Corporate Civil
Terrorism is a pattern of non-violent, systematic coercion in which an organization weaponizes its civil and administrative authority—discipline, policy enforcement, internal legal positioning, payroll and assignment control, reputational records, and termination
power—to compel employee compliance through credible threat of economic and career harm. A pattern where a company uses its own administrative
power — HR discipline, PIPs, policy "compliance," termination threats, and internal legal positioning — to intimidate an employee into submission through
fear of economic and career destruction, while making every coercive move look like routine management ("it's just policy," "it's just performance").
Distinguished from ordinary
bad management by its deniability architecture: each individual action looks defensible on
paper, but the aggregate pattern functions as a systematic intimidation regime. The coercion hides in plain sight because it's dressed in process language.
Borrows the intimidation-and-coercion logic from federal
terrorism law (18
U.S.C. § 2331) but substitutes economic threats for violence, career destruction for physical danger, and procedural legitimacy for secrecy. The employee isn't afraid of being
hurt — they're afraid of being destroyed financially, professionally, and reputationally, and that
fear is enough to override any rational attempt at self-advocacy.
"I filed for an
ADA accommodation and two weeks later got a
PIP I'd never been warned about, then got told if I didn't accept an assignment 90 miles away with no reimbursement guarantee I'd be terminated for '
job abandonment.' Every email from HR sounds perfectly reasonable until you realize the only options they give you are submit or get fired. That's corporate civil terrorism — they
don't need to threaten you with anything but paper."