to ask lawmakers to repeat their
questions during his rapid-fire questioning on Capitol Hill, though he reportedly
prepared at length for the hearings.”
And indeed, (though I haven't worked all the way
through the transcript yet), Mueller did ask his interrogators to repeat their
questions quite a bit.
So what's up?
To look at the linguistic acrobatics that defined many impossibly tortured questions today – let’s
start with the question that just throws a bunch of numbers at the wall and
expects the answerer to follow along:
COLLINS: Is it also true that you issued over 2,800
subpoenas, executed nearly 500 search warrants, obtained more than 230 orders
for communication records and 50 pin registers?
MUELLER: That went a little fast for me.
COLLINS: Your report states that your investigative team
included 19 lawyers and approximately 40 FBI agents and analysts and accountants.
Are those numbers accurate?
MUELLER: Could you repeat that, please.
Problem 1
Rattling off a series of numbers, and asking the respondent to keep in short term memory the exact numbers you just rattled off and retrieve numbers from the distant past is a simply wonderful example of a notoriously failed
question.
Problem 2
It's a horse of a very different color when you're getting the questions through the air, in fleeting, ephemeral spoken language. In this case I marvel that on hearing the question repeated Robert Mueller answered clearly.
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