Frame Finding #001: When a fallacy is the frame
Shifting focus to the speaker's circumstances or credentials rather than addressing the core argument.
An interactive vault mapping 28 real-world communication frames, metaphors, and rhetorical pivots analyzed in the wild.
Shifting focus to the speaker's circumstances or credentials rather than addressing the core argument.
Highlighting a specific detail or attribute of a topic to filter the audience's emotional response.
Using a familiar framework like STEM education to explain and validate a complex issue like emotional health.
Using the image of a car with failing brakes to frame air traffic control system issues as an imminent danger.
Framing AI development as an urgent national race to deflect attention away from safety and regulatory concerns.
Layering multiple excuses or arguments together to create a stack of deflections that is hard to pin down.
Comparing AI regulation to a referee in a sports game to frame oversight as essential for fair play rather than restriction.
Interrogating the opponent's hidden motives or problem definition to reframe a funding freeze as a hostile attack.
Shifting the question from 'who is in charge' to 'how can we optimize the structure' to build consensus for a policy change.
Pivoting away from climate change to historical wildfire trends to frame local management as the primary solution.
Comparing AI to a sandwich to show how unregulated the industry is compared to everyday physical goods.
Redirecting allegations back at the media organization reporting them to undermine their credibility.
Framing economic spending as jet fuel to make a bill sound like an essential accelerator rather than an expense.
Exposing how a policy's outcomes align with negative corporate interests rather than the public good.
Framing the goal as bending the deficit curve rather than balancing the budget to shift the target to a more achievable metric.
Comparing Congress to a drunk teenager with a credit card to frame national debt spending as reckless and immature.
Using high-cost metaphors to frame tariff plans as an economic threat that shifts costs to everyday consumers.
Framing troop deployments as a de-escalation effort to project a peaceful intent behind military action.
Contrasting local consensus with external actions to frame local policies as mainstream and federal actions as extreme.
Introducing a red herring about local protests to deflect attention away from criticisms of federal policy implementation.
Framing product delays as quality-driven discipline to turn a scheduling failure into a proof of commitment.
Framing business model disruption as a technology wave that a firm is uniquely positioned to ride rather than fall victim to.
Comparing social media regulation to car safety (seat belts, airbags) to argue for legislative safety standards.
Framing a controversial report as standard statutory process to normalize a politically charged issue.
Explaining how analogies reposition thinking by highlighting the contrast between the comparison and the core issue.
Shifting the question from funding levels to system restructuring to change the political debate around subsidies.
Using dense, buzzword-heavy jargon to obscure corporate details and present mergers as historic moments.
Pivoting away from a direct policy question to a moral story about individual citizens to evade taking a controversial stance.