A few more FGCAs. Some of these aren't really arguments, but anyone mounting an FGCA is unlikely to be concerned about epistemological propriety, and all of these things can be used together in support of each other.
"Check your privilege."
"Check your premises."
Psychologising the opposition.
"This is settled science."
Emphasis and reassertion of the thesis.
"Oh. My. God."
"*facepalm*"
"Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha!"
Satire.
Parody.
Pretty much anything, said in your own echo chamber. NB. Link to your allies' actual postings, but not to your enemies'. A link to the top of their blog is better.
Cite some other blogger and say they've completely eviscerated the enemy.
Irregular verbs. ("We are right/You are wrong." "These studies prove/Those studies are flawed." "We have the support of.../You are in the pocket of...")
And a Fully General way of generating all of these and more: bottom-lining. Nail your desired conclusion to a wall marked "TRUE" and your opponents' to a wall marked "FALSE", and ask the virtual outcome pump in your head to fill in the empty space on the walls. There is no conclusion, however absurd or repellent, that you cannot do this with. The smarter and better educated you are, the more puzzle pieces you have available to play with and the more easily you can invent new ways to put them together. Related quote from Foucault's Pendulum.
Someone said to me "you're just repeating a lot of the talking points on the other side."
I pointed out that this was just a FGCA, so they linked to this post and said "Oh what tangled webs we weave when first we practice to list Fully General Counter Arguments. Of course that sentiment probably counts as a Fully General Counterargument: Round like a circle in a spiral, like a wheel within a wheel. Never ending or beginning on an ever spinning reel." Did I break him?
Follow-up to: Knowing About Biases Can Hurt People
See also: Fully General Counterargument (LW Wiki)
With the caveat that the arguer doesn't need to be aware that this is the case. But if (s)he is not aware of that, this seems like the other biases we are prone to. The question is: Is there a tendency or risk to accidentally form FGCAs? Do we fall easily into this mind-trap?
This post tries to (non-exhaustively) list some FGCAs as well as possible countermeasures.
The List
Here is a list of my own making:
Do you now some more? Into what clusters do these FGCAs fall?
Self-sealing Belief
Why do we use FGCAs? One reason may be when we are arguing from within a self-sealing belief:
Preventive Action
What are known ways to avoid FGCAs?
One specific method against this mind trap is being humbly gullible.
Another is to practice Steelmanning as long as you avoid the dangers of steelmanning. Especially applicable is Steelmanning Inefficiency.
More general advice can of course be found in the Twelve Virtues of Rationality. See also the concise and improved versions.