What Is Whataboutism?
Whataboutism is a rhetorical move in which a person avoids responding to a criticism, claim, or question by pointing to a different problem, usually with a response such as, ‘What about this other thing?’
Whataboutism matters because it can sound like fairness while functioning as avoidance. Instead of answering the question in front of the discussion, it redirects attention to another issue, another person, or another example of wrongdoing.
This does not mean that every comparison is a fallacy. Comparisons can clarify patterns, expose inconsistency, or help students see how two situations are similar and different. Whataboutism becomes a problem when the comparison replaces the original question rather than helping answer it.
In that sense, whataboutism is closely related to logical fallacies such as tu quoque, red herring arguments, and false equivalence. It is especially common in political debate, social media arguments, classroom disagreements, and any discussion where responsibility, evidence, or fairness is being questioned.
Related Terms
| Term | How It Relates To Whataboutism |
|---|---|
| Tu quoque | Responds to criticism by accusing the critic of similar behavior or hypocrisy. |
| Red herring | Distracts from the original issue by shifting attention to another topic. |
| False equivalence | Treats two situations as equal when important differences are being ignored. |
| Deflection | Avoids direct engagement with the original claim, question, or evidence. |
Examples Of Whataboutism
| Original Claim | Whataboutism Response | Why It Weakens The Discussion |
|---|---|---|
| “You did not contribute to the group project.” | “What about Jordan? He missed the first meeting.” | Jordan’s behavior may matter, but it does not answer whether this student contributed. |
| “This source does not support your claim.” | “What about the other group? Their source was weak too.” | The response shifts attention from the quality of the current argument. |
| “That comment was unfair.” | “What about all the unfair things people say about me?” | The second issue may be real, but it does not resolve the first one. |
Why Whataboutism Feels Persuasive
Whataboutism is tempting because it often contains a small piece of truth. The other issue may be real. The comparison may reveal hypocrisy. The person being criticized may genuinely feel singled out. That is why whataboutism can be difficult to identify in real time.
The problem is that a true comparison can still be irrelevant. A student can be correct that someone else also failed to help with the project, while still needing to answer for their own role. A writer can correctly notice bias in another source, while still needing to support the claim they made.
Key distinction: A useful comparison helps clarify the original issue. Whataboutism avoids the original issue by replacing it with another one.
The Problem: It Changes The Question
The central problem with whataboutism is that it changes the question being discussed. Instead of asking, “Is this claim accurate?” or “Was this action justified?” the conversation moves toward a different question: “Did someone else do something similar or worse?”
That shift can make discussion circular. It can also make accountability nearly impossible, because every claim can be answered with another claim, every criticism with another criticism, and every problem with a different problem.
For students learning argument, discussion, and evidence-based reasoning, this is an important distinction. Strong critical thinking requires staying with a question long enough to examine it. That is also why classroom tools such as critical thinking questions, questioning strategies, and Socratic Seminar can help students separate relevant comparisons from simple deflection.
How To Respond To Whataboutism
- Return to the original claim: “That may be worth discussing, but does it answer the question we started with?”
- Separate the issues: “We can examine that next. First, let’s finish this claim.”
- Ask for relevance: “How does that example change whether this claim is accurate?”
- Acknowledge without conceding: “That may also be a problem, but it does not resolve this one.”
Conclusion
Whataboutism is a rhetorical deflection that avoids answering a claim by shifting attention to a different issue. Whataboutism weakens thinking when it uses comparison to avoid evidence, responsibility, or the original question. For students, the goal is not to stop asking ‘What about?’ but to ask it with precision: What does the comparison clarify, and what question still needs to be answered?
Reference: Merriam-Webster defines whataboutism as responding to an accusation by claiming that another offense is similar or worse. See Merriam-Webster: Whataboutism.
