Loving Our Jailers: Big Tech’s Stockholm Syndrome EffectFrom Freedom to Compliance: Are We Repeating Soviet History at the Hands of Big Tech?
After being subjected for years to abusive censorship by YouTube, Facebook, Twitter, and others, I have come to realize something deeply troubling: Even so-called “free speech” platforms are implementing questionable practices, where favored individuals are propped up while others are quietly suppressed. Substack, a platform once praised for neutrality, is also beginning to show cracks. Establishment figures have entered the platform boasting hundreds of thousands of “subscribers” overnight—despite these numbers being impossible without institutional sponsorship or artificial manipulation, thus violating the spirit (and arguably the rules) of the platform. This slow drift (or overnight in the case of Google/Youtube) toward manipulation leads me to a disturbing conclusion: What is Stockholm Syndrome? Stockholm Syndrome is a psychological phenomenon where hostages or victims develop positive feelings, loyalty, or even affection toward their captors or abusers—sometimes even defending them. At first glance, it seems irrational. Key Characteristics of Stockholm Syndrome:
How Stockholm Syndrome Conforms to Our Situation — and Its Effects on Society Today, many creators, journalists, and independent thinkers—having endured years of censorship, deplatforming, and economic punishment—find themselves emotionally and financially dependent on the very platforms that suppress them. They rationalize censorship: They defend Big Tech even when their freedoms are clearly violated, and they show gratitude for small mercies—such as having a single post restored, or getting slight algorithmic boosts after months of suppression. At the same time, they distrust true alternatives: This mass psychological shift has profound consequences for society:
Many consumers of media assume censorship isn’t their concern because they haven’t been personally targeted—yet. But every time a voice is silenced, the boundaries of free expression quietly shrink for everyone. The illusion of safety is temporary; once the precedent is set, no one’s voice is truly secure. Ignoring the erosion of free speech today guarantees fewer rights for all tomorrow. History has shown us this pattern before. Today, Big Tech monopolies are playing a similar role. They act not just as gatekeepers of information, but as engineers of thought and loyalty. In the end, Stockholm Syndrome in the digital age is not just an individual affliction—it is becoming a societal disease. If we don’t recognize this dynamic—and fight against it boldly—we risk losing not just freedom of speech, but the will to even want it. |
Are you suffering from Stockholm Syndrome?
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