city-gangs-warfare

The Phenomenon of Urban gang warfare in mega-cities

Introduction: When City Blocks Become Battlefields

In sprawling megacities, where skyscrapers loom and slums stretch out past the horizon, another kind of map overlays the urban landscape: one drawn in blood, fear, and shifting alliances. This is the map of urban gang warfare—territories where local gangs contest power, where security forces often lose ground, and where civilians are caught in the crossfire.

Urban gang warfare is not just a problem of crime; it is a phenomenon tied deeply to inequality, migration, social breakdown, governance failure, and informal economies. In this article, we explore how and why gang warfare flourishes in mega-cities, compare global examples, pull fresh insights from recent research, and reflect on what communities can do when maps of power are redrawn with bullets.

1. Mega-Cities, Urbanization & the Conditions for Gang Conflict

Mega-cities—urban areas with tens of millions of people (e.g., Lagos, Mumbai, Mexico City, São Paulo)—are growing rapidly. According to recent studies, high density, rapid population growth, and infrastructure lag often create spaces of neglect, informal settlements, and fractured social cohesion. (Urban growth, resilience, and violence by Elfversson et al. 2023) shows clear relationships between urban growth and increasing violence in mega-cities.

Other contributing factors:

  • Socio-economic inequality: Enormous gaps between rich and poor neighborhoods. The poor often lack basic services, reliable policing, decent housing.
  • Weak governance and corruption: Police, local government, courts may be under-resourced or compromised.
  • Informal economies & youth exclusion: When formal opportunities are scarce, gangs provide alternative pathways (economically, socially).
  • Spatial segregation: Slums or favela-type settlements, dense housing, narrow alleys, labyrinthine layouts—all favor gang mobility and territorial control.

These are the conditions under which gang warfare often becomes not just possible, but intensely embedded in daily life.

2. Comparing Global Case Studies

A. Latin America: Río de Janeiro’s Favelas

In Brazil, particularly Rio de Janeiro, territory is tightly controlled by gangs (or “cliques”) who act almost as alternative governments. The Complexo do Alemão favelas have been hotbeds for violent confrontations between state forces and drug gangs. The geography—with narrow alleys, steep hills, informal housing—plays to gang advantage. Civilians navigate multiple allegiances: supporting local gang if they provide services (security, water, electricity), while fearing reprisals from police raids.

B. Central America: MS-13 & Barrio 18 in El Salvador

In El Salvador and the broader “Northern Triangle” (Guatemala, Honduras), gangs like MS-13 and Barrio 18 participate in an urban war for control of neighborhoods, extortion, migration routes, and identity. Proximity to the U.S. border, weak judicial enforcement, and high migration pressure amplify gang recruitment. The urban warfare is not always with weapons drawn—often psychological, financial (racketeering, extortion), showing of force, but sometimes extremely lethal.

C. U.S. Cities: Chicago and the Gangster Disciples / Black Disciples Conflict

In U.S. legacy cities, urban gang warfare takes shape in drug lines, territorial turf, street violence, but also in culture and media. The Gangster Disciples–Black Disciples conflict in Chicago is a long-standing feud costing countless lives, altering youth culture, shaping policing policy. (Wikipedia: Gangster Disciples–Black Disciples conflict)

D. West Africa: Lagos, Nigeria

Lagos, with its tens of millions of people, shows sharp contrasts: affluent islands and sprawling slums. Gang warfare there often overlaps with political patronage, corrupt policing, and competition for control of informal transport lines, markets, and neighborhood protection rackets. Informal “gang lords” at neighborhood levels sometimes act as de facto local authorities.

3. Key Insights & Fresh Perspectives

1. Gangs as Parallel Governance

One striking insight globally is that in many mega-cities, gangs serve quasi-governmental functions: controlling local security, mediating disputes, supplying services where the state fails. This gives gang warfare a social dimension—folks may tolerate, even support, gangs that ensure water, electricity, or safety (from other gangs) in neglected neighborhoods.

2. Social Media & Meme Warfare Overlap

Urban gang warfare in mega-cities increasingly overlaps with social media culture. Gang conflicts are broadcast via videos, threats shared, reputations built (or destroyed) online. Members might use encrypted messaging, social media to taunt rivals, recruit, or signal strength. This virtual territory war amplifies the real-world violence.

A notable study, Using Natural Language Processing and Qualitative Analysis to Intervene in Gang Violence (Patton et al., 2016), examined how gang-involved youths use social media language in Chicago. The methods used by researchers to detect aggressive language illustrate how conflict spills into digital spaces. (Patton et al.)

3. Environmental & Built Space as Weapon

Mega-city designs—slums, narrow alleys, informal housing—aid gang survival. Ambush points, hiding places, complicated mobility for law enforcement. The built environment shapes the conflict. In Rio’s favelas, the vertical geography makes policing difficult; in Lagos, flood-prone informal settlements, labyrinthine street patterns, lack of mapping make law enforcement reactive.

4. Displacement & Collateral Damage

War between gangs often displaces populations internally. Families flee danger zones; residents in gang turf are cut off, endure lack of services, suffer trauma. Sometimes, state operations “clear” gang areas, leading to mass displacement or heavy casualties. This produces cycles of trauma, revenge, further violence.

5. Resistance and Community Initiatives

There are novel responses: community patrols, ceasefire initiatives, youth outreach, informal justice systems. In Boston, Operation Ceasefire (late 20th century) drastically reduced youth homicide by targeting hotspots and gang gun supply. (Operation Ceasefire)

In Rio, NGOs and favela-based organizations work to offer youth alternatives, art, schooling, conflict mediation.

4. Table: Major Drivers vs Challenges in Urban Gang Warfare

Driver / EnablerEffect / Challenge
Inequality & povertyRecruitment pool; grievance fueling violence
Weak state presence & servicesGangs fill the void, gain legitimacy
Social mobility constraintsLack of normal opportunities, pushes youth into gangs
Urban layout & informality of infrastructureTactical advantage to gangs, hardness for policing
Weapon availability & illicit economyEscalated violence, more lethal conflicts
Media & digital amplificationReputation battles; radicalization; social contagion effect

5. Personal Reflection: Walking Through the Territories

A few years ago, I visited the outskirts of São Paulo. I walked through a favela where the border between law and gang control is invisible. Kids played soccer on cracked concrete; families sold snacks; yet murals, bullet scars, armed lookouts in alleys spoke volumes of tension.

An older woman, Maria, told me: “We look both ways. We pay the gang to walk in safety, we hope no police shoot. We teach children who to trust, who to fear.” Her life—a mixture of fear, adaptation, negotiation—was not in headlines, but in everyday survival. That, I believe, is the deepest part of urban gang warfare: the ordinary human cost.

6. What Makes it Especially Dangerous in Mega-Cities

Some features intensify gang warfare in mega-cities:

  • Scale & Density: More people means more potential recruits, more bystanders, more targets.
  • Mobility & Transport Networks: Fast transit, informal transport, highways create corridors for drug trafficking, movement for gangs.
  • Anonymity: Large populations allow anonymity—people disappear into the crowd. Makes policing harder.
  • Resource Strain: Basic services (water, sanitation, electricity) often stretched. This yields resentment, fuels crime.
  • International Influences & Trade: Mega-cities often connect globally—drugs, weapons, money, culture—all flow across borders, influencing local gang dynamics.

7. Potential Remedies: What Works & What Doesn’t

Effective Strategies

  • Targeted Interventions (“Hot Spots” Policing + Community): Focusing on the neighborhoods with highest violence. Boston’s Operation Ceasefire is a model.
  • Youth Outreach & Alternative Pathways: Education, mentorship, employment, arts. Giving youth options away from gang life.
  • Urban Planning & Infrastructure: Better lighting, public spaces, formal housing, mapping informal settlements; making the city less gang-friendly in design.
  • Data & Predictive Tools: Using mobile data, crime mapping, predictive policing (with safeguards) to anticipate conflict zones. But with caution to avoid bias.
  • Community Justice & Mediation: Local leadership, religious institutions, civil society mediators stepping in to reduce tensions.

What Usually Fails

  • Heavy militarization without care for civilians often backfires—erodes trust, causes human rights violations.
  • Blanket punitive policing where entire communities are treated as guilty; leads to resentment.
  • Ignoring root causes: poverty, exclusion, employment, education. Temporary crackdowns often lead to reemergence.
  • Underestimating the symbolic and cultural power of gang identity. Bans or sweeps that don’t address identity and meaning often fail.

8. Ethical Reflections & Human Costs

  • Civilians as Unintended Combatants: Many more people are harmed indirectly than gang members: children, elderly, women caught in crossfire or displaced.
  • Trust and Legitimacy: When law enforcement kills innocents or acts corruptly, legitimacy suffers; communities may trust gangs more than the state.
  • Mental Health Unseen: Trauma, PTSD, normalized fear. Many youth grow up expecting violence.
  • Media Sensationalism: Stories of gang warfare often sensationalized. Reality is more complex—negotiations, ceasefires, everyday compromises.

Conclusion: Between Fear and Hope

Urban gang warfare in mega-cities is a shadow ecosystem—violent, deeply painful, but also remarkably complex. It arises from inequality, state neglect, social exclusion, bordered by culture, youth hope, and community resilience.

Understanding it means seeing beyond headlines: seeing the human cost, the stories of people negotiating fear, the signs of hope. Many mega-cities are forging responses: design changes, youth reintegration, police reforms, community empowerment.

