"Please hire me for the job; I really need the money to pay my bills."
The naturalist fallacy.
It looks like you haven't provided an example of a logical fallacy. If you have one in mind, please share it so I can help identify which type of fallacy it belongs to.
The fallacy in question is an appeal to ignorance, where a lack of evidence is used to support a claim. This fallacy occurs when someone argues that a statement is true simply because it has not been proven false, or vice versa.
fallacy of induction
Straw man
The logical fallacy used here is a slippery slope fallacy, where the argument suggests that something minor (wearing school sweatshirts on Fridays) will lead to a series of escalating events (creating a sense of unity and belonging).
An Equivalence fallacy is the error of defining distinct and conflicting items in similar terms, thus equating tow items that are not, in fact, equal. An author who suggests that one act of serious wrongdoing does not differ from a minor offence commits the fallacy of moral equivalence. A different kind of Equivalence Fallacy is used when, for example, a politician argues: "Yes, I used illegal money to fund my campaign ... but so did my opponent!" This type of moral equivalence fallacy is called the "tu quo" argument ("But you're one too!").
Straw man
Without knowing the specific statement, it is difficult to identify the type of logical fallacy. Can you please provide the statement so I can assist you further?
Ad hominem
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An ad hominem fallacy, sometimes called a "genetic fallacy" or "to the person fallacy" or shorted to "ad hominem", is a kind of logical fallacy. This logical fallacy's definition is: attacking the person rather than the statements the person made.