What is the first day of the week?
Sunday
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Saturday
The week never "starts" or "ends"
Other
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seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Japan
seen from Nepal

seen from New Zealand
seen from United States

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Australia
seen from China

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Brazil

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from China

seen from Kyrgyzstan
seen from China
seen from United States
What is the first day of the week?
Sunday
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Saturday
The week never "starts" or "ends"
Other
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Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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Gender presentation and hair length poll
Fem presenting, hair shorter than my shoulders
Fem presenting, hair PAST my shoulders
Masc presenting, hair shorter than my shoulders
Masc presenting, hair PAST my shoulders
Androgynous presenting, hair shorter than my shoulders
Androgynous presenting, hair PAST my shoulders
Other/it's complicated, hair shorter than my shoulders
Other/it's complicated, hair PAST my shoulders
Gender presentation here means the way you physically appear in public most of the time.
Obviously there are short fem hairstyles and long masc hairstyles/anyone can have any length hair. This is just surveying the wider trends.
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(part 1) Which of these logical fallacies do you think you see OTHERS use most often? Definitions listed below.
Ad hominem
False dilemma
Bandwagon
Incomplete comparison
Strawman
False cause
Slippery slope
False analogy
Guilt by association
Hasty generalization
Brief definitions:
Ad Hominem: Trying to undermine the opponent's arguments by using personal attacks rather than logical argument
False Dilemma: Presenting two alternative states as the only possibilities when more possibilities may exist
Bandwagon: Presuming that a proposition must be true because many believe it to be true/everyone else is doing or saying it
Incomplete Comparison: Comparing two things that aren't really related, in order to make something more appealing than it would be otherwise
Strawman: Misrepresenting an argument so that it becomes easier to attack
False Cause: Citing sequential events as evidence that the first event caused the second
Slippery Slope: Claiming that a single event will lead to a series of events that would lead to one major event, or that event A will lead to event B which must lead to event C and so on until event Z
False Analogy: Assuming that if two things or events have similarities in one or more respects, they are similar in other properties too
Guilt by Association: Connecting an opponent to a demonized group of people or to a bad person in order to discredit their argument
Hasty Generalization: Making a claim based on evidence that is too small to prove the claim
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Have you ever tried to summon Bloody Mary?
Yes
No, but I've tried to summon a different popular ghost
No, but I know what you're talking about
I'm not familiar with this
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How do you pronounce tinnitus?
Tin-eye-tus
Tin-it-us
Secret third way
I don't know this word
Tinnitus is the sensation of hearing a persistent noise like ringing, buzzing, or roaring that doesn't have an external source.
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Caffeine overdose symptoms and signs. Includes documented cases of overdose and steps to prevent overuse by following these safety guideline
Based off the symptoms listed in the article above, have you ever had a caffeine overdose?
Yes, and I have caffeine every day
No, and I have caffeine every day
Yes, and I have caffeine regularly but not daily
No, and I have caffeine regularly but not daily
Yes, I only have caffeine for a specific purpose (e.g. staying awake to study)
No, I only have caffeine for a specific purpose (e.g. staying awake to study)
Yes, and I've only had caffeine a few ever
No, and I've only had caffeine a few times ever
I've never had caffeine
Not sure
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(part 2) Which of these logical fallacies do you think YOU use most often? Brief definitions listed below.
Ad hominem
False dilemma
Bandwagon
Incomplete comparison
Strawman
False cause
Slippery slope
False analogy
Guilt by association
Hasty generalization
Brief definitions:
Ad Hominem: Trying to undermine the opponent's arguments by using personal attacks rather than logical argument
False Dilemma: Presenting two alternative states as the only possibilities when more possibilities may exist
Bandwagon: Presuming that a proposition must be true because many believe it to be true/everyone else is doing or saying it
Incomplete Comparison: Comparing two things that aren't really related, in order to make something more appealing than it would be otherwise
Strawman: Misrepresenting an argument so that it becomes easier to attack
False Cause: Citing sequential events as evidence that the first event caused the second
Slippery Slope: Claiming that a single event will lead to a series of events that would lead to one major event, or that event A will lead to event B which must lead to event C and so on until event Z
False Analogy: Assuming that if two things or events have similarities in one or more respects, they are similar in other properties too
Guilt by Association: Connecting an opponent to a demonized group of people or to a bad person in order to discredit their argument
Hasty Generalization: Making a claim based on evidence that is too small to prove the claim
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Are you cis or trans? What was the gender mix of your friends like as a teenager?
I'm cis, my friends were mostly my same gender (>75%)
I'm cis, my friend group leaned same-gender (55–75%)
I'm cis, my friend group was about even (45–55%)
I'm cis, my friend group leaned different-gender (55–75%)
I'm cis, my friend group was mostly a different gender (>75%)
I'm trans, my friend group was mostly the gender I NOW identify with (>75%)
I'm trans, my friend group leaned the gender I NOW identify with (55–75%)
I'm trans, my friend group was about even (45–55%)
I'm trans, my friend group leaned more toward my assigned gender (55–75%)
I'm trans, my friend group was mostly my assigned gender (>75%)
I or my friends were too nonbinary to answer this question
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