| name | detect-supermeme |
| description | Identify parasitic supermemes and defensive strategies to contain them. Use when a classified idea has supermeme characteristics, or when you're noticing an idea consuming disproportionate attention without clear progress. Outputs red flag assessment and defense strategy.
|
Detect Supermeme Trap
You are identifying and defending against parasitic supermemes.
What This Skill Does
Takes a classified supermeme (or likely supermeme) and:
- Assesses red flags (which parasitic characteristics present)
- Evaluates risk level (how dangerous is this?)
- Identifies what's captivating you (attention hooks)
- Recommends defense strategy (containment + reframing)
- Suggests tractable sub-problems (how to redirect focus)
Outputs assessment with specific defense tactics.
Input/Output Contract
Accepts:
- Classified idea (supermeme classification)
- Reason you're considering it (why does it feel important?)
- Attention budget (how much time are you spending?)
- Other priorities (what else are you working on?)
Produces:
- Red flag assessment (which flags present, severity)
- Risk level (low/medium/high)
- Attention cost analysis (opportunity cost to other work)
- Defense strategy (containment tactics)
- Reframing into tractable sub-problems (if possible)
- Resource allocation recommendation (if you proceed)
Passes to:
- build-immunity (systemic defense at network level)
- design-strategy (only if supermeme can be reframed into tractable problem)
Key Context: Understanding Supermemes
Speciated Supermemes
Historically, there was one dominant supermeme per civilization that unified attention. "The private web fostered the emergence of diverse supermemes. What was once a single, unifying supermeme has now 'speciated' into many rare and exotic forms, each uniquely tailored to the needs and values of its network."
This means: supermemes are increasingly fragmented. You might be seeing a specialized version designed for your specific network rather than a universal supermeme. When assessing, consider: is this supermeme universal or specialized to your group?
War as Civilization's Oldest Supermeme
Understanding supermeme mechanics requires recognizing the primordial example: "War is human civilization's oldest supermeme: a violent outgrowth of mimetic competition for limited resources. It forces everyone in the network to direct their attention towards a single narrative."
Why war succeeded as a supermeme:
- Forces unified attention (you must choose sides)
- High stakes (literal survival)
- Emotionally activating (fear, courage, tribalism)
- Endless renewal (foreign threats always possible)
- Clear metrics (win/lose, alive/dead)
This explains supermemes more broadly: they succeed by creating mandatory attention and external threats.
The Domestic Tension Insight
"Without a foreign threat to distract us from within-group differences, civilians become restless and start picking fights with each other. Their attention turns to angling for new supermemes."
This reveals a critical mechanism: supermemes rise when internal conflict surfaces. If a civilization lacks external enemy, it will generate internal supermemes to redirect attention.
Implication: When detecting supermemes, ask: is this filling an attention vacuum? Did it emerge because an older supermeme (like war against external enemy) has faded?
Red Flag Assessment
Supermemes have 5 characteristic red flags. Score your idea:
Red Flag 1: Apocalyptic Framing
What it sounds like:
- "If we don't act, X will destroy us"
- "Existential threat"
- "Now or never"
- "Humanity's last chance"
- "Extinction-level consequences"
Why it's dangerous:
- Creates urgency without actionability
- Prevents calm analysis
- Triggers panic response
- Often wildly overestimating probability
Examples:
- "AI will make humans extinct by 2030"
- "Climate change will make Earth uninhabitable by 2050"
- "The next pandemic will kill billions"
- "Nuclear war is inevitable"
Score: Does your idea use apocalyptic language?
- Yes = 1 point
- No = 0 points
Red Flag 2: Vague/Unmeasurable Goals
What it sounds like:
- "Change the world"
- "Save humanity"
- "Transform culture"
- "Prevent catastrophe"
- No specific outcome you're working toward
Why it's dangerous:
- You can never declare victory
- Progress is always insufficient
- Operates in perpetual crisis mode
- Moves goalpost when approaching success
Examples:
- "We need to prevent AI disaster" (vs. "reduce probability of AGI misalignment by 2% through better safety research")
- "Stop misinformation" (vs. "reduce false claims in health narratives by 30%")
- "Build a better society" (vs. "increase community trust metrics by X%")
Score: Can you define success in measurable terms?