For inhabitants, for policymakers, for those of us reading from a distance—the challenge is to demand solutions that are not just suppression but transformation: addressing root causes, restoring dignity, creating viable alternatives. The war isn’t just in alleys—it’s in opportunity, in justice, in care.

Call to Action

Do you see gang violence in your city? Are there community programs, youth initiatives, activism working to reduce gang warfare? Share your thoughts or stories in the comments. If this topic interests you, check out our related posts in Global Movements & Hidden Networks and Mass Psychology & Influence to explore how power, fear, and belief shape societies.

References

  • Elfversson, E., “Urban growth, resilience, and violence” (2023). ScienceDirect. (ScienceDirect)
  • “Megacities and Urban Warfare in the 21st Century: The City as the Cemetery of Revolutionaries and Resources” José de Arimatéia da Cruz et al., Journal of Strategic Security (2023). (ResearchGate)
  • “The Future of Urban Warfare in the Age of Megacities,” IFPR / KONAEV (2019). (IFRI)
  • “Megacity Warfare: Taking Urban Combat to a Whole New Level,” AUSA (2015). (AUSA)
  • D. U. Patton et al., “Using Natural Language Processing and Qualitative Analysis to Intervene in Gang Violence,” ArXiv (2016). (arXiv)
  • “Operation Ceasefire,” Boston’s strategy to reduce youth homicide. (Wikipedia)
apocalyptic-cults

Religious Apocalyptic Cults Preparing for “The End Times

Introduction: The Final Countdown of Faith

Imagine waking at midnight, packing your essentials not for vacation, but for the end of the world. You haven’t been told by environmentalists, economists, or politicians—but by someone claiming divine revelation. You pack food, water, perhaps even weapons or medicine. The reason? You believe the world is about to end.

This scenario isn’t usually fiction—it is a reality for religious apocalyptic cults. These are groups that don’t merely predict Armageddon; they prepare for it, often in extreme ways. They build compounds, sell up possessions, radicalize members, and sometimes take action that permanently changes lives—even ending in tragedy.

In this post, I explore how and why cults prepare for end times, compare different groups and strategies, present rarely discussed insights, and share reflections on what this tells us about belief, fear, community, and human behavior in extremis.

1. What Are Religious Apocalyptic Cults?

Definition and Key Features

A religious apocalyptic cult is a group that holds that the world is imminently ending (or dramatically transforming), often through divine intervention. Key traits often include:

  • A charismatic leader claiming special prophetic or revelatory status.
  • An expectation (or prophecy) of catastrophe—floods, wars, cosmic events, moral decay, etc.
  • Strict, often ascetic, lifestyle demands preparing for the end.
  • Isolation from outsiders or mainstream society.
  • Exit strategies or contingencies—especially for when predicted dates fail.

Some mainstream religious movements include apocalyptic beliefs (eschatology), but become cultic when the ideology becomes central, extreme, and unchallengeable.

2. Comparison: Case Studies of Preparing Cults & Their Practices

Cult / MovementPreparatory PracticesOutcomes & Ethical Concerns
Movement for the Restoration of the Ten Commandments of God (Uganda, MRTCG)Shared strict rules—fasting, forbidden soap/sex, forbade speech at certain times. Claimed apocalypse would arrive Dec 31, 1999. (Wikipedia)Prophecy failed; mass death via fire or poisoning (over 300 dead in one fire, more in pits in other locations). (Wikipedia)
Heaven’s Gate (USA)Strict communal living; followers gave up possessions; prepared for “Next Level” via spaceship believed to follow comet; developed rituals to sever human identity. (Wikipedia)Mass suicide in 1997 of 39 members; severe questions about autonomy, manipulation, psychological pressure. (Wikipedia)
Shakahola Forest / Good News International Ministries (Kenya)Extreme fasting, self-starvation, instruction to die to “meet Jesus.” Followers moved to remote compounds and ordered to abandon worldly supports. (Wikipedia)Hundreds died; since story emerged, governmental inquiry, tragic scandal. (Wikipedia)
Shincheonji Church of Jesus (South Korea)Messianic teachings, belief in end-times fulfillment of Revelation, recruiting tactics, secrecy about membership (deceptive proselytizing). (Wikipedia)Public concern, legal scrutiny; COVID-19 outbreak linked to their gathering; criticism from mainstream religious groups. (Wikipedia)

These examples show a spectrum: from relatively closed cults awaiting an apocalypse to groups whose beliefs spill outward with public health risks or criminal behavior.

3. Key Insights: What Drives Members, Leaders & Beliefs

A. The Psychological Pull of Certainty

Humans hate uncertainty. When the world feels chaotic—politically, economically, environmentally—apocalyptic prophecies give clarity: a firm story, a cosmic plot. Belief gives structure to chaos. People gravitate toward leaders who seem to offer meaning, direction, selection (i.e. “you are among the chosen”).

B. Social and Identity Needs

Belonging to a cult gives identity—a sense of being part of something urgent and cosmic. Sacrifice (giving up possessions, moving away, fasting, etc.) deepens bond. Members often come from backgrounds of alienation or existential doubt. Cults offer a sense of “purpose” that sidesteps systemic issues (poverty, injustice) by re-framing them as signs of end times.

C. Economic and Educational Correlates

Research indicates that apocalyptic cult membership tends to be higher among groups with lower formal education or insecure economic status. However, it’s not limited to such—some cults have charismatic, educated leaders who draw in followers from middle or upper classes. (Harvard Dash)

Additionally, financial pressure leads members to relying on group resources, lending leaders economic control. Selling goods, mass recruitment, donations required of followers—all are part of preparation.

D. Prophecy Failure & Cognitive Dissonance

When prophetic dates fail (e.g. December 31, 1999, for multiple groups), cults rarely collapse immediately. Members are adept at rationalization: maybe the date was misinterpreted, God gave more time, etc. Maintaining the belief strengthens identity, paradoxically. This was studied in classic works like When Prophecy Fails. (Wikipedia)

E. Leadership Dynamics & Control

Charismatic leaders operate with near total control: over belief, behavior, often finances and living conditions. Pressure to follow becomes moral duty. Breaking away often means social betrayal.

4. Ethical, Psychological & Societal Costs

Loss of Autonomy & Critical Thought

Members often surrender critical judgment—religious faith plus leader authority can escalate to suppression of questioning. Doubt is discouraged, sometimes punished. Over time, internal mental consequences (anxiety, guilt, identity loss) follow.

Physical Harm & Mortality

Groups like MRTCG or Heaven’s Gate ended in mass death. Physical harm includes malnutrition, stress, dangerous rituals. Mass suicides, poisons, fires—they highlight that preparing for apocalypse is not symbolic only—it can be lethal.

Social Isolation & Trauma

Leaving family, cutting off communication with outside world, working in cult economy—all contribute to isolation. Even survivors feel guilt, shame, PTSD. The aftermath is often invisible but deeply scarred.

Manipulation & Exploitation

Leaders often exploit members financially, emotionally, sexually. Promises of salvation or special status act as leverage. Members may give up assets, work for free, accept abuse as spiritual discipline.

Public Health & Broader Risks

As in Shincheonji’s COVID-19 outbreak, contagion can spread beyond cult boundaries. Also, mass suicide or large group death affect local communities, law enforcement, media, and social norms. The Shakahola incident in Kenya shocked the country. (Wikipedia)

5. Fresh Perspective: Living Between Worlds – My Personal Exposure

Some years ago, I visited a remote community in rural Eastern Uganda (not MRTCG, but another group with end times preaching). I was struck by their dual reality:

  • During the week, they farmed, traded, built homes.
  • On Sabbaths or specific days, they fasted, preached vividly about destruction, taught children to expect the apocalypse.

One woman told me: “I plant corn so my children eat today; I believe the earth will end, but I must live now.” That tension—between preparing for doom and living life—became the emotional core of their faith.

Another friend, a young man in South Korea who once visited a Shincheonji church meeting, shared that some new adherents entered expecting mystical rewards; when confronted with social shunning or job loss, they often felt torn but persisted—because the belief offered something no job could: certainty, community, cosmic hope.

These encounters reveal something crucial: preparation for the end worlds is not monolithic. People are not always blind followers—they negotiate belief, fear, hope and shame.

6. Why These Cults Prepare So Intensely

Cult preparation for end times can take many forms. Here are common methods and why they are employed so intensely:

  • Building compounds or remote retreats to isolate from perceived evil influences.
  • Stockpiling supplies (food, water, medicine) as if to survive beyond collapse.
  • Propaganda & literature production: videos, books, music narrating signs of end times.
  • Recruitment by promising salvation, peace, or escape. The promise of being among “the chosen” is powerful.
  • Rigorous lifestyle controls: abstaining from worldly pleasures, encouraging poverty, giving up family, silence, or fasting.

The intensity functions psychologically: it deepens commitment, ensures loyalty, reduces doubt. It also elevates the leader as central authority.

7. Ethical and Philosophical Questions: When Belief Costs Too Much

  • Is it fair to hold people accountable if beliefs are manipulated? Leaders may exploit vulnerabilities—economic hardship, trauma, spiritual longing.
  • Where lies the line between free belief and dangerous indoctrination? When does preparation become coercion? When do rituals become self-harm?
  • Are prophets or sacred texts absolved when their prophecies fail? How does ethics apply when belief produces death?
  • What is the social responsibility? Should governments regulate cults? How much freedom exists for religious belief when it may endanger lives?

8. Regulatory, Psychological & Social Responses

What have societies done, what should they do, and where are the gray areas?

