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Field Rationality

The performance of being a rational actor according to the narrowly defined standards of a specific field. It involves adopting the vocabulary, metrics, and goals of the field as one's own, and making decisions that are "rational" within that closed system, even if they are irrational or destructive from a wider human perspective.
Field Rationality Example: A student choosing to memorize factoids for a standardized test instead of deeply understanding the subject. This is field rationality: within the field of "educational testing," maximizing your score is the only rational goal. The richer, more meaningful—but less testable—learning is rationally abandoned.
by Dumuabzu February 8, 2026
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Abuse Rationalization

The use of logic, economic theory, or detached language to recast systemic exploitation as a neutral, inevitable, or even beneficial process. It transforms acts of harm into abstract data points, "trade-offs," or necessary evils, while pathologizing the victims for their suffering. The violence of the system is laundered through vocabulary.
Example: A corporate memo announcing mass layoffs to "right-size the company" and "maximize shareholder value," while offering outplacement services. The human devastation of lost livelihoods, health insurance, and purpose is rationalized as a prudent financial strategy. The abuse rationalization frames the decision as a hard but logical business necessity, not a human catastrophe.
by Abzugal February 8, 2026
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Oppression Rationalization

The intellectual framework that justifies hierarchical control by arguing it is natural, efficient, or for the victims' own good. It uses historical determinism, pseudo-science, or theories of "order" to argue that oppressed groups are inferior, unprepared for freedom, or that their subjugation is essential for societal progress or stability.
Example: Defenders of colonial rule arguing it brought "civilization," railways, and governance to "backward" societies. The violence, cultural genocide, and extraction are rationalized as the difficult but necessary price of progress. This oppression rationalization treats domination as a tutelage, reframing the oppressor’s greed as a burden shouldered for the benefit of the oppressed.
by Abzugal February 8, 2026
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Penetrator Rationalization

A specific form of justification where the invasive, extractive, or violating nature of a power is reimagined as a welcome, modernizing, or liberating force. The language is often sexualized or gendered, framing conquest as "penetration" into new markets or ideas, and resistance as irrational fear of progress.
Example: A tech CEO describing data harvesting and behavioral micro-targeting as "delivering more relevant experiences" and "entering a deeper relationship with the user." The violation of privacy is rationalized as intimacy; the penetrator rationalization reframes extraction as a service and the colonizing of mental space as connectivity.
by Abzugal February 8, 2026
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Atrocity Rationalization

The deployment of historical context, utilitarian calculus, or ideological ends to minimize, excuse, or morally vindicate large-scale human suffering. It often involves bogus counterfactuals ("it would have been worse otherwise") or the labeling of victims as acceptable collateral damage in a grander narrative of progress or security.
Example: Justifying the nuclear bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki by claiming they "ultimately saved lives" by ending the war faster. The immediate vaporization of civilians is rationalized through a speculative, retrospective body-count calculus. This atrocity rationalization uses a hypothetical alternative to sanitize a concrete war crime.
by Abzugal February 8, 2026
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Poverty Rationalization

The set of beliefs that attribute systemic, structural economic deprivation to the moral, cultural, or intellectual failings of the poor themselves. It uses anecdotes of exceptional escape ("pull yourself up by your bootstraps") or pseudo-scientific theories about intelligence and work ethic to rationalize inequality as a natural and fair outcome.
Example: Blaming poverty on a "culture of dependency" or poor financial choices like buying smartphones. This poverty rationalization ignores structural factors like wage stagnation, discriminatory policies, and capital concentration. It transforms an economic outcome of systemic design into a character judgment, protecting the system from critique.
by Abzugal February 8, 2026
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Scarcity Rationalization

The ideological claim that resources are inherently and permanently insufficient to meet human needs, used to justify inequality, hoarding, and the exclusion of certain groups from access. It presents a contingent political choice—who gets what—as an immutable law of nature, framing greed as prudence and sharing as naive.
Example: "There just isn't enough to go around," said by a wealthy nation debating healthcare or housing, while immense wealth concentrates at the top. This scarcity rationalization masks artificial, politically-engineered scarcity (e.g., vacant investment properties, drug patents) to naturalize deprivation and defeat demands for redistribution.
by Abzugal February 8, 2026
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