A form of digital groupthink specific to cancel culture, where a social media community rapidly converges on a
single, often harsh judgment of a
target—without due process, nuance, or evidence—driven by the
fear of being the next
target or the desire for moral approval. Cancelthink operates through echo chambers: anyone who questions the majority narrative risks being canceled themselves. It amplifies outrage, suppresses dissent, and treats any call for context or proportionality as “defending the indefensible.” Cancelthink is not reasoned deliberation; it is a social panic, fueled by algorithms that reward outrage and punishment. The result is swift, often disproportionate consequences for the
target, regardless of the actual harm caused. Critics argue that cancelthink is the digital equivalent of a
mob with torches, enabled by retweets and screenshots.
Example: “When a decade-
old joke resurfaced, cancelthink took over the timeline within hours. Anyone who asked about context was accused of ‘harboring bigotry.’ The
mob judged, sentenced, and exiled before lunch.”