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Moving the Goalposts

Also Known As: Raising the Bar Shifting Standards Impossible Expectations
Manipulation & Propaganda ID: moving_the_goalposts

Definition

Moving the goalposts is a technique where someone continually changes the criteria for proof or success after the original criteria have been met. When evidence satisfying the initial demand is presented, the person raises new requirements, ensuring that no amount of evidence can ever be sufficient. This creates a rigged game where the skeptic appears to be asking reasonable questions while making genuine resolution impossible. While primarily a manipulation tactic, this pattern also functions as a logical fallacy (D1) when it undermines the logical structure of an argument by retroactively changing the criteria for proof.

Examples

Skeptic: 'Show me one peer-reviewed study supporting that claim.' After receiving one: 'One study isn't enough — show me a meta-analysis.' After receiving a meta-analysis: 'That meta-analysis didn't include studies from the last two years.' After updated analysis: 'Well, the methodology of those studies is questionable.' The criteria keep changing indefinitely.

A job candidate is told they need a bachelor's degree to be considered. They apply with one, and are then told they also need five years of experience. They return with that too, only to hear: 'We're really looking for someone with an MBA for this role.'

During a political debate, an opposition leader demands the government reduce unemployment below 5% before claiming economic success. When it drops to 4.7%, they say: 'That number doesn't account for part-time workers. Real full-time employment needs to recover first.' When that improves: 'But wage growth is still stagnant — that's the real measure.'

Verification Steps
Verification Steps
Binary yes/no questions that an AI must answer to detect a reasoning pattern in a text.
Each of the 452 aspects has verification steps — simple yes/no questions designed to systematically detect whether a pattern appears in a text. For ad hominem: "Does the argument attack a person rather than their claim?" For false dichotomy: "Are only two options presented when more exist?" This ensures consistent, reproducible analysis.

Binary (yes/no) questions an LLM must answer to identify this aspect:

  1. 1

    Were specific conditions or evidence originally demanded to support a claim?

    Type: binary
  2. 2

    After those conditions were met, were new or different conditions introduced?

    Type: binary
  3. 3

    Does the pattern of shifting criteria suggest bad faith rather than genuine inquiry?

    Type: binary
Deep Dive
The expandable detail section on each aspect page with examples, psychology, and counter-strategies.
The Deep Dive section provides in-depth information about each aspect: a real-world example showing the pattern in action, an explanation of why it works psychologically, practical advice on how to counter it, alternative names, and links to related aspects.