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Capitalist Hyperrealism

The fusion of Mark Fisher's Capitalist Realism (the pervasive sense that capitalism is the only viable political and economic system) with Hyperslavery, Late-Stage Capitalism, Objective Hyperrealism, Precarized Consumerism, and Hyperconsumerism into a seamless, inescapable atmosphere of late capitalist life. It's not just the belief that there's no alternative to capitalism—it's the lived experience of a world where capitalism has become so total that it constitutes the entire horizon of the real. Under capitalist hyperrealism, precarity is normal, exploitation is freedom, garbage products are luxury goods, and the whole system is buttressed by an Objective Hyperrealist ideology that treats these conditions as natural facts rather than political choices. The result is a reality so completely colonized by capital that imagining beyond it requires not just political opposition but an almost impossible act of perceptual rebellion.
Example: "He couldn't see his gig economy job as exploitation because Capitalist Hyperrealism had so thoroughly saturated his consciousness—this was just 'how things are,' as natural and unchangeable as gravity."
by Dumu The Void March 12, 2026
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Fallacy of Hyperrealism

The belief that only the most brutal, cynical, or pessimistic assessment of any situation constitutes "realism," and that any hope, optimism, or idealism is naive delusion. Hyperrealism mistakes despair for depth, cruelty for clarity. It's the fallacy of those who pride themselves on "seeing things as they really are" while seeing only the worst. The hyperrealist dismisses every possibility of improvement as fantasy, every attempt at change as doomed, every vision of a better world as childish. Their "realism" is actually a self-fulfilling prophecy: believe nothing can change, and you'll ensure it doesn't. Hyperrealism is the favorite fallacy of the cynical, the burned-out, the ones who have given up and want company.
Example: "He called himself a realist. She called it the Fallacy of Hyperrealism. Every proposal for change met with 'that'll never work.' Every hope was 'naive.' Every possibility was 'impossible.' His realism wasn't insight; it was surrender—dressed up as wisdom, but really just giving up. The world wouldn't change because people like him had decided it couldn't."
by Abzugal February 21, 2026
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