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Anti-Pseudoscience Violence

The aggressive, often cruel enforcement of the boundary between “science” and “pseudoscience,” using accusations of pseudoscience to justify harassment, censorship, or personal attacks. While genuine pseudoscience criticism is valuable, anti‑pseudoscience violence occurs when the label is applied arbitrarily, without engagement, and with the intent to destroy rather than educate. It often targets emerging fields, heterodox researchers, or cultural practices that do not fit Western scientific norms. The violence is in the certainty that one knows what real science is and the willingness to harm those who disagree.
Anti-Pseudoscience Violence Example: “He called her research on plant communication ‘pseudoscience’ and organized a campaign to get her funding cut—anti‑pseudoscience violence, using the label as a weapon to silence unpopular ideas.”
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Anti-Pseudoscience Violence

The use of physical, verbal, or online violence against individuals or groups because they are perceived as promoting pseudoscience. This can range from online harassment and doxxing to real-world threats, vandalism of alternative health clinics, or physical attacks on practitioners of traditional medicine. Anti-pseudoscience violence is often rationalized by the perpetrator as “defending science” or “protecting the public,” but it functions as a form of vigilantism that targets vulnerable communities. It ignores that violence is not a scientific method, and that coercion contradicts the very principles of reason and consent that science advocates claim to defend.
Example: “After her blog post about herbal remedies went viral, she received death threats and her home address was posted online—anti-pseudoscience violence, using the banner of reason to justify terror.”

Anti-Pseudoscience Alienation

A social and psychological condition experienced by individuals who hold beliefs labeled as pseudoscientific, arising from systematic exclusion, mockery, and pathologization by scientific or skeptical communities. This alienation can lead to self-censorship, withdrawal from public discourse, internalized shame, or a deepening mistrust of legitimate science. Unlike mere disagreement, anti-pseudoscience alienation is produced by a hostile environment where people are made to feel that their worldviews are not just mistaken but signs of mental defect or moral failure. It often drives people away from science altogether, ironically creating the very irrationality it claims to oppose.

Example: “She stopped talking about her spiritual practices even with friends, after years of being called ‘delusional’ online—anti-pseudoscience alienation, where the cure for bad ideas becomes a weapon that drives people into silence.”

Anti-pseudoscience violence

A critical term for the aggressive, often disproportionate hostility directed at individuals or groups labeled as “pseudoscientific.” It includes online harassment, doxxing, mass reporting, public shaming, and calls for deplatforming or firing—all justified under the banner of defending science. Anti‑pseudoscience violence often targets alternative health practitioners, spiritual believers, or even legitimate heterodox researchers. Critics argue that while some pseudoscience is harmful, the violent response often escalates beyond reason, mirrors the dogmatism it claims to oppose, and erodes the possibility of respectful debate. It is a form of scientific gatekeeping turned into a weapon.
Anti-pseudoscience violence Example: “The anti‑pseudoscience activist coordinated a harassment campaign against a homeopath, posting their address and calling their employer. That’s anti‑pseudoscience violence: using science as a pretext for harm.”

Hair spider

A tight, tangled knot of loose hair and lint that forms inside clothing during the clothes dryer cycle. It typically hides inside garments, causing an annoying lump or a phantom tickling sensation against the skin until it is found or falls out onto the floor during folding.
I was folding my clothes and a huge hair spider fell out onto my hand
Hair spider by Kmorsels July 15, 2026
Word of the Day on July 16, 2026
n. A screenshot fabricated by a company to misrepresent the graphics of a game; a combination of the words bullshit and screenshot.

Originated from Penny Arcade, a popular gaming webcomic.
-Have you seen Madden 2006 for the Xbox 360? The graphics are gonna be awesome!
-Dude, the Madden 2006 images they showed at E3 were bullshots. It doesn't look nearly as good as they said.
bullshot by Worker Unit #503,298,545 September 26, 2005
Word of the Day on July 15, 2026

Gayborhood 

N. A neighborhood containing homes, clubs, bars, restaurants, and other places of business and entertainment that cater to homosexuals.
"They've opened up a new club in the Gayborhood called the Male Box."
Gayborhood by Mia Shields January 6, 2006
Word of the Day on July 14, 2026
A small piece of information. Derived from the word ken, used often in the scottish language and is synonymous with knowledge.
Person 1: "Hey I don't get this shit. How do you solve this problem?"
Person 2: "I got that one. Give me some kenlets on this assignment and I'll help you w/ that one."
kenlet by Norma Y. October 8, 2005
Word of the Day on July 13, 2026