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Nermalite 

Anti Garfield and anti lasagna.
Likes Nermal,the self proclaimed "world's cutest kitten".
The nermalite stole my lasagna and spat on it!
Nermalite by MR_TRONFIELD May 18, 2024
The ongoing act of being utterly and irrevocably in love with an angelic being in human form
I Numaliya you, I have devoted myself to be in the state of Numaliya towards her
Numaliya by babyboyyinks December 28, 2025

Normality Bias

The oppressive use of "normality"—defined by dominant social, cultural, or political groups—as a cudgel to dismiss arguments, identities, or ways of life that deviate from that imposed standard. It asserts that what is statistically common or traditionally accepted is inherently right, rational, and healthy, while anything else is defective, radical, or invalid. It's a bias that mistakes convention for truth.
Example: Arguing against universal childcare by saying, "The normal family has a stay-at-home mother, so policy shouldn't support other models," uses Normality Bias. It leverages a descriptive (and arguable) claim about what's common to make a prescriptive judgment, shutting down debate about what might be better or more just.
Normality Bias by Dumu The Void February 4, 2026

Normality Bias

The societal-level counterpart, referring to the institutional and cultural machinery that actively pathologizes, marginalizes, or renders invisible any person, identity, or mode of living that falls outside the constructed norm. It's not just a cognitive error; it's a system of power that uses bias as a tool. This bias is embedded in language ("that's not normal"), diagnostic manuals, legal codes, and architectural design.
Example: Urban planning that assumes every household owns a car, thereby neglecting public transit, bike lanes, and walkable spaces, enforces a Normality Bias. It physically constructs a world where car-free living is difficult and stigmatized as "abnormal," privileging one lifestyle and disadvantaging all others.

Normalization Bias

A cognitive bias and metabias, common in scientific and expert communities, where the tools of science, evidence, and inquiry are deployed to normalize the status quo and/or the current political, economic, and social system. Normalization Bias operates when researchers unconsciously (or consciously) frame their questions, interpret their data, and present their findings in ways that make existing power structures seem natural, inevitable, or optimal. Poverty becomes a matter of "individual choices" rather than systemic extraction; inequality becomes "natural variation" rather than policy outcome; exploitation becomes "market efficiency" rather than violence. The bias lies in using the authority of science to launder the contingent into the necessary, turning "what is" into "what must be" through the alchemy of normalized framing. It's a metabias because it shapes not just individual findings but entire fields' approaches to what questions are worth asking.
Example: "The study 'proved' that poverty was caused by poor decision-making—completely ignoring that the decisions available to poor people were structurally constrained. Normalization Bias: using science to make oppression look like choice."

Normalization of Toxic Behavior

The process by which harmful actions—harassment, clique exclusion, gangbaiting, banlighting—become routine, expected, and even praised within online communities. When toxicity is normalized, new members learn that this is “just how things work”; targets are blamed for not adapting; and perpetrators see themselves as simply following community norms. Normalization happens gradually: each act is dismissed as minor or justified until the cumulative culture becomes one of cruelty. It is the mechanism that turns individual incidents into systemic abuse.
Example: “New members quickly learned that if you questioned a mod, you’d be called every name in the book. Normalization of toxic behavior: making abuse the price of participation.”