Originally Posted by
The Ineffable
Hmm... "anyone else". Much like "nobody cares". Fallacies like this betray rhetorical and interest-driven speech but it's interesting nevertheless... this is not necessarily a false statement, not dishonest at all, I may add. It is not "I like looking", but "I like looking *as*" [anyone else], which means it could be like or dislike, the audience would just naturally assume that liking to look at hot chicks is the common-sense, but that is not your problem anymore, we don't have to do so, this "anyone" can be actually anyone, even someone who is actually annoyed by those bimbos and in fact... even yourself. In this case it translates into "I like looking at hot chicks as much as I like looking at them", is it circular reasoning or just an elegant manner of refusing an answer to a too personal question? We don't know. Yet.