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Witch Accusation

An accusation made against someone of something so others don't accuse the accuser of that thing.

Origin: During the time of the Salem Witch Trials, people would accuse their neighbors of being witches so that people would not accuse them.
The gay person made a witch accusation and accused the trans person of being a predator in the hopes that they wouldn't be called a predator themself.
by Shugunou January 28, 2023
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"I'm conflating accusations with confessions... Like... Totally deliberately."
Shit-lib "Every accusation is a confession!"

Hym "No it isn't. Not when I'm doing it."
by Hym Iam July 17, 2024
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The rhetorical move of accusing someone of believing in or promoting pseudoscience as a way of dismissing their claims without engagement. The accusation functions as social and intellectual exclusion—positioning the target as gullible, irrational, or unsophisticated. The fallacy lies in using the accusation itself as the argument, rather than addressing the actual evidence or reasoning. It's ad hominem by methodological association: you don't have to refute someone if you can successfully frame them as a "pseudoscience believer."
"I mentioned that I've found meditation and energy work helpful for my anxiety. Response: 'That's just pseudoscience—you're believing in woo.' That's Pseudoscience Accusation Fallacy—using the label to dismiss, not engaging my experience or the evidence. Whether it's 'pseudoscience' or not, my anxiety improved. The label doesn't negate the outcome; it just avoids engaging it."
by Dumu The Void February 28, 2026
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The rhetorical move of accusing someone of being into "parascience" as a way of dismissing their experiences, beliefs, or claims without engagement. The accusation positions the target as credulous, unscientific, or mentally unstable. The fallacy lies in using the accusation itself as the argument—as if labeling something "parascience" does the work of refutation. It's a conversation-ender that allows the accuser to feel superior without having to engage the actual phenomena or experiences.
"I tried to explain my meditation experiences and the sense of connection I feel. Response: 'Oh, you're into all that parascience stuff.' That's Parascience Accusation Fallacy—using the label to dismiss, not engaging what I actually said. My experiences are real to me; calling them 'parascience' doesn't make them disappear. It just shows you're not interested in understanding."
by Dumu The Void February 28, 2026
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Fallacy Accusation

A specific form of the fallacy fallacy where one doesn't just point out fallacies but accuses the opponent of fallacy as a way of dismissing their argument without engagement. The accusation functions as a conversation-ender: "That's an appeal to authority!" becomes a magic phrase that makes the argument disappear. The fallacy lies in treating the accusation as refutation—as if naming the fallacy does the work of showing why the argument fails. It's fallacy-spotting as a weapon, not as analysis.
"She cited a study. 'Appeal to authority!' he declared, as if that settled it. Fallacy Accusation: using fallacy names as weapons, not tools. He never addressed the study's quality, relevance, or methodology—just named a fallacy and declared victory. The accusation was the argument; the content never got touched."
by Dumu The Void March 4, 2026
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The rhetorical move of accusing someone of believing conspiracy theories as a way of dismissing their arguments without engagement. The accusation functions as social exclusion—positioning the target as paranoid, irrational, or dangerous. The fallacy lies in using the accusation itself as the argument, rather than addressing the actual claims. It's ad hominem by category: you don't have to refute someone if you can successfully frame them as a "conspiracy theorist."
Conspiracy Theory Accusation Fallacy "I raised questions about media consolidation and its effects on news coverage. Response: 'Oh, you're one of those conspiracy theorists.' That's Conspiracy Theory Accusation Fallacy—using the label to dismiss, not engaging the substance. Media consolidation is real, documented, and worth discussing. But the accusation short-circuits the conversation before it starts."
by Dumu The Void February 28, 2026
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Argumentum Ad Accusationem

A form of Argumentum Ad Te where the focus shifts to accusing the opponent based on their argument rather than dealing with the argument's content. "You're just accusing" becomes a way of dismissing claims without engagement. The move reframes substantive critique as mere accusation, then dismisses the accusation as unworthy of response. It's a meta-dodge: instead of addressing what was said, you address the act of saying it—treating critique as attack, analysis as accusation. The fallacy lies in using the form of the response (it's an accusation) to avoid its content.
"I documented patterns of unfair treatment. Response: 'You're just accusing—that's Argumentum Ad Accusationem.' By calling it accusation, they avoid the documentation. Maybe it's accusation; maybe it's evidence. The label doesn't settle it, but it lets them feel justified in not engaging. Accusation as a magic word that makes critique disappear."
by Dumu The Void March 3, 2026
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