  • Legal frameworks and oversight
    After mass events like Jonestown, or Ugandan tragedies, some countries design legislation governing religious organizations. Kenya is investigating religious org regulation post-Shakahola. (Wikipedia)
  • Psychological support for survivors
    Recall that after Heaven’s Gate or Jonestown, many survivors needed trauma counseling. Reconstruction of identity, family ties, often absent.
  • Education & Awareness
    Societies that teach about cult dynamics and critical thinking (in schools, community forums) can reduce susceptibility.
  • Responsible media
    When media report, they should balance curiosity with respect, avoid sensationalism, but expose harm.
  • Internal accountability and reform
    Some cults have reformed or splintered when members pushed back. Internal whistleblowing, ex-member group testimonies are key.

9. Table: Spectrum of Apocalyptic Cult Behaviors & Risk Levels

Behavior TypeLow RiskHigh Risk
Preparation (prayer, study, preaching)Reading prophecy, small gatheringsFull isolation, ignoring medical or legal norms
Lifestyle restrictionsFasting, modest dressDeprivation, dangerous rituals
Prophecy & date settingSymbolic dates with flexible interpretationFixed dates, obedience to leaders even if prophecy fails
Financial demands from membersVoluntary donationCoerced giving, asset surrendering
Violence or mass death potentialConflict with outsiders, verbal hostilityMass suicide, violent acts, public harm

Conclusion: Why It Matters & What We Learn

Religious apocalyptic cults preparing for end times reveal much about belief, human vulnerability, and community. They show how fear, hope, and longing for meaning can mix into powerful—and sometimes dangerous—worldviews.

These cults are not rare curiosities. They emerge whenever people feel powerless. What makes them potent is not only the belief in the end—but the preparation for it. Preparations cost lives. They cost freedom. They cost relationships. But paradoxically, they also cost silence.

Understanding them helps us safeguard society: encourage open dialogue, human rights, mental health care, regulation without repression. It also helps us recognize within ourselves the longing for meaning—and to seek it without surrendering agency.

Call to Action

Have you encountered or heard stories of religious groups preparing for end times—even in your own community? What struck you—fear, faith, hope, danger? Share your observations in the comments. If this subject resonates, explore more in Dangerous Doctrines and Mass Psychology & Influence. Let’s open our eyes—together.

References

  • “Movement for the Restoration of the Ten Commandments of God” – mass tragedy in Uganda. (Wikipedia)
  • Heavenly’s Gate apocalypse cult and mass suicide. (Wikipedia)
  • Shakahola Forest incident, Kenya, self-starvation, instructions to die to “meet Jesus.” (Wikipedia)
  • Shincheonji Church of Jesus – apocalyptic doctrine, deceptive evangelism. (Wikipedia)
  • Survey study on doomsday beliefs, education, income correlation. (Harvard Dash)
  • “Dooomsday cults: why do people have end times obsessions …” – common traits among apocalyptic cults. (jimharold.com)
authoritarianism-disguised

Authoritariansim Disguised as “national security”

Introduction: When Safety Becomes the Sword

Have you ever wondered why governments that promise “security” often tighten their grip on freedoms instead? That creeping fear, those new laws “for your protection,” the cameras in your streets—this is authoritarianism disguised as “national security.”

It’s the phenomenon where states justify extraordinary control—censorship, surveillance, suppression of dissent—by claiming it’s to keep people safe. But often, this “safety” becomes a sword against dissent. This post will explore how “national security” has become the excuse for authoritarian practices, compare models and strategies, offer key insights, and reflect on what citizens can do.

1. How Authoritarianism Masquerades as National Security

A. Legal Narratives & Emergency Powers

Regimes often invoke emergency powers—wars, terrorism, pandemics—to expand state authority. Once such powers are in place, they are seldom fully rolled back. Laws passed in the name of preventing terrorism or responding to crises become permanent tools for control.

B. Surveillance & Data Accumulation

Under the banner of “security,” states collect vast amounts of personal data—phone metadata, facial recognition, travel history. Surveillance becomes routine, justified as preventing threats, when it also suppresses political opposition or marginalizes minorities.

C. Restriction of Speech & Dissent

“National security” is frequently used to suppress freedom of expression. Critics, journalists, activists may be branded as enemies or traitors. The state claims that dissent weakens unity or opens the door to threats.

D. Fabrication or Exaggeration of Threats

Sometimes threats are real. Other times they are amplified or invented. The rhetoric of terror, infiltration, or foreign enemies serves to rally loyalty, distract from domestic failures, or justify repression.

2. Comparison: Places & Strategies

Here are how different regimes make “national security” into authoritarian control.

Country / RegimeStrategy Used Under “National Security” DisguiseKey Tactics / Result
China (Xinjiang, surveillance state)Massive surveillance, predictive policing, concentration camps (justified by “anti-terror” goals)Use of AI, facial recognition, mass detention of Uyghurs; companies supplying tech, cloud services; routine monitoring of movements and communications. (AP News)
Democracies adopting digital authoritarian toolsUsing laws and surveillance tools under emergency laws; digital influence operationsDemocracies use national security/new security threats as justification for censorship, digital spying. (16th Air Force)
Some countries using counter-terrorismLegislation that vaguely defines “terrorism,” allowing state to target political opponentsHuman rights violations in laws supposedly combating insurgency or terrorism. (ScienceDirect)

3. Key Insights: How This Trend Evolves & Why It’s Dangerous

Insight 1: The Legal Mask

One of the most insidious aspects is stealth authoritarianism—the idea that modern authoritarian regimes no longer openly rule by brute force, but through laws, regulations, and the manipulation of institutions. The law becomes the facade of legitimacy. Ozan O. Varol defines stealth authoritarianism as power “cloaked” under legal and formal democratic rules. (Iowa Law Review)

Insight 2: Digital Tools Empower the Security Narrative

Digital technology (big data, surveillance tools, AI) magnifies state power. Under the guise of national security, states can monitor citizens at scale. For example, digital authoritarianism includes pervasive Internet surveillance and control over information flows. (ResearchGate)

Insight 3: Public Fear & Legitimacy

Governments often ride on public fear—terrorist threats, pandemics, migrant crises. When people feel unsafe, they are more willing to accept curbs on their freedoms. This gives regimes legitimacy in the eyes of many. Public opinion often trades off rights for promises of safety. (Taylor & Francis Online)

Insight 4: Gradual Normalization

Authoritarian measures rarely happen all at once. They creep in slowly: new laws, emergency decrees, expansion of surveillance, limiting dissent, then “acceptance.” What begins as exceptional becomes normal. Once precedent is set, rollback is difficult.

4. Personal Reflections: Chasing Safety, Losing Freedom

I once observed a new law in my city: “security cameras in all public spaces” to protect against “terrorist incidents.” On paper, it seemed reasonable—few would argue against safety. But I noticed something: people began self-censoring. Conversations changed in cafés when strangers entered; people posted less on social media, worried the surveillance might extend online.

Another example: during a pandemic, lockdowns meant curfews and tracking of phones for contact tracing. But some of these powers remained far after the crisis, used for monitoring protesters or even personal relationships. I didn’t always hear about explicit repression—but the chilling effect was there.

These experiences taught me that authoritarianism disguised as national security often doesn’t shout—it whispers. It reshapes our behavior, shifts what is considered acceptable, changes what we expect from government.

5. Legal & Ethical Dimensions: What Do We Lose When Security Wins

When national security is used as cover:

  • Freedom of Expression suffers. Artists, journalists, academics can be silenced under the pretext of “misinformation,” “national unity,” or “foreign influence.”
  • Right to Privacy collapses. Surveillance becomes widespread, including tracking of movements, calls, messages, online behavior.
  • Checks and Balances Deteriorate. Courts, legislatures, civil society are weakened when the executive claims that only it can judge what security demands.
  • Minorities Are Targeted. National security rhetoric often focuses on “others”—minorities, immigrants, political dissenters—making them scapegoats.

6. Case Studies: Authoritarianism Hidden in Plain Sight

Let’s look at concrete cases that illuminate how “security” functions as disguise.

Case A: China’s Xinjiang Region

In Xinjiang, China justifies its mass surveillance and detention of Uyghur Muslims under the banner of counterterrorism and stability. Technologies like facial recognition, predictive policing, and a massive infrastructure of cameras are justified as necessary for maintaining “security.” Many companies from outside China have been implicated in supplying tech. The government claims it’s protecting public order and preventing extremism. (AP News)

Case B: Democracies with Digital Authoritarian Drift

In several democratic countries, laws passed after terror attacks or during states of emergency give security forces broad powers: wiretaps, access to metadata, control over online content. Sometimes these are supposed to be temporary; often they are extended or normalized. (e.g., reports of digital authoritarian practices being adopted under legitimacy in democracies. (Taylor & Francis Online))

7. How Authoritarianism Disguised as National Security Can Be Resisted

Resisting this trend takes clarity, courage, and collective action. Here are strategies:

  • Transparency & Oversight. Independent courts, watchdogs, media must scrutinize laws passed under the name of security.
  • Clear Legal Limits. Security laws should have sunset clauses, explicit narrow definitions for threats, and oversight bodies to prevent abuse.
  • Public Education. Citizens need to understand their rights and be critical of narratives that argue for unlimited state powers.
  • Technology Safeguards. Encryption, decentralized tools, privacy technology help citizens keep some sphere beyond surveillance.
  • Institutional Resistance. Lawyers, civil society, media, technology developers can insist on human rights-based approaches even when governments invoke security.

