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Bias baiting

When someone is trying to push their opinion on you or get validation for their judgments. Generally people who are very gossipy are bias baiters.
Isn’t it a shame that they got a breeder dog than a rescue? Stop bias baiting (or stop being a bias baiter!)
by SuggestionSmuggler November 27, 2024
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bias bitch

A bias bitch is somebody who ONLY believes their sibling side of a story over the victim.
Shantahlia: Justin, stop messaging my family. You are harassing them.
Justin: Excuse me you are being a bias bitch! I'm the real victim! I'm done with you.
by jkoss2654 May 1, 2025
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bias bitch

When someone falsely accuse someone of something they didn't do.
Shantahlia: Stop messaging my family .You are harassing them.
Justin: Why don't kiss my ass you bias bitch. I did nothing wrong.
by jkoss2654 June 7, 2025
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Bias Blind Spot

The ingrained inability to perceive the influence of your own cognitive biases on your judgments, while being acutely aware of how biases distort everyone else's thinking. You understand that confirmation bias makes your uncle's news feed a conspiracy theory echo chamber, but you'd never entertain the idea that your own curated feed creates a progressive or libertarian echo chamber just as potent. Your biases are "critical thinking"; other people's biases are "brainwashing."
Example: "She could write a dissertation on the availability bias skewing public fear of plane crashes, but couldn't see how the same bias made her irrationally terrified of moving to a new city after binge-watching crime dramas. Her bias blind spot was so total, she diagnosed cognitive distortions in others as a hobby while living in a glass house of her own."
by AbzuInExile January 31, 2026
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Bias of Controlled Bias

A meta-problem in experimental design where the researchers' attempts to eliminate one form of bias (e.g., selection bias) unintentionally introduce another, often by creating control groups or conditions that are artificially sterile, non-representative, or so constrained they don't reflect real-world complexity. The study becomes a perfectly controlled test of an irrelevant scenario.
Example: A psychology study on stress uses a "controlled" lab stressor (like a timed puzzle) to eliminate life-history variables. But this Bias of Controlled Bias means the results only apply to acute, performance-based stress in weird lab settings, not to the chronic, social, and economic stressors that define real-world mental health.
by Dumu The Void February 4, 2026
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Bias of Everything

The paralyzing, often disingenuous, insistence that because all perspectives are inherently biased (by culture, experience, etc.), no perspective can claim superior footing for understanding reality. This "meta-bias" is used to create false equivalence, arguing that since a historian and a conspiracy theorist both have biases, their claims deserve equal weight. It mistakes the universal condition of situatedness for the negation of rigor, evidence, or truth-seeking.
Example: In a climate debate, someone dismisses the IPCC's decades of peer-reviewed research by saying, "Your scientists are biased by grant money. My oil-funded blogger is biased too. It's all just bias. Nobody can know." The bias of everything argument is a thought-terminating cliché that elevates skeptical parity over the vast differentials in evidence, methodology, and reliability.
by Dumu The Void February 9, 2026
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Bias of Fact-Checking

The inherent skew introduced when the process of verifying factual claims becomes institutionalized, gatekept by specific media or tech entities, and is applied disproportionately. This bias isn't about truth vs. falsehood, but about which truths get scrutinized, how context is framed, and whose statements are subjected to a forensic audit while others enjoy implied credibility. It often reflects the political and cultural priorities of the fact-checking institution.
Example: A fact-checking organization rigorously rates a progressive politician's minor statistical exaggeration as "Mostly False," while using a more charitable, context-laden analysis to rate a conservative ally's demonstrably false claim about election integrity as "Lacking Context." The bias of fact-checking lies in the uneven application of scrutiny, shaping public perception of credibility rather than merely dispensing truth.
by Dumu The Void February 9, 2026
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