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Evidence Industry

A critical term for the modern system where facts and data are no longer neutral discoveries but mass-produced commodities. In this "industry," evidence is generated, packaged, and marketed to serve pre-determined political agendas, corporate interests, or ideological conclusions. Think of it as a factory where the desired product (a specific narrative) is designed first, and the raw materials (studies, statistics, expert testimony) are then selectively manufactured or sourced to fit. It turns truth-seeking into a supply-chain management problem for power.
Evidence Industry Example: During a major policy debate—like on climate change or public health—opposing think tanks, media conglomerates, and university labs funded by interested parties all churn out a flood of conflicting reports, charts, and "expert" opinions. This isn't an accident of science; it's the Evidence Industry at work. The public is left drowning in a sea of manufactured certainty, unable to find solid ground because every fact has a corporate or ideological barcode.
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 6, 2026
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Evidence Pluralism

The principle that what counts as legitimate "evidence" depends on the context and the question being asked. It rejects the idea that only quantitative, statistical data from controlled experiments constitutes valid proof. Under this view, a patient's detailed narrative, a historical document, an ethnographic observation, or a logical model can all serve as robust evidence within their respective domains of inquiry.
Example: In a court of law, Evidence Pluralism is the rule. The case is built on forensic data (DNA), documentary evidence (a contract), testimonial evidence (an eyewitness account), and expert interpretation (a psychologist's analysis). Dismissing the witness's story because it's not a DNA strand would be absurd. Different questions (Who was there? What happened?) require different forms of proof.
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 6, 2026
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Related Words
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Evidencepost

The rhetorical equivalent of moving the goalposts, but specifically about evidence—demanding proof, then when proof is provided, declaring that proof invalid and demanding a different kind of proof, then when that's provided, moving to yet another standard. The evidencepost is that shifting standard of what counts as "real evidence," designed to be impossible to satisfy. It starts at "show me a peer-reviewed study," moves to "peer-reviewed studies are biased, show me raw data," then to "data can be manipulated, show me a real-world example," then to "anecdotes aren't evidence, show me a study." The evidencepost is always just out of reach, because the goal isn't to find truth—it's to never admit you're wrong.
Example: "In the Facebook comments, he kept moving the evidencepost. First he wanted a source. She provided one. He said that source was biased. She provided a different one. He said it was too old. She provided a current one. He said statistics could say anything. Finally, she asked what evidence he would accept. He said 'common sense.' The evidencepost had moved to a location where no evidence could reach it."
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 15, 2026
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Evidence-Saturation Delay

The cognitive phenomenon where the presentation of overwhelming evidence actually slows down decision-making and judgment rather than accelerating it. When faced with too much evidence, the mind freezes—unable to process, prioritize, or conclude. This delay is paradoxical: more information should lead to faster, better decisions, but beyond a certain point, it leads to paralysis. Evidence-saturation delay is why juries can deadlock after weeks of testimony, why consumers can't choose among 50 similar products, and why debates about complex issues never end despite mountains of data. The cure is not more evidence but better filtering, which is why experts are valuable: they know what to ignore. The rest of us just drown.
Example: "She spent three weeks researching which laptop to buy, reading reviews, comparing specs, watching videos. Evidence-saturation delay had struck: the more she learned, the less she could decide. She finally bought the one her friend recommended, which she could have done in five minutes. The evidence hadn't helped; it had paralyzed."
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 17, 2026
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Evidencebait

A form of bait designed to manipulate a user into producing evidence against themselves—admissions, confessions, screenshots, or other material that can be used to harm them. Evidencebaiting involves creating situations where the target feels safe enough to reveal damaging information: a private conversation that isn't private, a confession encouraged by false friendship, a document shared in supposed confidence. The baiter cultivates trust, provides opportunity, and waits for the target to incriminate themselves. Once the evidence is obtained, it's weaponized—used for blackmail, exposure, reporting, or public humiliation. Evidencebait is the art of turning people into their own prosecutors.
Example: "He confided in a new online friend about a mistake he'd made at work years ago—something that could get him fired if discovered. The friend was evidencebaiting: gathering material for blackmail. Weeks later, the threat came: pay up or your employer finds out. He'd provided the rope; they'd made the noose."
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 18, 2026
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Evidencepot

A form of honeypot designed specifically to get users to produce evidence against themselves—a server, community, or group created to encourage confessions, admissions, and self-incrimination. An evidencepot might present itself as a confidential support group, a lawyer-recommended "safe space," or a private forum for discussing sensitive topics. In reality, every admission is recorded, every confession documented, every piece of self-incriminating evidence saved for future weaponization. Users join seeking understanding; they leave having provided the ammunition for their own destruction.
Example: "The 'legal advice' server seemed legitimate—real lawyers, confidential discussions, strict privacy rules. Users shared details of their cases, their mistakes, their crimes, seeking guidance. Then the server owner revealed it was all an evidencepot—every message saved, every admission recorded, ready to be sold or leaked. The users had sought help; they'd found a trap."
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 18, 2026
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Evidencepost

A form of goalpost manipulation where the ultimate objective is to get a user to produce evidence against themselves. The evidencepost is the moving standard of safety, the shifting boundary of what seems safe to reveal. First, the target shares something mildly personal. Nothing happens. Then something more private. Still nothing. Then something incriminating. The boundaries keep expanding, the consequences keep not coming, until the target finally shares something that can destroy them. That evidence is captured, saved, weaponized. The evidencepost has done its work: lured the target step by step into self-incrimination.
Example: "They wanted something on him, so they set up an evidencepost. First, they asked where he grew up. He told them. Then his real name. He told them. Then his workplace. He told them. Then his social security number—for a contest, they said. He hesitated, but the post had moved so gradually that it seemed safe. He provided it. The evidence was complete; the identity theft began. The post had moved, and he'd followed it into ruin."
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 18, 2026
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