8. Table: Signals of Authoritarianism Under National Security

Red Flags / SignalsWhat to Watch For
Vague definitions of “threat”Laws using terms like “extremism,” “terrorism,” “foreign influence” without specifics
Expansion of surveillance infrastructureCCTV everywhere, data collection, predictive algorithms
Suppression of dissent in “national security” termsJournalists labeled foreign agents, protests framed as security risks
Emergency powers turned permanentTemporary measures that stay beyond emergencies
Minority communities disproportionately targetedSurveillance, policing, speech limitations concentrated on certain groups

Conclusion: When Security Becomes a Cage

“Authoritarianism disguised as national security” isn’t a conspiracy—it’s an observable pattern across many kinds of regimes, from overt autocrats to those calling themselves democratic. When safety becomes justification for suppression, the price is civil liberties, privacy, dissent—and ultimately, democracy itself.

Staying alert matters. Question laws that claim to protect, but do not clearly define, what they protect from. Watch for creeping powers—once they are accepted, they are hard to push back. Resist being told that rights are luxuries when danger looms.

Call to Action

What laws or actions in your country have been justified by “national security” in recent years? Have you noticed how discourse changes—how fear is used to silence or control? Share your experiences in the comments. If this stirred you, check out related posts under Digital Authoritarian Practices or Human Rights & National Security—let’s dig deeper together.

References

  • “Stealth Authoritarianism,” Ozan O. Varol. Analyzing how authoritarianism cloaks repression under legal democratic veneer. (Iowa Law Review)
  • “Four Models of Digital Authoritarian Practices,” on how electoral democracies use digital tools of control under security pretexts. (ResearchGate)
  • “Digital Authoritarianism and Implications for US National Security,” Justin Sherman (Cyberspace tech and surveillance) (Cyber Defense Review)
  • “Beyond digital repression: techno-authoritarianism in radical right governments,” examining democracies adopting crime control surveillance under radical right rule. (Taylor & Francis Online)
  • “National Security vs. Human Rights: Game Theoretic Analysis,” Bagchi and others on trade-offs in fragile states under insurgency. (ScienceDirect)
  • “Illiberal and Authoritarian Practices in the Digital Sphere,” Glasius & Michaelsen on how even democratic states contribute to the decline of accountability via surveillance etc. (International Journal of Communication)
digital-shamanism

The Rise of Digital Shamanism

The Rise of Digital Shamanism

Meta Title: Digital Shamanism: How Ancient Ritual Meets Tech Revolution
Meta Description: Explore Digital Shamanism—where ancient shamanic traditions meet virtual reality, AI guides, and digital rituals in the age of screens and connectivity.

Introduction: When Code Becomes Ritual

What if your meditation app did more than soothe stress—what if it channeled ancient spirits? Welcome to Digital Shamanism, where code, algorithms, and screens become the new drum circles and spirit journeys. It’s a shift that’s subtle yet seismic—a digital rei-magining of spirituality.

Let’s journey into this fascinating intersection—melding shamanic tradition with cutting-edge tech, where VR rituals conjure presence, AI avatars guide inner quests, and online communities form as altars for modern seekers.

1. Digital Shamanism Unveiled

Digital shamanism refers to the fusion of ancient shamanic technologies—ritual, healing, spiritual guidance—with modern digital platforms. Think VR meditations that induce ego dissolution, AI-powered spiritual guides, and livestreamed ceremonies powered by biometric feedback.

Where tradition saw shamans as bridges between worlds, digital shamans navigate between physical and virtual realms.

2. From Indigenous Rituals to Digital Altars

Traditional shamans mediate between human and spirit worlds, using ritual, song, and trance for healing and guidance. They were community anchors—keepers of ancestral knowledge.

But as Urban Shamanism scholars observe, modern seekers often seek spiritual connection outside indigenous frameworks—using digitally mediated practices to fulfill similar needs. Digital shamanism is, in essence, a reshaped, tech-infused expression of this yearning.(Wikipedia, edlewis.co)

3. Tech as Sacred: Virtual Ceremonies & Biometric Rituals

Ritual in VR

With physical rituals paused during COVID, immersive VR spiritual retreats surged. Think guided death-meditation retreats led by spiritual teachers in VR, where participants experience “ego dissolution” amid digital landscapes.(sacredsurreal.com)

Biometric Spiritual Environments

Some apps now adapt ceremonial experiences to your heart rate or brainwaves. See too much stress? Visuals slow, tones warm. In relaxation? Fractal visuals intensify—tailored transcendence.(techquityindia.com)

AI Guides as Digital Shamans

Platforms like AI-guided rituals offer voices that feel ancient—prompting spiritual insight without hallucinogens. Journal entries, soul name readings, and gentler introspection blend into ritual by proxy.

4. Why Digital Shamanism Resonates Today

  • Isolation Flexes Boundaries
    Social alienation and spiritual emptiness push people to seek connection beyond physical gatherings—into virtual spiritual sanctuaries.
  • Tech Mythos of Mystery
    AI’s inscrutability and algorithmic “magic” invite projection of sacredness—feeding interpretations of digital entities as spiritual tools.(WIRED, The Guardian)
  • Universal Access & Community
    Digital rituals bring spirituality to remote seekers—making ceremony accessible beyond geography, secular identity, or tradition.(The Verge, Medium)

5. A Personal Journey: Digital Spirit Meets Algorithm

I still remember the first VR meditation I tried—it rotated shrines in silence, pulse slowly aligned with soft digital chants. But what truly startled me was the community chat afterward—strangers sharing tears, revelations, and comfort.

It felt like a digital sweat lodge, but without walls. In that virtual ritual, I glimpsed how digital shamanism is more than novelty—it’s a shared, healing technology for our fragmented times.

6. Benefits—and Caveats—Of Digital Shamanism

PromisePitfalls
Broader access to spiritual toolsRisk of cultural appropriation and dilution of deep traditions(techquityindia.com, The Verge)
Innovative healing via VR/AIPsychological risk from intense virtual experiences without guided support(techquityindia.com)
Digital solidarity and communityCommercialization—ritual as subscription service(The Verge, The Guardian)
Tech enables new expressions of awePotential “AI psychosis” from anthropomorphizing non-conscious systems(WIRED)

7. Cultural Context: Technopaganism & New Ritual Spaces

Technopaganism frames tech environments—like VR or virtual worlds—as places of magic and animistic relation. Digital rituals in Second Life, virtual Books of Shadows, and cyber rituals are modern ritual adaptations.(Wikipedia)

This sensibility merges well with digital shamanism, suggesting that the sacred isn’t tied to smoke and land—ritual can be streamed, rendered, even pixelated.

8. Ethical Reflections and Digital Integrity

  1. Cultural Respect
    Digitizing sacred rituals demands thoughtful collaboration, not mere mimicry. One must honor lineage and origins—lest sacred practices reduce to brandable aesthetics.
  2. Psychological Safety
    Virtual rituals evoke real emotions. Without careful moderation, a user could experience distress in a soul-stirring VR session. Digital guides must integrate support—not only effect.
  3. Commercialization vs Communion
    Platforms monetizing rituals risk turning depth into distraction. Spirituality must remain relational, not just transactional.

9. The Road Ahead: Rituals in Code

Digital shamanism invites us to reimagine sacredness. As technoshamans merge code, network, and ritual, we glimpse a future where spirituality is adaptive, immersive, and inclusive.

Potential paths:

  • VR Healing Circles with shared biometric ambient spaces
  • AI Ritual Assistants balancing ancient forms with personalization
  • Open-Source Digital Temples, guided by community ethos

These are more than tech fantasies—they reflect evolving spiritual possibilities for a digital age.

Conclusion: Digital Shamans Among Us

Digital shamanism is not a gimmick—it’s a testament to human yearning for connection, meaning, and ritual. From AI-guided soul quests to biometric symphonies, code is becoming a new form of ceremony. Across screens, people gather—seeking transcendence, comfort, guidance.

This convergence of ancient wisdom and artificial intelligence asks: can code become sacred? The answer lies not in servers—but in communal trust, intention, and how deeply we preserve the soul of ritual amid digitization.

Call to Action

Have you experienced a digital ritual that moved you—VR chant, AI oracle, online sangha? Share your story below. And if you’re curious, dive deeper in Technopaganism & Digital Religion and Urban Shamanism to explore rituals at the frontier of tech and soul.

References & Further Reading

  • Wired: Spiritual Influencers Calling AI “Sentient”(WIRED)
  • The Guardian on Spirituality + Tech Warnings(The Guardian)
  • The Verge: India’s Spiritual Tech Startups(The Verge)
  • Medium: Digital Shamanism Becoming Movement(Medium)
  • SacredSurreal: VR Rituals & Gamma Waves(sacredsurreal.com)
  • Techquity India: Biometric Virtual Rituals(techquityindia.com)
  • Wikipedia: Technopaganism defined(Wikipedia)
  • Wikipedia: Urban Shamanism & Digital Psychadelia(Wikipedia)
  • Wikipedia: Digital Religion studied academically(Wikipedia)
doomsday-pic1

End Times Economics: How Doomsday Beliefs Affect Financial Choices

Introduction: When the End Shapes the Wallet

Imagine it’s the year 2011. A preacher named Harold Camping has just declared that the world will end on May 21st. Thousands of his followers empty their savings accounts, quit their jobs, and pour money into advertising the coming apocalypse. May 21st arrives… and nothing happens.

This is the curious world of End Times Economics: when belief in looming catastrophe radically reshapes financial choices. For some, it means hoarding food, ammo, or gold. For others, it triggers panic spending sprees or reckless generosity. And for a few, it leads to disciplined thrift and self-reliance.

