Coercion Cascade
Also known as: coercion cascade model
Summary
A 7-step model for neutralizing opposition: trigger → detection → automated grievance → severance → termination → blacklisting → rehabilitation.
Definition
The Coercion Cascade is a 7-step model derived from Round 3 synthesis of the enforcement mechanisms's operations. The sequence is: (1) trigger event, (2) detection via surveillance infrastructure, (3) automated grievance generation via Reportify AI, (4) representation severance via legal pressure, (5) termination from employment, (6) blacklisting via de-banking and industry coordination, and (7) conditional rehabilitation upon compliance. It describes the full lifecycle of targeted neutralization.
Background & History
The Coercion Cascade is a seven-step model derived from synthesis of the enforcement network's operations, describing the full lifecycle of targeted neutralization from initial trigger to conditional rehabilitation. It formalizes the observed pattern by which individuals and organizations are systematically isolated and neutralized.
Operational Role in the Network
The cascade operates as the master framework for the enforcement network, integrating surveillance, automated legal attack, employment termination, financial severance, and blacklisting into a single sequential process. Each step feeds the next, creating a self-reinforcing cycle that makes resistance increasingly costly and rehabilitation conditional on compliance.
Documented Actions & Evidence
7-step process deployment
The seven-step sequence—trigger, detection via surveillance, automated grievance generation via Reportify AI, representation severance, termination, blacklisting via de-banking, and conditional rehabilitation—has been deployed against multiple targets across academia, entertainment, and civil society.
Integration with sub-mechanisms
The cascade integrates the De-banking Cascade (step 6), Morality Clause enforcement (step 5), and Title VI lawfare (step 3) into a unified neutralization framework.
Aliases & Alternative Names
Primary Sources
Referenced In
This entity is discussed in the following investigation pages: