|
Again the dictionary
fair1 [fair] Show IPA adjective, fair·er, fair·est, adverb, fair·er, fair·est, noun, verb
adjective
1.
free from bias, dishonesty, or injustice: a fair decision; a fair judge
|
?!?! It's like you're proving
MY point.
YOU are misunderstanding the things that you are citing.
The dictionary agrees with me that the word "fair" represents something that cannot be affected by bias.
So yes, unfair would clearly mean that something may include bias. My claim that it has "nothing to do with bias" means that
your bias cannot effect the state of how unfair something is.
As in, you cannot say, "Nah, I don't think that's unfair," when you give one person 3 grapes and another person only 2 grapes. Basically, you're being biased about
bias, and when bias is even included in the equation then clearly it's unfair. Are you following me?
I don't need to click your link because again, you're taking the discussion of others and trying to substitute dialect for vocabulary. People will always casually misuse the words "fair" and "unfair" for the lack of a better word.