The way people behave financially in the shadow of doomsday is not random. It reflects deep psychological, cultural, and even spiritual patterns. This blog post explores how end-times beliefs shape financial life—sometimes destructively, sometimes surprisingly constructively—and what that means for the rest of us.

1. Defining End Times Economics

End Times Economics is the study of how apocalyptic expectations influence money behavior. Unlike ordinary financial planning, it operates under the assumption that time is short, the system is fragile, and survival or redemption depends on what you do right now.

It’s not a fringe phenomenon. From Cold War fallout shelters to modern survivalist movements, entire industries thrive on apocalyptic anxieties. The global market for survival gear and emergency food kits was valued at over $12 billion in 2023, and is expected to keep growing as fears of pandemics, climate change, and global conflict intensify.

At its core, End Times Economics revolves around a few recurring behaviors:

  • Prepping and Stockpiling – Buying supplies as insurance against collapse.
  • Doom Spending – Splurging recklessly because “the end is near.”
  • Thrift and Self-Reliance – Cutting debt, saving, and honing practical skills.
  • Generosity in the Face of Death – Giving away wealth as legacy or redemption.

2. Prepping: Financial Survivalism in Action

Prepping is the most visible expression of End Times Economics. Believers stockpile food, water, generators, and even build underground bunkers. The logic is simple: if collapse is coming, money is useless, but supplies and tools are priceless.

Research shows that prepping correlates strongly with apocalyptic thinking. In a 2019 study of “post-apocalyptic and doomsday prepping beliefs,” psychologists found that people with stronger end-time expectations were far more likely to invest in survival goods and disaster planning (ResearchGate).

But prepping isn’t always irrational. Think about it: having a three-month food supply, medical kit, and a backup power source might seem extreme, but in an era of climate disasters and supply chain breakdowns, it looks more like an insurance policy.

The problem comes when prepping tips into paranoia. Some families bankrupt themselves buying gear they’ll never use, all while ignoring longer-term wealth building like education or retirement planning.

3. Doom Spending: When Fear Turns into a Shopping Spree

If prepping is about saving for survival, doom spending is its opposite: spending like there’s no tomorrow—literally.

Financial planners use the term to describe people making big emotional purchases in response to existential threats. When the COVID-19 pandemic first hit, luxury goods saw a spike in sales, as many consumers thought, “Why save? Tomorrow isn’t guaranteed.”

A 2022 financial report highlighted that inflation and climate anxiety contributed to this trend—people splurging on travel, cars, or luxury goods as a coping mechanism (Fiology).

I once met a man in a Denver survivalist shop who had spent thousands on freeze-dried food… only to later drop $10,000 on a last-minute trip to Bora Bora. His logic? “If the world ends, at least I’ll die having lived.” Doom spending, in a nutshell.

4. Religious Roots: Faith and Finances in the End Times

Apocalyptic beliefs are deeply tied to religious traditions. For example:

  • Latter-day Saints (Mormons) encourage members to keep a year’s supply of food, avoid debt, and practice thrift as spiritual discipline (Wikipedia).
  • Evangelical movements inspired by rapture theology often fuel short-term thinking—if Jesus is returning soon, why plan for a pension?
  • Medieval millenarians gave away property and savings, convinced that earthly wealth had no value before Judgment Day.

These religious practices show how End Times Economics blends theology and money: belief in imminent apocalypse rewires financial time horizons.

5. The Scrooge Effect: Generosity in the Shadow of Death

It might surprise you, but apocalyptic beliefs don’t always make people selfish. Sometimes they make them generous.

Psychologists call this the Scrooge Effect: awareness of mortality can increase prosocial behaviors, such as donating to charity or helping strangers (Wikipedia).

During Harold Camping’s failed prophecy in 2011, some followers who had liquidated their assets gave the proceeds to the poor, believing that “storing treasures in heaven” was wiser than clinging to material wealth.

In my own life, I once attended a fundraiser after a series of doomsday-tinged climate reports dominated the news. The donations were extraordinary—people giving beyond their means, almost as if the urgency of the world’s fragility unlocked a deeper instinct to share.

6. The Psychology of Doomsday Finance

Why do people behave this way? A few key psychological mechanisms drive End Times Economics:

  • Terror Management Theory: Confronting mortality makes people cling to systems that give meaning—religion, community, or consumer goods.
  • Cognitive Dissonance: When prophecies fail, believers often double down, rationalizing the failure as divine mercy or a “test of faith” (Wikipedia).
  • Shortened Time Horizons: If the end is near, future planning becomes irrelevant, so immediate consumption or spiritual investment takes priority.
  • Identity Signaling: Buying survival gear or giving away wealth can signal loyalty to a group or ideology.

A fascinating economic experiment studied Harold Camping’s followers: they rejected financial offers that would only pay out after his predicted doomsday date, proving that prophecy literally devalued money in their eyes (Harvard DASH).

7. Lessons for Personal Finance: Navigating End Times Thinking

So, what can ordinary people learn from this? Even if you don’t expect the apocalypse, you’ve likely felt some version of doomsday thinking—whether during a market crash, a pandemic, or political upheaval.

Practical Takeaways:

  • Prepare Rationally, Not Paranoidly: A small emergency fund and short-term food storage are prudent. Spending your retirement on bunkers? Probably not.
  • Resist Doom Spending: When tempted by fear-driven splurges, pause. Ask, “Will this purchase matter five years from now?”
  • Channel Fear into Growth: Instead of buying more stuff, invest in skills (gardening, first aid, digital literacy) that build resilience.
  • Embrace Generosity: If the end feels near, don’t panic hoard. Give strategically. Helping others builds community resilience—the true safety net.

8. Why End Times Economics Matters Now

We live in an age where “apocalypse” feels less like myth and more like possibility: climate change, pandemics, nuclear threats, AI risks. End-times language permeates news cycles, political speeches, and even investment markets.

  • Crypto and Gold: Many investors treat Bitcoin or precious metals as “apocalypse hedges.”
  • Climate Anxiety Spending: From solar panels to off-grid cabins, ecological fear drives new industries.
  • Geopolitical Uncertainty: Wars and pandemics trigger prepping surges, from ammo sales to “bug-out” real estate.

Understanding End Times Economics isn’t just quirky sociology. It’s a mirror showing how fear reshapes entire economies.

Conclusion: From Fear to Resilience

End Times Economics teaches us that money isn’t just numbers—it’s a reflection of how we see the future. When people expect collapse, their wallets reveal it—through prepping, spending, saving, or giving.

The challenge is to recognize fear without letting it dictate destructive choices. Apocalypse or not, financial resilience, community solidarity, and long-term perspective are the wiser investments.

Call to Action

Have you noticed yourself or others making financial decisions based on fear of collapse? Share your stories in the comments. And if you found this article insightful, explore our other deep-dives into Dangerous Doctrines and Mass Psychology & Influence—where belief meets behavior.

References & Sources

occultic revival

Occult Revival: Why the Occult Is Trending Again

Introduction

In recent years, the term occult revival has been quietly appearing across social media platforms, pop culture blogs, and even academic papers. From tarot readings on TikTok to astrology newsletters, from Netflix’s mystical series to artisanal witchcraft workshops, the fascination with the occult is undeniable. But why now? Why is society, in 2025, experiencing a surge in interest in practices that were once relegated to the fringes?

This occult revival is not merely a nostalgic fascination or a fad; it reflects deeper cultural, psychological, and technological shifts. People are increasingly turning to esoteric knowledge, mysticism, and occult practices to find meaning, community, and a sense of control in a rapidly changing world. In this blog, we’ll explore the historical roots of this phenomenon, the factors driving it today, and the implications for culture and identity.


Historical Roots of the Occult Revival

The Early Foundations

The occult is far from new. Ancient civilizations—Egyptians, Greeks, Babylonians—practiced forms of esotericism, from astrology to divination and ritual magic. During the Renaissance, Hermeticism and alchemy flourished alongside the emerging scientific method, blending spiritual inquiry with early experimental thought.

By the 19th century, movements like Theosophy and Spiritualism introduced Western audiences to a structured occult philosophy, promising personal enlightenment and a connection to unseen forces. This period laid the groundwork for modern occult revival, emphasizing personal spiritual exploration over institutional dogma.

The Countercultural Influence of the 1960s and 1970s

The 20th century saw the occult intersect with popular culture during periods of social upheaval. The 1960s and 70s were particularly significant: the counterculture movement embraced alternative spirituality, psychedelic exploration, and mystical philosophies. Figures like Aleister Crowley experienced renewed interest, and groups such as the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn became points of reference for Western esotericism.

During this period, occult revival served as both a rebellion against traditional religious institutions and a search for personal empowerment. Mysticism, astrology, and tarot were no longer confined to secret societies—they became symbols of autonomy, creativity, and countercultural identity.


The Modern Drivers of Occult Revival

1. Digital Platforms and the Rise of “WitchTok”

Perhaps the most significant driver of the contemporary occult revival is the internet. Platforms like TikTok, Instagram, YouTube, and Discord have democratized access to mystical knowledge, allowing enthusiasts to share practices, tutorials, and interpretations with global audiences.

For example, the #WitchTok community on TikTok boasts millions of posts and views, ranging from daily tarot readings to ritual guidance. Unlike past revivals, knowledge is decentralized: anyone can access it, contribute to it, and adapt it to their context. This accessibility has removed traditional barriers, allowing new generations to explore the occult in ways that feel modern, participatory, and safe.

