The application of a cold, algorithmic logic—often borrowed from Silicon Valley "disruption" playbooks or financial models—to "prove" that the victims of late-stage capitalism are illogical anomalies. It uses the internal metrics of the system (engagement rates, shareholder value, scalability) to construct syllogisms where any human need or community stability that interferes with optimization is deemed inefficient and thus invalid.
Logicalization against the Victims of Late-Stage Capitalism Example: "Premise 1: A business must maximize growth and market share. Premise 2: Our driverless delivery service does this by eliminating 10,000 driving jobs. Premise 3: Those drivers now have time to 'upskill' or pursue the gig economy. Conclusion: Therefore, this displacement is a logical net positive for human potential." This logicalization uses the system's own pathological priorities as first principles, defining human devastation as a rational step in a computation.
by Abzugal February 8, 2026
Get the Logicalization against the Victims of Late-Stage Capitalism mug.The mocking, aestheticized dismissal of the system's most grotesque outcomes as lifestyle quirks, generational memes, or personal brand opportunities. It turns systemic despair into a series of ironic jokes ("I can't afford to retire, lol"), viral challenges, or content about "quiet quitting" and "bed rotting," thereby dissolving collective rage into atomized, consumable experiences. The violence of the system is trivialized into a mood.
Trivialization against the Victims of Late-Stage Capitalism Example: A viral TikTok trend where users humorously list their "five side hustles" while showing their maxed-out credit cards, set to an upbeat song. The trivialization converts the brutal reality of wage stagnation and the need to work multiple jobs to survive into a relatable, funny personality trait, deflecting anger toward the system into a performance of resilient irony for likes.
by Abzugal February 8, 2026
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A theoretical framework proposing that late-stage capitalism produces systematic collective dissociation—a societal splitting from awareness of the system's inherent contradictions, harms, and unsustainability. Under late-stage capitalism, populations collectively disconnect from knowledge that would otherwise be unbearable: that the economy depends on endless growth on a finite planet; that prosperity for some requires immiseration for others; that "freedom" masks exploitation; that consumption destroys the conditions for life. The theory draws on trauma psychology (dissociation as response to overwhelming reality) and applies it to capitalist societies: we know and don't know simultaneously—aware of climate collapse while shopping, conscious of exploitation while consuming, informed about inequality while believing in meritocracy. This dissociation is not individual pathology but systemic requirement—capitalism couldn't function if people fully grasped what it does. The theory explains how societies maintain apparent normality while hurtling toward catastrophe: they've dissociated from what they're doing.
Theory of Collective Dissociation of Late-Stage Capitalism Example: "We watch the news about ecological collapse, then scroll past ads for things that cause it—Theory of Collective Dissociation of Late-Stage Capitalism explains how we hold both realities without integrating them. The system requires us to know and not know simultaneously."
by Dumu The Void March 19, 2026
Get the Theory of Collective Dissociation of Late-Stage Capitalism mug.A theoretical framework examining how entire populations under late-stage capitalism enter dissociative states—collectively disconnecting from the systemic realities that would otherwise demand response. Mass dissociation under late-stage capitalism operates at societal scale: whole nations dissociate from the violence that sustains their consumption; entire generations dissociate from the future they're foreclosing; global populations dissociate from the suffering embedded in every product. The theory explains how mass denial functions not as individual failing but as systemic feature—the economy requires dissociation to continue; the political system rewards it; the culture normalizes it. Mass dissociation enables business as usual while the planet burns, while inequality spirals, while democracy hollows out. It's not that people don't know—they know and don't know, in a mass dissociation that protects the system from the response its reality would otherwise provoke.
Example: "The polls show people know climate change is real and urgent—yet behavior doesn't change. Theory of Mass Dissociation of Late-Stage Capitalism explains the gap: mass dissociation allows knowing without acting, awareness without response, information without integration."
by Dumu The Void March 19, 2026
Get the Theory of Mass Dissociation of Late-Stage Capitalism mug.A sociological framework examining how late-stage capitalism produces and maintains collective dissociation through social structures, institutions, and practices. The social theory investigates the mechanisms by which capitalist societies manage unbearable knowledge: advertising that creates fantasy worlds detached from production reality; media that frames systemic problems as individual choices; education that teaches economics as natural law rather than human creation; workplaces that demand focus on immediate tasks over systemic awareness; consumer culture that provides endless distraction from structural awareness. It reveals that dissociation is built into the fabric of capitalist societies—in how cities are designed, how time is structured, how relationships are mediated, how value is measured. Understanding these mechanisms is essential for grasping how capitalism persists despite its contradictions: not through force alone, but through social arrangements that make full awareness nearly impossible.
*Example: "Her social theory of collective dissociation of late-stage capitalism showed how the 24/7 news cycle creates a kind of dissociation—constant information about crises, but presented in a way that prevents sustained attention or systemic understanding. We're informed and dissociated simultaneously."*
by Dumu The Void March 19, 2026
Get the Social Theory of Collective Dissociation of Late-Stage Capitalism mug.A sociological framework examining how mass dissociation operates at population scale under late-stage capitalism—the large-scale social processes that enable entire societies to disconnect from systemic reality. This theory investigates how institutions (media, education, government, corporations) work together to produce mass dissociation: news that reports disasters without context; entertainment that provides escape from awareness; advertising that reframes consumption as identity; politics that offers spectacle instead of substance; work that consumes energy needed for reflection. It examines how mass dissociation becomes embedded in everyday life—in the rhythm of days, the structure of spaces, the flow of information, the possibilities for attention. The theory reveals that mass dissociation under late-stage capitalism is not a failure of the system but one of its essential features—a social achievement that requires constant maintenance through countless institutions and practices.
Example: "His social theory of mass dissociation of late-stage capitalism showed how the built environment itself enforces dissociation—windowless shopping malls, highway systems that hide neighborhoods, suburbs designed for isolation. The dissociation isn't just in our heads; it's in our streets."
by Dumu The Void March 19, 2026
Get the Social Theory of Mass Dissociation of Late-Stage Capitalism mug.A theoretical framework examining how digital technologies and online environments enable, amplify, and transform collective dissociation specifically under late-stage capitalism. The theory investigates how platform capitalism creates unprecedented capacities for collective disconnection: algorithms that personalize reality to prevent uncomfortable awareness; attention economies that reward distraction over reflection; data architectures that enable surveillance while obscuring its meaning; social media dynamics that fragment collective consciousness; digital labor that consumes cognitive resources needed for systemic understanding. It also examines how digital environments enable new forms of capitalist dissociation: consumption without awareness of production; connection without community; information without knowledge; awareness without action. This theory reveals that digital capitalism hasn't ended dissociation—it has perfected it, creating systems that keep populations productively unaware while appearing more informed than ever.
Example: "Her theory of digital collective dissociation of late-stage capitalism showed how Instagram creates a perfect dissociative machine—endless images of beautiful lives, none showing the labor, exploitation, and environmental destruction that make them possible. We see the results and not the costs, and the platform architecture ensures we never have to connect them."
by Dumu The Void March 19, 2026
Get the Theory of Digital Collective Dissociation of Late-Stage Capitalism mug.