Casus Belli Engineering

The article explores 'Casus Belli Engineering,' a phenomenon where technical failures are used as pretexts to replace working systems with preferred alternatives through the psychological mechanism of scapegoating.
Few things in a professional environment are more important than a lasting impression; be it for building trust or conveying unappreciated quality, it is often what kills any system: people lose confidence in it. Imagine seeing something always faulty; a stakeholder sees a failed commitment. They do not see, and cannot see, the distinction between the feature that failed and the foundation it rests upon. To them, the system is monolithic; if any part fails, the whole is suspect. This perception, though technically naive, creates social stress that technical accuracy cannot dispel.
As failures accumulate, pressure builds; someone must be responsible, and something must be done. The organization demands resolution, not in the form of root cause analysis or targeted fixes, but in the form of visible action, decisive change and ritual purification. The tension must be released.
What follows is as old as human society itself: the stressed group selects a victim, to which the guilt is assigned, and finally, the victim is destroyed. Through its destruction, social cohesion is restored. The Aztecs sacrificed captives atop pyramids to ensure the sun would rise. We sacrifice codebases in conference rooms to ensure projects will ship. The mechanism is identical; only the altar has changed.
René Girard observed that human communities in crisis often resolve internal conflict through scapegoating: the selection of a victim to bear collective guilt, whose expulsion restores order. The scapegoat need not be guilty; it need only be acceptable as a target. Its guilt is constructed through narrative, not discovered through investigation (see [5], [6]).
Some dangerous individuals, however, institutionalize such ritualistic practices into what I call Casus Belli Engineering: the use of perceived failure as pretext to replace working systems with one's preferred worldview. The broken feature is the crisis that demands resolution. The foundation becomes the scapegoat, selected not for its vulnerability and the convenience of its replacement. And in most cases, this unfolds organically, driven by genuine belief in the narrative. These individuals are truly alchemists at heart; they have the power to manipulate the phantoms of lasting impressions to their favor [14]. They do not wait for crisis, they nourish it. They do not stumble into scapegoating, they engineer it. They fabricate casus belli deliberately, using the ancient machinery of collective violence to remake systems
Source: Hacker News