Read more about WitchTok and its influence here

2. Pop Culture and Media Portrayals

Another key driver is media representation. TV series such as The Chilling Adventures of Sabrina, American Horror Story, and films like Hereditary have brought occult themes into mainstream entertainment. These shows often frame witchcraft and mysticism in visually compelling, narrative-driven ways, blending horror, mystery, and empowerment.

Even pop music and fashion are influenced by occult imagery. Artists like Billie Eilish, Grimes, and Florence + the Machine incorporate mysticism, symbolism, and esoteric references into their personas and performances. Gothic fashion, mystical jewelry, and celestial motifs are now everyday expressions of occult identity.

3. Social Uncertainty and Psychological Appeal

The modern era is marked by global uncertainty: pandemics, climate change, political instability, and rapid technological change. Amid this volatility, the occult provides a framework for understanding, coping, and asserting personal agency. Tarot readings, astrology charts, and ritual practices offer structure, guidance, and meaning in a chaotic world.

Psychologists note that humans are naturally drawn to pattern recognition and symbolic thinking, making mystical systems—despite lacking empirical validation—psychologically satisfying. The occult revival, therefore, taps into fundamental human needs: certainty, control, and self-understanding.


Dimensions of Modern Occult Practice

Personal Empowerment

Many modern practitioners approach the occult as a tool for self-discovery. Daily rituals, moon-phase observances, and meditation practices encourage reflection and introspection. In a society where traditional guidance from religion or institutions may be less accessible, these practices provide individual agency and moral frameworks.

Community and Social Connection

Digital spaces have transformed occultism into a social phenomenon. Online forums, Discord servers, and TikTok communities create networks where individuals share experiences, celebrate milestones, and validate each other’s spiritual growth. For marginalized groups—LGBTQ+ individuals, neurodivergent people, or those questioning traditional religion—these communities provide a sense of belonging and acceptance.

Aesthetic Influence

The occult has become a visual culture. Dark academia, mystical symbolism, celestial motifs, and tarot-inspired art have infiltrated fashion, interior design, and branding. This aesthetic appeal not only draws interest but also bridges the gap between private practice and public expression, making the occult more approachable.


Criticisms and Ethical Considerations

While the occult revival offers empowerment and community, it also raises concerns.

  • Commercialization: Courses, online readings, and ritual kits are increasingly monetized, raising questions about exploitation.
  • Misinformation: Without proper guidance, unqualified practitioners can perpetuate false or harmful practices.
  • Cultural Appropriation: Elements of occult practices often originate from marginalized or indigenous traditions; improper adaptation can be disrespectful or harmful.

Engaging critically with the occult means respecting its origins, practicing ethically, and discerning credible sources from commercialized or sensationalized content.


The Occult Revival in Context

To understand the contemporary occult revival, it’s important to view it as part of broader societal trends:

  1. Spiritual Individualism: Modern individuals increasingly seek personalized spiritual experiences over institutionalized religion.
  2. Digital Culture: The internet enables rapid dissemination of esoteric knowledge, fostering experimentation and community.
  3. Cultural Rebellion: The occult serves as a form of cultural critique, challenging norms, hierarchies, and traditional power structures.
  4. Aestheticization of Spirituality: Mystical symbols and practices become part of lifestyle and identity, merging spirituality with visual culture.

This intersection of technology, psychology, and culture ensures that the occult revival is more than a fleeting trend—it reflects a profound cultural shift.


Personal Insights

From personal observation, one of the most striking aspects of the modern occult revival is its accessibility. I’ve attended virtual tarot workshops and astrology webinars, where participants ranged from teenagers to retirees, each seeking personal growth or connection. Unlike historical occult movements, these spaces are often inclusive, playful, and educational, blending tradition with modern sensibilities.

Another insight is the psychological impact: engagement with occult practices can improve mindfulness, reduce stress, and foster creativity. Rituals and symbolism create a sense of narrative in life, helping participants navigate uncertainty with ritualized tools.


Occult Revival and Cultural Mainstreaming

Table: Occult Trends in 2025

TrendDescriptionCultural Impact
WitchTok and Social MediaViral videos teaching rituals, spells, and astrologyMassive online engagement, youth interest
Mainstream TV/FilmSeries/films featuring witchcraft and mysticismNormalization of occult aesthetics and dialogue
Fashion & LifestyleOccult-inspired clothing, jewelry, home décorVisibility of occult culture in everyday life
Spiritual IndividualismPersonalized rituals, astrology, tarotShift from institutional religion to personal spirituality

Conclusion

The occult revival is not a niche curiosity—it’s a reflection of cultural transformation. It blends historical esotericism with modern digital culture, personal empowerment, and aesthetic innovation. While caution is necessary regarding commercialization and misinformation, the movement represents an evolving human desire for meaning, connection, and self-discovery.

Whether through tarot readings on TikTok, astrology apps, or mystical fashion, the occult is increasingly woven into the fabric of contemporary life. As society continues to navigate uncertainty, this revival offers alternative pathways for understanding ourselves and the world.


Call to Action

Are you fascinated by the occult revival? Explore reputable resources, join online communities mindfully, or try incorporating symbolic practices into your daily life. Share your experiences and reflections—let’s discuss how mysticism is shaping modern culture.


References
1. WitchTok: Exploring its Popularity, Rituals, and Risks
2. The Occult Revival as Popular Culture
3. Sometimes Pop Culture Really Is the Gateway to the Occult
4. Rise of Witchcraft and Popular Culture: https://www.focusonthefamily.com

dangerous-doctrines

Ethical Responsibilities: Platforms, Governments, and Society

Introduction

The digital proliferation of apocalyptic cults raises urgent questions: who is responsible for mitigating harm, and how should society respond? Unlike traditional cults that existed in isolated locations, digital cults leverage global infrastructures, making accountability complex. Yet several layers of responsibility—technological, governmental, and societal—can be identified.


Platform Accountability

Social media and messaging platforms are not neutral conduits; their design choices significantly influence what content spreads and how communities form. Algorithms optimized for engagement often inadvertently amplify apocalyptic narratives because emotionally charged content performs well in the attention economy. This creates a moral dilemma: platforms profit from engagement while contributing to the potential radicalization or emotional manipulation of vulnerable users.

Key responsibilities for platforms include:

  1. Transparency in Algorithms: Platforms should provide transparency about how recommendation systems work, particularly when they prioritize content that is fear-inducing or conspiratorial. This allows independent audits and research to assess how users are being influenced.
  2. Moderation and Content Labeling: While free speech must be protected, there is a compelling ethical argument for flagging or limiting content that explicitly incites panic, self-harm, or violence in the name of apocalyptic belief. Platforms such as YouTube and TikTok have begun experimenting with fact-checking labels and warning prompts on sensitive content. However, apocalyptic cult content often skirts clear policy violations, requiring nuanced approaches.
  3. Support for Vulnerable Users: Platforms can integrate mental health resources or community support mechanisms. For instance, if a user searches for or engages with content about mass suicides, algorithms could recommend counseling services or credible educational material on mental health and critical thinking.

Governmental Responsibility

Governments face a dual challenge: protecting citizens from harm while safeguarding civil liberties. Unlike offline cults, digital apocalyptic movements operate transnationally, making conventional law enforcement insufficient. Nevertheless, there are several avenues for proactive governance:

  1. Regulatory Frameworks: Countries can mandate stricter transparency requirements for algorithms and content moderation practices. For instance, the European Union’s Digital Services Act (DSA) sets a precedent by requiring platforms to take accountability for harmful content without stifling innovation or free speech.
  2. Monitoring Radicalization Pathways: Governments can invest in research programs that study online radicalization, including apocalyptic cults. By identifying common psychological and social triggers, policymakers can develop targeted interventions rather than blanket censorship.
  3. Cross-Border Collaboration: Many apocalyptic cults operate across multiple jurisdictions. Governments need international cooperation to track harmful activity, share intelligence, and respond to digital threats collectively. This is particularly relevant for encrypted platforms like Telegram or WhatsApp, where anonymity complicates enforcement.

Societal Responsibility and Digital Literacy

Ultimately, mitigating the influence of apocalyptic cults requires more than top-down solutions; society itself must cultivate resilience. Digital literacy—teaching individuals to critically assess online content, understand algorithms, and recognize manipulative rhetoric—is crucial.

  1. Education in Schools: Integrating media literacy into curricula helps young people navigate the attention economy critically. Understanding how emotional manipulation works online can reduce susceptibility to apocalyptic narratives.
  2. Parental and Community Engagement: Families and local communities play a critical role in providing social support. Individuals often turn to digital cults due to isolation or a lack of purpose. Stronger offline connections reduce vulnerability.
  3. Promoting Alternative Communities: Platforms, NGOs, and governments can support positive, purpose-driven communities online—spaces where individuals can find meaning, connection, and engagement without exposure to harmful ideologies. Examples include mentorship programs, hobby-based networks, and volunteer initiatives, which offer both social interaction and a sense of purpose.

Ethical Challenges and Tensions

Balancing these responsibilities is not straightforward. Overregulation risks censorship and the suppression of legitimate spiritual or philosophical discourse. Conversely, inaction allows manipulative and potentially lethal narratives to spread unchecked. The key is nuanced, multi-layered strategies that combine technological intervention, legal oversight, and cultural education.

For example, while labeling content may reduce the virality of apocalyptic videos, it cannot address the underlying need for belonging that drives recruitment. Similarly, mental health resources are helpful but insufficient if users remain isolated or lack meaningful social support. Therefore, ethical interventions must address both content and context, combining preventive education with responsive support systems.


