by Julie Telgenhoff
It starts with a quiet, uncomfortable idea: what if the madness isn’t on the fringes…what if it’s in the center? What if the behavior that feels “normal” is actually the product of something engineered, repeated, reinforced—untl no one remembers what clarity felt like in the first place?
That’s the thread running through “The Manufacturing of a Mass Psychosis – Can Sanity Return to an Insane World?”
The video doesn’t come in loud. It builds. It walks through how entire populations can be pulled into a shared psychological state where perception shifts, not individually, but collectively. Not through one dramatic event, but through a slow conditioning process—fear layered with confusion, contradiction layered with repetition.
At the core is menticide—the deliberate dismantling of a person’s ability to think clearly. Not by removing information, but by flooding it. Overload the mind. Contradict it. Keep it emotionally charged. When someone is kept in that state long enough, they stop evaluating reality on their own. They start reaching outward—for guidance, for authority, for something that feels stable.
And that’s where the turn happens.
Fear destabilizes. Isolation disconnects. Confusion disorients. Eventually, people don’t want truth—they want relief. And relief often comes in the form of a narrative that explains everything, even if it’s flawed. Especially if it’s repeated enough.
That’s the breeding ground for what the video calls totalitarian psychosis.
In that state, the dynamic shifts. A centralized authority begins to define reality, while the population—psychologically worn down—starts to accept it without resistance. Not because they’re weak, but because their internal compass has been scrambled. Over time, people don’t just follow the narrative—they defend it. Enforce it. Identify with it.
And once that happens, something subtle but powerful takes hold.
Anyone who doesn’t align with the shared narrative becomes a problem.
Not because they’re aggressive. Not because they’re wrong. But because they’re not participating. Their presence creates friction. It raises a question no one wants to ask: if they’re not seeing it this way…what does that mean?
So the response isn’t curiosity.
It’s rejection.
This is where that old quote lands with weight—the idea that a time will come when the sane are labeled mad simply because they don’t mirror the collective state. In a society shaped by mass psychosis, sanity doesn’t feel comforting. It feels threatening. It breaks the illusion of consensus.
And people protect consensus.
That’s the uncomfortable truth sitting underneath the entire video. It’s not just about control structures or power dynamics—it’s about psychology. About how easily the human mind can be pushed off center when enough pressure is applied in the right ways.
But there’s a quieter point woven through it.
If a mass psychosis is built on individuals losing their ability to think clearly, then the reversal doesn’t start at the top. It starts at the individual level. One person at a time, regaining clarity. Regaining internal stability. Stepping out of reaction and back into observation.
Not loudly. Not dramatically.
Just…steadily.
And in a world that’s conditioned to move as a group, that kind of stillness stands out more than anything else.







