# You Too Fallacy Logical Fallacy Activity Pack - Critical Thinking Activities

**Price:** $12.95 AUD
**Seller:** TeachBuySell Seller

**Year Levels:** noYearLevel
**Subjects:** english

## Description (seller-submitted)

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"You forgot to take the bins out." "Yeah, well YOU never do the dishes!" Sound familiar? That's not a defence. That's a distraction. Instead of owning a mistake, someone points the finger right back at their accuser. It doesn't matter if the accusation is true. It doesn't address what actually happened. It just gets everyone looking the other way - and suddenly no one's talking about the original problem anymore. That's the You Too Fallacy. Your learners use it, see it used on them, and watch it play out everywhere - at school, at home, in politics, online. "You said I spend too much time on my phone? Well YOU'RE always on the computer!" "You think my candidate is dishonest? What about YOUR candidate two years ago?" Deflect. Distract. Escape. No one wins, and nothing gets resolved. This 20-page printed activity pack teaches kids to recognise when someone sidesteps a criticism by firing one straight back. Through an illustrated true story, a funny comic, and hands-on activities featuring Duchess and Bruno, learners don't just memorise a definition. They understand the fallacy well enough to catch it in the wild. ⭐ Rated 5.0 on Etsy and TPT THE STORY INSIDE This pack features the story of Andrei Sakharov and the Soviet Union's whataboutism machine. From 1917 to 1991, the Soviet government silenced anyone who dared speak out - censoring speech, wiretapping phones, trailing dissidents, and reading private mail. Andrei Sakharov knew exactly how dangerous this was. A nuclear physicist who helped build the Soviet hydrogen bomb in 1953, he grew troubled by the threat of nuclear annihilation and began speaking out publicly about human rights. The Soviet government censored him. Then, when the United States criticised them for silencing dissidents like Sakharov, the Kremlin didn't defend itself. Instead, it fired back: "You do it too!" They accused the US of jailing civil rights activists, censoring media, and killing students at Kent State. Soviet newspaper Pravda - "The Tru… [truncated]
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## Learning Needs

personalDevelopment, growthMindset, socialSkills

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