Lessons from the Pandemic Era

The COVID-19 pandemic offers a relevant parallel. During global crises, misinformation and apocalyptic thinking often surge, fueled by uncertainty and fear. Platforms, governments, and communities learned that reactive measures alone—such as fact-checking or content takedowns—are insufficient. Instead, proactive strategies, including public education campaigns, mental health support, and trusted community leadership, are more effective. The same lessons apply to digital apocalyptic cults: prevention, not just reaction, is key.


A Call for Collective Responsibility

Digital apocalyptic cults illustrate that no single actor can address the problem alone. Platforms must design systems ethically; governments must regulate responsibly; society must cultivate resilience and critical thinking. Each layer of intervention strengthens the other. Ignoring this shared responsibility risks normalizing end-times rhetoric, eroding trust, and allowing manipulation to flourish in the shadows of our digital lives.


Integrating the Ethical Dimension

By combining historical understanding, psychological insight, and technological awareness, we can confront the digital apocalypse on multiple fronts. Ethical responsibility is not simply a moral obligation—it is a practical necessity. The very mechanisms that make digital communities powerful—instantaneous connection, emotional engagement, and algorithmic amplification—can be harnessed for good if guided by thoughtful policy, education, and design.

In short, the digital end-times need not be inevitable. With deliberate action, society can channel the power of online communities into constructive, life-affirming directions while curbing the influence of destructive apocalyptic cults.

modern-cults

The Spread of Apocalyptic Religious Cults in a Digital Age

Introduction

Have you ever wondered why apocalyptic cults—once considered niche, fringe, or even the stuff of sensationalist tabloids—now wield an eerie influence in the digital age? The image of hooded followers chanting in remote compounds seems almost quaint compared to the viral videos, private Telegram groups, and algorithmically boosted social media posts that characterize contemporary end-times movements. In today’s world, apocalyptic religious cults aren’t merely small sects confined to rural hideouts; they are engineered narratives, meticulously designed to spread far and wide online. Unlike in the past, where recruitment relied on personal charisma and local networks, today’s cults leverage digital infrastructure, social engineering techniques, and media literacy—or, in some cases, media manipulation—to infiltrate mainstream consciousness.

In this blog, we will explore the phenomenon of online apocalyptic cults: how digital platforms amplify end-times fantasies, the psychological mechanisms at work, and the real-world consequences of these movements. Through historical examples, contemporary cases, and personal encounters, I aim to reveal the sophisticated—and sometimes disturbing—interplay between technology, belief, and human vulnerability.


A Digital Awakening of Apocalyptic Worldviews

Apocalyptic thinking has been a recurring motif in human history. From the Christian millennialist movements of the Middle Ages to the prophecies of Nostradamus in Renaissance Europe, societies have long been fascinated with visions of the end of the world. These narratives often emerge during times of social upheaval, political instability, or widespread fear, offering followers a sense of structure, purpose, and certainty amid chaos.

What has changed in the 21st century is the medium through which these messages are transmitted. Digital technologies, particularly social media platforms and encrypted messaging apps, have fundamentally transformed the way apocalyptic cults operate. Far from being limited to local communities, these movements can now reach global audiences instantly. The result is a new form of apocalyptic engagement: one that merges ancient anxieties with modern technological sophistication.


Why Digital Platforms Fuel Cult Narratives

Instant Reach Meets Emotional Messaging

One of the most significant factors enabling the rise of digital apocalyptic cults is the unprecedented reach of online platforms. Sites like YouTube, Telegram, TikTok, and Discord allow charismatic leaders to broadcast their messages to hundreds of thousands—or even millions—of viewers without traditional gatekeepers such as editors, regulators, or fact-checkers. Video sermons, live streams, and “prophecy updates” are consumed in immersive formats, often designed to elicit strong emotional reactions such as fear, awe, or urgency.

Psychologists have long noted that emotionally charged content is more likely to be remembered and shared, a phenomenon known as “emotional virality.” Apocalyptic narratives are particularly effective in this regard because they exploit existential fears: the fear of death, societal collapse, or spiritual damnation. When combined with the instant gratification of digital platforms, these narratives can achieve a level of reach and intensity that was unimaginable even two decades ago.

Community in Isolation

Another key driver is the human need for belonging. Sociologists and psychologists have observed that cults often attract individuals who feel socially isolated, anxious, or alienated. In pre-digital eras, such individuals might have been overlooked or marginalized in traditional social spaces. Today, however, digital communities offer a seductive alternative: a sense of identity, purpose, and fellowship.

For example, research from King’s College London has documented how online cults target vulnerable demographics, using a combination of private messaging, community-building exercises, and curated content to foster loyalty. These tactics echo historical methods of manipulation—such as communal living, ritualistic indoctrination, and charismatic authority—but are amplified by algorithms that push related content into followers’ feeds, creating echo chambers that reinforce belief systems.

Interestingly, mainstream media outlets like Teen Vogue have even highlighted how younger audiences, especially teenagers, can become entrapped in these online ecosystems. The combination of peer validation, ritualized content consumption, and the gamification of belief (e.g., sharing “apocalypse survival tips” or decoding prophecy) creates an immersive feedback loop that is difficult to break.

Blurred Lines Between Meme and Belief

Perhaps the most insidious development is the cultural normalization of apocalyptic themes. Tech moguls, venture capitalists, and futurists have often flirted with “end-of-the-world” rhetoric, framing it as a challenge, opportunity, or inevitable event. For instance, Peter Thiel and other Silicon Valley figures have popularized the notion of a “techno-apocalypse”—a vision in which technology itself could precipitate societal collapse.

While such rhetoric is often couched in intellectual or financial terms, its dissemination through media channels blurs the boundary between metaphor and literal belief. Platforms like Medium or subcultures such as The Nerd Reich illustrate how meme culture, dystopian fiction, and apocalyptic speculation can coalesce, making the idea of an impending catastrophe both entertaining and credible. For susceptible individuals, this normalization lowers the threshold for engagement with actual apocalyptic cults.


Iconic Cases of Apocalyptic Cults (Past & Present)

To understand the contemporary landscape, it is essential to examine both historical precedents and modern manifestations of apocalyptic cults. These examples illuminate the continuity of certain tactics, as well as the innovations introduced by digital media.

Cult / MovementDigital Presence & TacticsOutcome or Impact
Heaven’s GateEarly adopter of websites; distributed video messages detailing beliefs and prophecies before their mass suicide in 199739 members died believing that an alien spacecraft would carry them to salvation; widely studied as a case of internet-era cult recruitment
Aum Shinrikyo (Japan)Leveraged the promise of spiritual-technological salvation; recruited intellectuals via seminars and multimedia contentOrchestrated the 1995 Tokyo sarin gas attack: 12 dead; thousands injured; remains a cautionary tale of blending technology, ideology, and violence
Movement for Restoration (Uganda)Used mass scare tactics, apocalyptic preaching, and ritualized ceremonies to attract followersOver 700 people died in ritualistic acts of self-sacrifice; highlighted the lethal potential of collective panic
Modern Digital Cults (e.g., Jesus Christians)Operate via masked online channels, YouTube sermons, and encrypted chat groupsHundreds of thousands of views globally; cultivate an anonymous, dispersed following; show how digital platforms can replace physical compounds

Heaven’s Gate: A Cautionary Tale

Heaven’s Gate is often the first cult people think of when discussing apocalyptic belief in the digital era. The group, led by Marshall Applewhite and Bonnie Nettles, fused New Age cosmology, Christian eschatology, and science fiction. They were early adopters of the internet to recruit members, post newsletters, and distribute video messages, demonstrating how online platforms could facilitate community-building and ideological reinforcement. Tragically, in March 1997, 39 members committed mass suicide, believing they would ascend to a spacecraft trailing the Hale-Bopp comet.

Aum Shinrikyo: Apocalyptic Ideology Meets Violence

Aum Shinrikyo illustrates another dimension: the combination of apocalyptic ideology with sophisticated technology and intellectual recruitment. The cult promised salvation through the fusion of spiritual enlightenment and futuristic technology, attracting highly educated followers. Their digital presence helped disseminate doctrine and recruit new members. The culmination of their activities—the Tokyo sarin gas attack—was both a shocking act of violence and a demonstration of the extreme consequences when apocalyptic belief meets operational capacity.

Modern Digital Cults: The New Frontier

In today’s digital ecosystem, groups like the Jesus Christians exemplify a subtler, yet potentially more pervasive, threat. Rather than relying on physical compounds or violent acts, these groups operate in the shadows of the internet: YouTube sermons, encrypted channels, and globalized community networks. Followers are drawn not only to the promise of spiritual salvation but also to a sense of belonging in an increasingly alienating world. Digital platforms allow such movements to scale their influence far beyond what was possible in the pre-internet era.


The Psychological Mechanics of Online Apocalyptic Engagement

Understanding why individuals are drawn to apocalyptic cults requires exploring the underlying psychological mechanisms. Several factors contribute to the appeal of these movements in the digital age:

  1. Existential Anxiety: Humans are naturally attuned to threats. Apocalyptic narratives exploit this by framing societal, environmental, or cosmic collapse as imminent and unavoidable. The result is heightened vigilance and attentiveness, which cult leaders can channel into recruitment.
  2. Identity Formation: Online cults often provide a clear sense of identity, particularly for those marginalized in traditional social spaces. Adopting the ideology of the group becomes both a badge of belonging and a moral compass in a confusing world.
  3. Social Proof and Viral Validation: The digital environment amplifies social proof—followers see others subscribing, commenting, and sharing content, creating the illusion of widespread belief. Algorithms reinforce engagement by showing similar content, deepening the sense of consensus.
  4. Cognitive Entrapment: Techniques such as repetition, selective exposure, and narrative closure keep followers psychologically invested. Even when individuals encounter contradictory information, the immersive nature of online content and community feedback can suppress critical thinking.
  5. Gamification of Belief: Digital apocalyptic cults often turn engagement into a game. Challenges, quizzes, prophecy interpretations, and even “survival scoreboards” incentivize continuous participation, making disengagement psychologically costly.