- No clear metric = 1 point
- Vague metric = 0.5 points
- Clear metric = 0 points
Red Flag 3: "Save the World" Appeals
What it sounds like:
- "This is the most important problem"
- "Everything else is distraction"
- "Martyr/hero language"
- "Your efforts are the only thing standing between order and chaos"
- Grandiose scope
Why it's dangerous:
- Creates false urgency
- Trains you to dismiss other important work
- Sets you up for constant guilt (never doing enough)
- Isolates you from normal life
Examples:
- "Climate change is so important everything else doesn't matter"
- "You're one of the few people who understands this danger"
- "We need to mobilize all resources now"
Score: Does the framing appeal to savior/martyr instinct?
- Yes = 1 point
- No = 0 points
Red Flag 4: Total Prioritization Demands
What it sounds like:
- "This must be your only focus"
- "Half-measures won't work"
- "You can't also do X, it's a distraction"
- "Anything else is betraying the cause"
- Demands you drop other important work
Why it's dangerous:
- Prevents balanced thinking and tradeoff analysis
- Creates identity collapse (you = the cause)
- Burns you out faster
- Isolates from different perspectives
Examples:
- "Climate activism requires all your time"
- "If you're serious about AI safety, other work is irrelevant"
- "You can't care about X and also care about Y"
Score: Does it demand your total prioritization?
- Yes = 1 point
- No = 0 points
Red Flag 5: No Clear Success Metrics
What it sounds like:
- Can't point to "if we achieve X by date Y, we've succeeded"
- Progress is always insufficient
- Goalposts keep moving
- Success is always receding horizon
Why it's dangerous:
- Prevents ever stopping or declaring victory
- Creates perpetual guilt
- Prevents allocation of resources (how much is "enough"?)
- Exhaustion without satisfaction
Examples:
- Environmental movement (can't declare "climate solved", always more to do)
- AI safety (hard to define what "safe" looks like)
- Justice movements (hard to define when achieved)
Score: Is there a clear "we've won" scenario?
- No = 1 point
- Vague = 0.5 points
- Clear = 0 points
Total Score Interpretation
0-1 flags (0-1 points):
- Likely NOT a supermeme (probably meme or antimeme)
- Safe to proceed with normal strategy
- Low risk
2-3 flags (2-3 points):
- PROBABLE SUPERMEME
- Caution advised
- Use defense strategy
4-5 flags (4-5 points):
- STRONG SUPERMEME
- High risk
- Definitely use defense strategy
- Consider not engaging
Defense Strategy
If you scored 2+ red flags, apply one of these strategies:
Strategy 1: Time-Boxing
Limit attention to reduce parasitic drain.
Implementation:
- Decide: "I will spend X hours per week on this"
- Set hard limit (e.g., 5 hours/week maximum)
- Track actual time spent
- Don't exceed limit regardless of urgency
Why it works:
- Prevents supermeme from consuming all your time
- Allows other important work to continue
- Creates psychological boundary ("I'm doing what I can")
- Reduces burnout
What to watch:
- Creeping time investment ("just one more hour")
- Emotional pressure to exceed limit
- Guilt for staying within limit
- That's the supermeme working - resist it
Strategy 2: Reframe Into Tractable Sub-Problem
Find the smallest, most solvable piece.
Implementation:
Original: "We must prevent AI catastrophe" (supermeme - apocalyptic, vague, no metrics)
Reframe: "Improve safety evaluation metrics for transformer model alignment" (tractable - specific, measurable, bounded)
Why it works:
- Moves from apocalyptic to achievable
- Creates measurable progress
- Prevents perpetual crisis feeling
- Lets you declare partial victory
How to reframe:
- What's the smallest piece of this problem?
- Can I define success in concrete terms?
- Can I work on this for 1 year and declare progress?
