The chronic condition arising from Mass Media Trauma, marked by a pathological relationship with information, characterized by doomscrolling addiction, apocalyptic thinking, and social withdrawal. Sufferers are simultaneously addicted to and terrified by the news, unable to disengage. Symptoms include catastrophic cognitive biases, paralyzing cynicism, the inability to plan for a future perceived as doomed, and a shattered "assumptive world" where basic beliefs about safety, order, and human goodness have been systematically dismantled by media narratives.
Example: A person refreshes five news apps hourly, jumps at every phone alert, and can only talk in terms of systemic collapse. They've abandoned career plans ("the economy will be gone in 5 years"), don't want children ("the climate is doomed"), and view any positive event as "propaganda." They are exhausted, isolated, and functionally depressed, yet cannot stop consuming the very content that makes them ill. This is mass media trauma syndrome: a state of informed helplessness and addictive despair manufactured by their media diet.
by Dumu The Void January 27, 2026
Get the Mass Media Trauma Syndrome mug.A psychotic break in which the curated reality of mass media—its narratives, characters, and symbolic events—completely replaces lived experience. The individual may believe they are living inside a news broadcast, that they are a celebrity or a wanted criminal from a TV show, or that world events are part of a scripted drama with them as a key, hidden player. This often involves the literalization of media metaphors (e.g., believing "the war on terror" is a physical war happening on their street). It represents a final dissolution of the boundary between the mediated spectacle and the mind.
Example: An individual, isolated and watching reality TV non-stop, begins to believe their apartment is a hidden camera show. They narrate their actions for an imagined audience, interpret mail delivery as "plot twists" from producers, and confront neighbors believing they are "fellow contestants." They call news stations to report on events in their home as "breaking news." This is mass media psychosis: the performative, narrative-driven world of television has become their only operational reality, erasing any sense of a private, unobserved self.
by Dumu The Void January 27, 2026
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The society-wide synchronization of confirmation bias, typically driven by centralized media, educational curricula, and state propaganda. When billions of people consume the same filtered information, apply the same interpretive frameworks, and are rewarded for expressing the same conclusions, their individual confirmation biases align into a single, massive, self-reinforcing system. Mass confirmation bias produces the phenomenon of "obvious truths" that are, in fact, contingent upon an enormous, invisible infrastructure of bias maintenance.
Mass Confirmation Bias Example: During wartime, a nation's citizens confirm the righteousness of their cause through newspapers, films, school lessons, and patriotic songs. They see enemy atrocities and ignore their own. This isn't conspiracy; it's Mass Confirmation Bias operating at scale. The information environment is so thoroughly structured to confirm a single narrative that perceiving alternatives requires heroic epistemic independence—a resource as rare as it is fragile.
by Dumu The Void February 11, 2026
Get the Mass Confirmation Bias mug.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
Get the Mass Social Control Systems Theory mug.The established, institutionalized set of beliefs about mass culture itself—the often-unexamined assumptions that mass culture is inevitable, that it serves the people, that it reflects popular taste, that it's democratizing, that criticism of mass culture is elitist, and that engagement with mass culture is simply normal. Mass culture orthodoxy includes commitments: that cultural production should be market-driven, that popularity indicates quality, that mass audiences get what they want, that cultural critique is snobbery, that alternatives to mass culture are nostalgic or impractical. Like all orthodoxies, it naturalizes particular arrangements—making mass culture seem like simply "how culture works" rather than a specific historical formation shaped by capitalism, technology, and power. Mass culture orthodoxy determines what cultural forms are visible, what alternatives are unthinkable, and who counts as "in touch" versus "out of touch."
Example: "He dismissed independent media as irrelevant because 'nobody watches that'—as if popularity were the measure of value. Mass culture orthodoxy had made market success feel like cultural significance."
by Dumu The Void March 17, 2026
Get the Mass Culture Orthodoxy mug.The established, institutionalized set of beliefs and practices that define mainstream mass media—the often-unexamined assumptions about how media should be organized, what counts as professional journalism, how audiences should be addressed, and what role media plays in society. Mass media orthodoxy includes commitments: that media should be commercial, that advertising is the natural funding model, that professionalism means neutrality, that audiences are consumers, that "balance" means centering mainstream views, that media's role is to inform within existing frameworks rather than challenge them. Like all orthodoxies, it shapes what media becomes, but it functions as ideology—making commercial, corporate media seem like simply "how media works" rather than one model among many. Mass media orthodoxy determines what information reaches publics, what perspectives are legitimized, and what counts as "responsible" journalism versus "activism" or "bias."
Example: "The reporter followed mass media orthodoxy perfectly—got quotes from both parties, didn't question the framing, presented the issue as a matter of individual choice rather than systemic forces. It was professional, and it was useless."
by Dumu The Void March 17, 2026
Get the Mass Media Orthodoxy mug.A theoretical framework proposing that large populations can enter dissociative states—collectively disconnecting from reality, from their own actions, from historical truth, or from moral responsibility. Mass dissociation theory extends concepts from individual and collective dissociation to the largest scales: entire nations, civilizations, or global populations can dissociate from knowledge too terrible to integrate. The theory explains how societies can function while ignoring genocide, how populations can support policies that cause immense suffering, how humanity can continue business as usual while facing ecological collapse. Mass dissociation involves not just denial but a genuine splitting of awareness—the truth is known and not known simultaneously, present in some contexts and absent in others. This theory draws on trauma psychology, social theory, and historical analysis to understand how masses of people can live with contradictions that should be unbearable.
Example: "Mass Dissociation Theory explains how we can know about climate catastrophe and do nothing—the knowledge is there, but it's also not there, split off into a part of the mind that doesn't connect to action. An entire civilization dissociating from its own future."
by Dumu The Void March 19, 2026
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