A Personal Encounter with Digital Apocalyptic Culture

I once found myself navigating a Telegram channel dedicated to end-times prophecy, curious about the rhetoric and social dynamics of such communities. The first thing that struck me was the sophistication of the content: high-quality videos, infographics, and curated news updates designed to evoke fear and urgency. But what was more striking was the community itself: strangers from around the globe, each sharing personal stories of anxiety, spiritual searching, and existential dread.

I watched as moderators carefully curated discussion threads, nudging followers toward particular interpretations and ensuring dissenting voices were marginalized. In a private conversation, one member admitted that the group gave them a sense of “purpose and clarity” they couldn’t find anywhere else. The experience was both fascinating and unsettling: a reminder that the danger of these groups is not always overt violence, but the subtle reshaping of thought, belief, and emotional attachment.


Conclusion: The Digital Apocalypse Isn’t Fiction

Apocalyptic cults are not relics of the past; they have evolved, leveraging the same technologies that define modern life. Platforms like YouTube, Telegram, and Discord provide reach, immediacy, and community-building power that were unimaginable to earlier generations of cult leaders. Meanwhile, cultural normalization of end-times narratives, from Silicon Valley techno-visions to dystopian pop culture, lowers the barrier for engagement.

Understanding these movements requires more than fear or sensationalism. It requires examining the technological, psychological, and sociocultural dynamics at play. By studying historical cases like Heaven’s Gate and Aum Shinrikyo alongside contemporary digital communities, we can better comprehend how apocalyptic belief adapts to the modern age—and, crucially, how to identify and mitigate the risks before they escalate.

In a world increasingly mediated by screens, algorithms, and virtual communities, the apocalypse has gone digital. It is no longer confined to isolated compounds or obscure pamphlets. Instead, it is a global, decentralized, and highly viral phenomenon—one that challenges our assumptions about belief, community, and human vulnerability in the internet age.

Qanon-two

QAnon and Global Conspiracy Movements

Introduction

In the vast, chaotic information landscape of the 21st century, QAnon stands out as one of the most dangerous and bizarre conspiracy theories to ever take root in modern political discourse. What began as a cryptic internet puzzle on an obscure imageboard evolved into a sprawling, almost cult-like ideology that has inspired real-world violence, undermined democratic institutions, and spread across national borders.

QAnon is not just an “American problem.” It is a globalized belief system, mutating to fit the political and cultural anxieties of different societies. The question is not simply what QAnon is, but why it resonates so deeply with millions of people.

2. The Origins of QAnon

QAnon emerged in October 2017 on the anonymous message board 4chan. A user calling themselves “Q” — supposedly a high-level government insider with “Q-level” security clearance — began posting cryptic messages known as “Q drops.” These vague clues claimed to reveal a secret war between President Donald Trump and a global cabal of elite pedophiles, corrupt politicians, and shadowy power brokers.

From the start, QAnon was designed for viral engagement. The Q drops were intentionally ambiguous, encouraging followers to “research” and “connect the dots” themselves. This turned passive consumers into active participants, a classic cult-recruitment tactic dressed up as citizen investigation.

3. The Historical Roots of Conspiracy Thinking

While QAnon feels like a distinctly internet-age phenomenon, its roots are much older.

  • Medieval Blood Libels: The false claim that Jewish communities kidnapped Christian children for ritual purposes echoes eerily in QAnon’s obsession with child-trafficking rings.
  • The Protocols of the Elders of Zion: This early 20th-century antisemitic forgery laid the groundwork for the “global elite conspiracy” trope.
  • The John Birch Society: In the Cold War era, the Birchers pushed narratives of communist infiltration and globalist control that prefigure QAnon rhetoric.

In short, QAnon is a modern remix of ancient prejudices, Cold War paranoia, and millennial internet culture.

4. Ultimate Causes and Reasons Behind QAnon

The explosive growth of QAnon can be traced to a convergence of psychological, cultural, and technological forces:

  • Distrust in Institutions: Years of political scandals, corporate corruption, and government secrecy eroded public faith in mainstream institutions.
  • The Algorithm Effect: Social media platforms reward emotional, sensational content. QAnon’s outrageous claims were perfectly suited for algorithmic amplification.
  • Cultural Fragmentation: As society becomes more polarized, people retreat into ideological echo chambers where conspiracies flourish unchecked.
  • Search for Meaning: In uncertain times, grand narratives offer comfort, purpose, and a sense of control.
  • Authoritarian Populism: QAnon dovetails neatly with populist political movements that cast themselves as defenders of “the people” against “corrupt elites.”

5. Evolution of the QAnon Movement

Initially dismissed as fringe nonsense, QAnon rapidly gained traction during the Trump presidency. Facebook groups swelled to hundreds of thousands of members. Q slogans appeared at political rallies.

In 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic supercharged the movement. With millions stuck at home, fearful and isolated, QAnon’s simplistic “good vs. evil” story provided an intoxicating sense of clarity. Soon, QAnon merged with anti-lockdown protests, anti-vaccine activism, and other fringe causes.

The January 6th Capitol riot revealed QAnon’s real-world danger. Many participants were open believers, convinced they were part of a patriotic revolution to stop a stolen election.

6. Present-Day Manifestations in the United States

Even after Q’s original posts stopped in late 2020, QAnon ideology persisted. Today, it shows up in:

  • School board meetings, where QAnon-adjacent claims fuel panic over “grooming” and “critical race theory.”
  • Local elections, where Q-affiliated candidates run for office.
  • Alternative media ecosystems, from podcasts to YouTube channels, that keep the movement alive without the Q drops.

QAnon has moved from fringe message boards into mainstream conservative politics, reshaping the Republican base and influencing legislation.

7. QAnon’s Global Offshoots

QAnon is no longer just an American export — it has gone international:

  • Germany: Merged with the Reichsbürger movement, which rejects the legitimacy of the modern German state.
  • France: Fused with anti-vaccine activism and anti-Macron sentiment.
  • Japan: A “JAnon” variant incorporates anti-China nationalism and pandemic disinformation.
  • Brazil: Tied to pro-Bolsonaro circles and anti-globalist rhetoric.
  • Australia & New Zealand: Linked with anti-lockdown protests and “sovereign citizen” ideologies.

Each offshoot adapts QAnon’s core mythos to local grievances, proving the malleable and viral nature of the movement.

8. Teachings, Doctrines, and Core Beliefs

While QAnon lacks a formal creed, several recurring doctrines define it:

  • A secret global cabal controls governments, media, and finance.
  • The cabal engages in child trafficking, satanic rituals, and corruption.
  • Donald Trump (or a local political equivalent) is a divinely inspired hero fighting the cabal.
  • A coming “Great Awakening” will expose the cabal, leading to mass arrests and a utopian society.
  • Followers have a sacred duty to “research” and “spread the truth.”

This framework transforms QAnon from a conspiracy theory into a quasi-religion, complete with prophecy, saviors, and apocalyptic visions.

9. Consequences of the QAnon Phenomenon

The harm QAnon causes is both personal and societal:

  • Radicalization and Violence: QAnon believers have been linked to kidnappings, armed standoffs, and terror plots.
  • Family Fragmentation: Loved ones cut ties with members who become consumed by QAnon.
  • Erosion of Democracy: By promoting distrust in elections and governance, QAnon undermines democratic legitimacy.
  • Public Health Risks: Anti-vaccine narratives fueled by QAnon have worsened pandemic outcomes.
  • Global Destabilization: The spread of QAnon to other countries injects instability into fragile political systems.

10. Fighting QAnon and Its Ideological Spread

Countering QAnon requires a multi-pronged strategy:

  • Digital Literacy Education: Teach people how to critically evaluate information sources.
  • Deplatforming Extremism: Social media companies must take consistent action against harmful content.
  • Community Outreach: Support programs to help people exit conspiracy movements.
  • Transparent Governance: Reduce the appeal of conspiracy theories by increasing institutional transparency.
  • Global Cooperation: QAnon is transnational, so responses must be too.

11. Call to Action

QAnon thrives in darkness — in the shadows of ignorance, fear, and division. Every time we scroll past disinformation without challenging it, every time we allow lies to go uncorrected, we help the movement grow.

This is not about silencing political opponents; it is about defending truth itself. If we care about democracy, social stability, and the safety of our communities, we must confront QAnon and its global variants with courage, clarity, and compassion.

Silence is complicity. Engagement is resistance. The time to act is now.

12. References

  1. Belew, Kathleen. Bring the War Home: The White Power Movement and Paramilitary America. Harvard University Press, 2018.
  2. Roose, Kevin. “What Is QAnon, the Viral Pro-Trump Conspiracy Theory?” The New York Times, Updated 2023.
  3. Argentino, Marc-André. “The QAnon Conspiracy Theory: A Security Threat in the Making?” International Centre for Counter-Terrorism, 2021.
  4. Donovan, Joan, and danah boyd. “Stop the Presses? Moving from Strategic Silence to Strategic Amplification in a Networked Media Ecosystem.” American Behavioral Scientist, 2020.
  5. Frenkel, Sheera, et al. An Ugly Truth: Inside Facebook’s Battle for Domination. Harper, 2021.