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Systemic Control

Being Able To Have A Stronger Control of Your Body, Like Rubbing your Stomach While Patting Your Head.

Or Sitting In A Chair Making Clock Wise Cirlces With your Right Foot, Then using Your Righ Hand To Draw A 6
Few People Have Systemic Control.

I DO!!
by Silent Joe February 11, 2005
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Reaction control system

Small rockets mounted on the sides of a rocket in many orientations; allows for fine maneuvering in space, especially useful for docking. Usually abbreviated RCS.
Let's shut down the main engine and complete the rendezvous with the reaction control system.
by Some weird nerd guy March 27, 2017
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The study of technologies and infrastructures designed to manage the behavior, movement, and communication of entire populations at scale. This theory focuses on the industrial-age and digital-age machinery of control: census bureaus, national identification systems, surveillance networks, predictive policing algorithms, credit scoring, and social credit systems. Unlike localized control (a teacher in a classroom), mass control systems are impersonal, automated, and operate through data. The theory examines how states and corporations shift from disciplining individuals to modulating populations.
Mass Social Control Systems Theory Example: China's Social Credit System is the archetypal Mass Social Control System—a nation-scale behavioral scoring infrastructure. Less dramatic but equally pervasive examples include E-ZPass tracking (your movement is logged), Amazon's predictive ordering (your consumption is anticipated), and health insurance risk algorithms (your future is priced). These systems don't need to arrest you; they simply make non-compliance increasingly inconvenient, expensive, or invisible.
by Dumu The Void February 11, 2026
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A framework analyzing how societies regulate behavior not primarily through violence, but through integrated networks of institutions, norms, and technologies that shape what is thinkable, desirable, and permissible. It moves beyond crude models of "oppression" to map the subtle, distributed architecture of conformity: schools that sort and credential, media that frame and omit, architecture that guides movement, debt that disciplines, and algorithms that curate reality. The theory posits that modern control is less a whip than a gravitational field—invisible, pervasive, and internalized as common sense.
Social Control Systems Theory Example: Social Control Systems Theory examines how a teenager in a modern democracy is "controlled." Not by police, but by a system: school schedules condition compliance, standardized exams define intelligence, social media algorithms reward attention-optimized behavior, consumer debt enforces labor participation, and the two-party political menu constrains imagination. No single entity orchestrates this; it's a system that has evolved to regulate its own human components.
by Dumu The Void February 11, 2026
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The study of the complex, interconnected mechanisms through which societies regulate behavior—the institutions, technologies, and practices that together constitute systems of control. These systems include formal elements (laws, police, courts), informal elements (norms, gossip, shame), and increasingly, algorithmic elements (social media feeds, credit scores, surveillance cameras). The psychology of social control systems examines how these elements interact, how they're perceived by those subject to them, and how they shape not just behavior but identity, desire, and possibility. It's the psychology of being governed, whether by states, corporations, or algorithms.
Example: "She analyzed the psychology of social control systems in her city—cameras everywhere, social credit experiments, algorithms predicting crime. The system wasn't oppressive in obvious ways; it just nudged, monitored, scored. People behaved differently because they knew they were watched, even when no one was watching. The system worked by being felt, not seen."
by Dumu The Void February 16, 2026
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The study of the institutions, technologies, and practices that together constitute systems for managing large populations—governments, corporations, media, platforms, algorithms. These systems don't just control through obvious coercion; they shape the very categories through which we understand ourselves and our options. They define what's normal, what's desirable, what's possible. The psychology of mass control systems examines how these systems maintain themselves, how they adapt to resistance, and how they're experienced by those within them. It's the psychology of living inside systems so large you can't see their boundaries, so pervasive you can't imagine alternatives.
Psychology of Mass Control Systems Example: "She mapped the mass control systems operating in her life—the state that tracked her taxes, the corporations that tracked her purchases, the platforms that tracked her attention, the algorithms that shaped her choices. Each system claimed to serve her; together, they managed her. The psychology wasn't about resisting—that was nearly impossible—but about understanding, which was at least possible."
by Dumu The Void February 16, 2026
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The study of the institutions, technologies, and practices that societies develop to manage physical assemblies—police tactics, legal frameworks, communication systems, physical barriers. These systems evolve in response to crowd behavior, technological change, and political pressures. The psychology of crowd control systems examines how these systems are perceived by crowds, how they shape crowd behavior, and how they can themselves become triggers for conflict. A system designed to control crowds can create the very violence it's meant to prevent if it's perceived as oppressive. The psychology is about the interaction between controllers and controlled, each responding to the other in an ongoing dance of power and resistance.
Psychology of Crowd Control Systems Example: "He analyzed the crowd control system at major events—the barriers channeling movement, the police positioned at choke points, the cameras monitoring everything, the communication protocols for emergencies. The system was designed to be invisible when working, visible only when failing. When it worked, no one noticed. That was the point."
by Dumu The Void February 16, 2026
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