A paranoid and grandiose state developing in individuals deeply embedded in militant "skeptic" or anti-pseudoscience communities. They develop a persecutory delusion that they are on the front lines of a literal war against "the forces of unreason," seeing pseudoscience proponents not as mistaken, but as evil, conscious agents of a reality-distorting conspiracy. This can escalate to beliefs that they are being targeted by psychic attacks from "woo-practitioners" or that they must take extreme, "rational" measures (like attempting to "de-program" family members) that destroy their social world. Their identity as a defender of science becomes a totalizing, psychotic crusade.
Example: A moderator of a large anti-pseudoscience forum begins doxxing alternative health practitioners, believing they are "biochemical terrorists." They install EM-shielding in their home to block "homeopathic frequencies" they believe are targeting them. They cut off their sister for seeing a chiropractor, claiming she's been "infected by memetic pathogens." This is anti-pseudoscience psychosis: the ideological framework of combating falsehood has morphed into a schizoid reality where pseudoscience is an animate, malicious enemy requiring vigilante action.
by Dumu The Void January 27, 2026
Get the Anti-Pseudoscience Psychosis mug.A term used to describe systematic and sustained discrimination against Arsenal Football Club, its players, and its supporters within football institutions and discourse. This discrimination is perceived through disproportionate criticism, harsher media narratives, inconsistent refereeing decisions, and the normalization of negative stereotypes about the club and its fanbase.
Anti-Arsenal racism is often characterized by unequal standards: actions by Arsenal players being judged more severely than identical actions by players from other elite clubs, alongside the routine dismissal of Arsenal supporters’ concerns as delusional or conspiratorial.
Characteristics:
Persistent framing of Arsenal failures as cultural or moral flaws rather than situational or tactical issues
Refereeing inconsistencies that disadvantage Arsenal in comparable match situations
Media narratives that minimize Arsenal achievements while amplifying shortcomings
Stereotyping Arsenal fans as “overemotional,” “entitled,” or “out of touch with reality”
Impact:
Supporters argue that anti-Arsenal racism contributes to institutional bias, erodes competitive fairness, and shapes public perception of the club in ways that are difficult to reverse, regardless of on-field performance.
Anti-Arsenal racism is often characterized by unequal standards: actions by Arsenal players being judged more severely than identical actions by players from other elite clubs, alongside the routine dismissal of Arsenal supporters’ concerns as delusional or conspiratorial.
Characteristics:
Persistent framing of Arsenal failures as cultural or moral flaws rather than situational or tactical issues
Refereeing inconsistencies that disadvantage Arsenal in comparable match situations
Media narratives that minimize Arsenal achievements while amplifying shortcomings
Stereotyping Arsenal fans as “overemotional,” “entitled,” or “out of touch with reality”
Impact:
Supporters argue that anti-Arsenal racism contributes to institutional bias, erodes competitive fairness, and shapes public perception of the club in ways that are difficult to reverse, regardless of on-field performance.
by MuhGnr January 29, 2026
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The rigid, ideological stance that treats the current, mainstream scientific consensus as an infallible creed and defines all dissenting or non-standard ideas—regardless of their internal coherence or evidence—as "pseudoscience" that must be categorically rejected. This dogma confuses the scientific method (a skeptical, iterative process) with the institution of Science (a human social system). It elevates institutional authority over open inquiry, creating a black-and-white worldview where any challenge to established paradigms is heresy, not a potential catalyst for scientific progress. The dogmatist isn't defending science; they're defending the power and prestige of the current scientific priesthood.
*Example: "His anti-pseudoscience dogmatism was on full display when he shut down a discussion on the potential neurological effects of a new meditation technique. 'If it's not in a Tier-1 journal, it's pseudoscience! Full stop!' he declared, refusing to even look at the preliminary fMRI data. He wasn't being scientific; he was being a zealot for the official canon, using 'pseudoscience' as a heresy charge to avoid thinking."*
by AbzuInExile January 31, 2026
Get the Anti-Pseudoscience Dogmatism mug.The obsessive enforcement of ideological conformity within communities that claim to champion "science and reason." It involves purging members, silencing discussions, or ostracizing individuals who engage with ideas labeled "pseudoscientific," even tangentially or critically. This purity spiral values rhetorical and tribal cleanliness over genuine intellectual rigor. It creates echo chambers where the primary activity is not exploring truth, but performing one's allegiance by correctly identifying and shunning the "contaminated" other. Debate is replaced by excommunication.
Example: "The skeptic forum descended into anti-pseudoscience purity. A moderator was doxxed and expelled for the crime of attending a public lecture on the history of alchemy—not to believe it, but to understand its historical context. The ruling clique declared, 'Engagement with the topic is contamination. True skeptics must maintain purity of contact.' Their community became a sterile lab where no actual thinking, only ritualized disdain, was allowed."
by AbzuInExile January 31, 2026
Get the Anti-Pseudoscience Purity mug.The belief that ideas and people labeled "pseudoscientific" constitute an existential threat so grave that they justify active suppression, violence, or the dismantling of civil liberties. This extremism moves beyond debate and deplatforming to advocate for state censorship, the ruination of careers and lives, or even physical attacks against proponents of heretical ideas. It mirrors the totalitarian impulses of the worst ideological regimes, justifying its own illiberalism as a necessary defense of "Truth." The extremist becomes a mirror image of the conspiracy theorist they hate, seeing a monolithic, evil enemy that must be destroyed by any means.
*Example: "His online posts escalated from mocking flat-earthers to anti-pseudoscience extremism. He began calling for government agencies to raid and shut down alternative health clinics, for the families of vaccine-hesitant parents to be investigated by CPS, and celebrated when a prominent homeopath's clinic was firebombed, calling it 'a cleansing fire for reason.' He wasn't protecting science; he was waging a holy war, with reality itself as the casualty."
by AbzuInExile January 31, 2026
Get the Anti-Pseudoscience Extremism mug.Someone: I'd like to join the Anti Zeusophilia meeting...
That Dude: Yeah. Good choice. Now LET'S BEAT THE SHOCK OUT OF SOMEONE WHO DID NSFW TO SUCH ALIEN SPECIES!!
That Dude: Yeah. Good choice. Now LET'S BEAT THE SHOCK OUT OF SOMEONE WHO DID NSFW TO SUCH ALIEN SPECIES!!
by JelTheOCbase February 9, 2026
Get the Anti Zeusophilia mug.The logical fallacy of comparing any position one disagrees with to anti-vaccine beliefs, implying that because anti-vaccine views are dangerous and baseless, the position in question is similarly dangerous and baseless. The fallacy works by stigma transfer: if you believe X, you're like those terrible anti-vaxxers, therefore X must be rejected. It's a rhetorical weapon that avoids engagement with actual arguments, substituting moral condemnation for reasoning. The anti-vaccine analogy fallacy is especially common in public health debates, where it's used to dismiss legitimate concerns about specific policies by associating them with the most extreme anti-science positions. The fallacy ignores that concerns must be evaluated on their merits, not on their resemblance to the most vilified beliefs.
Anti-vaccine Analogy Fallacy Example: "He questioned the speed of vaccine approval for a new shot. She responded with the anti-vaccine analogy fallacy: 'Oh, so you're anti-vax now?' His question about regulatory process had nothing to do with opposing vaccines generally, but the analogy dismissed it without engagement. Legitimate discussion was replaced by stigma."
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 16, 2026
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