Mass formation psychosis

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Main.png Mass formation psychosis
(Mental health condition,  Psychosis,  Hypnosis,  Enemy image?)Rdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
Mass formation psychosis.jpg
Interest of• Mattias Desmet
• Robert Malone
An explanation promoted in 2021 of public reactions to the COVID-19/Response

Mass formation psychosis is a concept used to explain otherwise difficult to explain phenomena around public acceptance of policies taken in the name of COVID-19. Matthias Desmet applied the concept to COVID-19 in Summer 2020,[1][2] and it reached a much wide audience from Robert Malone. On the first of January 2022, Malone spoke in depth about it on The Joe Rogan Experience, reaching an audience of tens of millions, after which commercially-controlled media swung in to action to try to suggest the idea had no merit.

Preconditions

For a mass to form in a society, there a number of preconditions

  • The society must be stress-ridden, i.e. it must be high in what Desmet terms "free floating anxiety"
  • A large proportion of society must feel a lack of meaningful connection to the world, e.g. what anthropologist [[David Graeber] referred to as "bullshit jobs"
Mass Psychosis & You / Peak Prosperity - "This video explains why people you know seem to have lost their ability to reason or even be reasonable. Mass Hysteria, or psychosis is a very routine and well-documented part of human history."

Implications

A mass psychosis, once formed, bypasses the logical faculty. Its adherents are motivated by the desire to be members of a group with a purpose (even a non-sensical or impossible purpose). Rational arguments are therefore of very little use. Suggestions of returning to an "old normal", i.e. a pre-mass formation state, are particularly unwelcome, since the isolation and pointlessness of such a state inspired the mass formation.

Popularisation

In 2020 Matthias Desmet used the concept of mass formation to help understand the public response to the authoritarian measures introduced worldwide during the COVID-19 event.

It was widely popularised in December 2021.[3]

Cover-up

The source used for the Associated Press 'fact check' debunking Mass Formation Psychosis theory previously encouraged 'behavioral nudging' people with public messages reinforcing Covid compliance.[4]

Commercially-controlled media acted in lockstep in early January 2021 to deny that the concept had any validity:

Noah Berlatsky in The Independent wrote that "the “mass formation psychosis” argument, like the anti-vaccine argument, is complete nonsense."[5] An anonymously published article by Reuters concluded that "There is no evidence to suggest a “mass formation psychosis” has occurred during the pandemic, experts told Reuters. The term itself is not recognised among academics, and modern research into crowd psychology has shown that crowds do not behave in mindless or non-individualistic ways."[6]

Terminology

It should be noted that "collective delusion", or "mass delusion" are known terms in psychology.[7][8][9] There also exists the concept of the "Mass psychogenic illness", which is a known phenomenon and has it's own Wikipedia entry,[10][11] these are overlooked in commercially-controlled media reporting.

Mass sociogenic illness is the "rapid spread of signs and symptoms of illness among members of a cohesive group that originate in a nervous system disorder involving arousal, loss, or alteration of function, where the unconsciously exhibited physical complaints have no corresponding organic etiology. "It occurs in the context of a credible threat that triggers great anxiety, such as an odor nuisance in a school amid fears of chemical warfare or bioterrorism. In standard psychiatric nomenclature, mass sociogenic disorder is subsumed under the umbrella term somatoform disorder and subcategorized as "conversion disorder hysterical neurosis, conversion type." In the literature, it is referred to synonymously as "mass psychogenic disorder" or "epidemic hysteria" and is distinguished from collective delusions by the presence of symptoms of illness.[12]


 

Examples

Page nameDescription
McCarthyism
WitchAn enemy image used in the Middle Ages that was acted as a cover for expropriation of property, a forerunner of the modern day "terrorist"

 

Related Quotation

PageQuoteAuthor
War/Generations“People are hitting Google like crazy with queries regarding Jordon Walker, Pfizer and Veritas. As they did when I said “mass formation psychosis” on Rogan #1757, Google manually interferes with the searches, returning wishy washy “these results are changing rapidly” screens instead of actual links. So, now we have a pretty clear smoking gun involving collusion between Pfizer and Google to suppress the story. Then everything, anything, having to do with Jordon Walker, MD gets memory holed. Wiped from the internet, including the Wayback machine. And then the chaos agents, bots and trolls descend on all social media channels. Sowing doubt that Jordon Walker is even a real person. Floating paranoid conspiracy theories that this is all a big deep-fake set up of Veritas, O’Keefe and myself. Which of course get amplified by the usual actors. Now THAT is an example of Fifth Gen Warfare power!”Robert Malone
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References