Why We Follow Stupid Rules: The Problem with Broken Systems

2 months ago
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You see it every day: nonsensical rules, pointless paperwork, and frustrating processes. This isn't because people are unintelligent; it's because our world is filled with broken systems designed to produce illogical outcomes. This video explores the concept of "Manufactured Stupidity," showing how corporate culture and bureaucracy force good people into absurd situations.

We examine the psychological mechanisms behind this phenomenon, including the diffusion of responsibility ("it's not my job"), the strange logic of systems designed to protect themselves, and the learned helplessness that leads to quiet quitting and malicious compliance. This is an analysis of the systems that shape our behavior.

00:00 - The Story of a Twenty-Five-Dollar Mouse
04:00 - Naming the Machine
05:27 - It's Not My Job
08:49 - The Machine Protects Itself
12:27 - Giving Up
16:25 - The Human Response
19:30 - Seeing the Code

Disclaimer:
This video is intended for analytical and educational purposes. It explores concepts of organizational psychology and systemic inefficiency, using frameworks like Parkinson's Law, learned helplessness, and diffusion of responsibility. The goal is to examine behavioral patterns and systemic flaws—not to accuse, label, or target any specific individual, group, or company.

The content draws from publicly known psychological theories and interpretations of institutional design. All referenced ideas are used to encourage critical thinking and awareness.

Any real-world examples, anecdotes, or generalized roles discussed in the script are used strictly for illustration. They do not refer to, nor are they intended to resemble, any real person, company, or institution. No defamation or personal commentary is intended or implied.

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