Public figures often avoid answering a question; going off in a different direction without recognizing that they didn't answer it. (Sometimes they even say 'I answered your question' even though they didn't.
I wish they still said 'no comment'.
Non-answers without acknowledgement seems bad for public epistemics as well as for good governance and public choice.
In the linkpost, I report on a quick Anthropic/Claude analysis of the extent to which Harris and Trump actually answered the questions they were asked in last night's debate. (TLDR: neither did, but Trump did substantially worse.)
I suspect it would be easy to make a fairly useable tool to judge 'was the question answered?' in real time. I think bringing this into debates and interviews could add a lot of value.
I think saying “I am not going to answer that because…” would not necessarily feel like taking a hit to the debater/interviewee. Could also bring scrutiny and pressure to moderators/interviewers to ask fair and relevant questions.
I think people would appreciate the directness. And maybe come to understand the nature of inquiry and truth a tiny bit better.