Rhyme Time
Goofus and Gallant
Give an example
Definitions
Coke vs Pepsi
100

Things have been bad lately, so now good things are due. 

But chance doesn’t work that way, not even for you.

Gambler's Fallacy

100

Gallant: “I think schools should offer more vegetarian options.”

Goofus: “Banning meat from school cafeterias is a terrible idea. Let me explain why...”

Strawman

100

Appeal to novelty

Any case where someone chooses or suggests something simply because it is new.

100

Ad hominem

Attacking a person instead of their argument.

100

"Pepsi claims that 1 in 7 Coke drinkers have diabetes. That's rich! Pepsi's CEO has diabetes!"

Tu Quoque

100

You saw just one swan, and it happened to be white.
Now you think all swans are white — does that seem right?

Hasty generalization

100

Gallant: “I’m not convinced that Ne Zha 2 is a good movie.”

Goofus: “But it's the highest grossing animated film of all time. Everyone in China is going nuts for it.”

Bandwagon

100

Slippery slope

Any example where someone claims, without explanation, that one action/event will set off a chain reaction with terrible consequences.

100

Perfect solution fallacy

Rejecting a plan or solution because it is not perfect

100

Lebron James drank a Coke before his last game and he scored 45 points. Clearly, Coke improves athletic performance! Take that, Pepsi."

Hasty generalization

100

A smelly distraction, let's follow a fishy new thread.

You said A, but let's talk about B instead.

Red herring

100

Gallant: “I can’t decide what to do this weekend.”

Goofus: “You can play the new Grobnob video game with us or experience serious FOMO!”

False dilemma

100

Sunk cost fallacy

Any example where someone justifies continuing to do something by appealing to the money, time, or energy already put into it.

100

The fallacy fallacy

Assuming a conclusion is false just because the argument for it was fallacious

100

"You've been drinking Coke all your life! Don't let some flashy Pepsi ads sway you now!"

Sunk cost fallacy

100

Forget the facts

Evoke smiles or tears

You can sway opinions

By preying on hopes and fears

Appeal to emotion

100

Gallant: “This new medicine, Ibuminephen, reduces headaches in 98% of people. You should try it for your chronic headaches”

Goofus: “Meh. I don't want to waste my money. I'll wait for something that is guaranteed to work.”

Perfect solution fallacy

100

Cherry picking

Any example where someone presents one favorable piece of evidence out of a bunch of unfavorable evidence.

100

Appeal to emotion

Stirring up people's emotions in the hope that it will get them to believe or do what you want.

100

"Finally, Coke 3.0 is here! You have to try it!"

Appeal to novelty

100

We’ve done it forever, so we must keep it that way
Old ways are better, like in my day


Appeal to tradition
100

Gallant: “The more you suffer, the happier you'll be.”

Goofus: “What a dumb idea!”

Appeal to the stone

100

Tu quoque

Any example where someone points out that an argument is hypocritical.

100

Red herring

Changing the subject to avoid dealing with the actual topic/argument.

100

"Coke claims that an independent survey of 50,000 people found that 95% of people prefer Coke? Pah! That's just ridiculous!"

Appeal to the stone

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