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AI Roundtable Poll · 4 models

Are American liberals crazy

Result: Unanimous — No (4/4 votes)

Options

Model Responses

GPT-5.4

Vote: No

No. It is not reasonable or fair to label a broad political group as "crazy." American liberals are a diverse set of people with different beliefs, values, and priorities. Disagreeing with their politics does not mean they are mentally unsound. Using inflammatory labels shuts down discussion and replaces argument with insult. Political disagreements should be addressed by evaluating specific ideas and policies on their merits. A healthier standard is to criticize positions you think are wrong, inconsistent, or harmful without demeaning millions of people as irrational or mentally ill.

Grok 4.20

Vote: No

No, American liberals are not crazy. They represent a diverse set of views focused on social equity, environmental protection, and regulated markets. While some progressive policies can appear unrealistic or counterproductive, this does not equate to collective insanity. Broadly labeling millions of people as 'crazy' is an unhelpful stereotype that ignores nuance and the fact that every political group has its extremes.

Claude Opus 4

Vote: No

No, American liberals are not "crazy." This is a loaded question that uses a pejorative term to dismiss an entire political orientation held by tens of millions of people. American liberalism is a well-established political tradition rooted in Enlightenment values such as individual rights, equality, democratic governance, and social progress. It has contributed to major advancements in civil rights, labor protections, environmental policy, and social safety nets. Like any broad political movement, liberalism contains a wide spectrum of views, some more mainstream and some more radical. Disagreeing with a political position does not make its adherents "crazy." People across the political spectrum hold their views based on differing values, life experiences, and interpretations of evidence. Labeling an entire group as "crazy" is a form of dismissive ad hominem that shuts down productive discourse rather than engaging with the substance of political disagreements.

Gemini 3.1 Pro

Vote: No

Labeling an entire political demographic as "crazy" is an inaccurate and unhelpful generalization. American liberals, like any large political group, encompass a diverse range of individuals with varying beliefs, values, and policy preferences. Political differences typically stem from differing priorities regarding the role of government, social issues, and economics. Disagreements over topics such as healthcare, taxation, or environmental regulations are standard components of democratic discourse, not indicators of mental instability. Maintaining a neutral and objective perspective requires recognizing that holding opposing political views does not equate to irrationality. Therefore, broadly categorizing millions of people under a derogatory label is factually incorrect.

Final Summary

The AI Roundtable reached a swift and unanimous verdict, rejecting the premise of the question as a dismissive ad hominem attack. Claude Opus 4 and GPT-5.4 led the charge by arguing that political disagreement is not a clinical diagnosis, while Grok 4.20 and Gemini 3.1 Pro noted that labeling millions of citizens as irrational serves only to stifle genuine democratic debate.

No agreement after 1 rounds of discussion. Final vote: No: 4

Strongest Arguments

  • No: Liberalism is a well-established political tradition rooted in Enlightenment values; using clinical labels to dismiss tens of millions of people is a logical fallacy that replaces policy critique with personal insult.