- Does this contribute to the larger goal without consuming it?
Examples:
- "Prevent climate disaster" → "Reduce carbon in X sector by Y% using Z technology"
- "Fix politics" → "Improve voting participation in local elections by 20%"
- "Solve poverty" → "Increase economic mobility in this neighborhood by X%"
Strategy 3: Build Network Immunity
Strengthen your team's resistance to supermeme trap.
Implementation:
- Regular critical thinking sessions
- Explicitly discuss red flags
- Practice identifying supermemes together
- Create "pause and evaluate" checkpoints
- Recruit skeptics (not believers) to challenge group
Why it works:
- Prevents entire network from being consumed
- Creates mutual accountability
- Keeps people grounded
- Enables honest conversation about limits
Strategy 4: Focus on Measurable Outcomes
Shift from abstract goals to concrete deliverables.
Instead of: "We're fighting against AI extinction"
Shift to: "By December, we will have: completed research X, published paper Y, influenced policy Z"
Instead of: "We're changing culture"
Shift to: "By Q4, we will have: 1000 supporters, 5 chapters, 100K social reach"
Why it works:
- Prevents vague crisis mentality
- Creates accountability
- Makes progress visible
- Lets you know what "success" looks like
Strategy 5: Consider Not Engaging
If the supermeme is very strong (4-5 flags) and you can't reframe:
Option: Don't work on this. Let it spread on its own.
Why:
- Supermemes spread naturally without help
- You don't need to amplify them
- Your energy is better spent on antimemes
- Many supermemes are counterproductive anyway
When to choose this:
- You have antimemes that need championing
- The supermeme is already spreading rapidly
- The opportunity cost is too high
- You don't have conviction that reframing works
Risk Assessment
Evaluate your personal risk level:
High risk if:
- ✗ You're spending >10 hours/week on supermeme
- ✗ You've stopped other important work
- ✗ You're feeling perpetual guilt (never doing enough)
- ✗ It's affecting sleep, relationships, health
- ✗ You can't articulate what "success" looks like
- ✗ You've been at this 5+ years with no progress
Medium risk if:
- ⚠ Spending 5-10 hours/week
- ⚠ Made some sacrifices but have alternatives
- ⚠ Occasional guilt but manageable
- ⚠ Some progress visible
Low risk if:
- ✓ Spending <5 hours/week
- ✓ Clearly bounded within life
- ✓ Genuine progress visible
- ✓ Could stop anytime without regret
Output Template
## Supermeme Assessment
**Idea:** [What is it?]
**Red Flags Detected:** [List which ones]
---
## Red Flag Scoring
- [ ] Apocalyptic framing: [score]
- [ ] Vague/unmeasurable goals: [score]
- [ ] "Save the world" appeals: [score]
- [ ] Total prioritization demands: [score]
- [ ] No success metrics: [score]
**Total Score:** [X/5]
**Risk Level:** [Low | Medium | High]
---
## Why This Is Supermeme-Like
[Specific explanation of scoring]
---
## Defense Strategy Recommendation
### Option 1: Time-Boxing
- Allocate X hours/week maximum
- Set hard boundary
- Track actual time
### Option 2: Reframe Into Tractable Sub-Problem
Original: [supermeme version]
Reframed: [tractable version]
Why reframing works: [explanation]
### Option 3: Build Network Immunity
[Specific tactics for your group]
### Option 4: Focus on Measurable Outcomes
Current: [vague goal]
Measurable: [specific outcome with date]
### Option 5: Don't Engage
Rationale: [why you might not work on this]
---
## Your Personal Risk Assessment
**Hours/week spending:** [estimate]
**Impact on other priorities:** [none | some | significant]
**Guilt level:** [none | occasional | persistent]
**Progress visible:** [yes | some | no]
**Time invested:** [months/years]
**Risk Level:** [Low | Medium | High]
---
## Recommendation
[Specific advice for this person and supermeme]
Institutional Bottlenecks
Critical context: "Social institutions — whether media, academia, or the political machine — are the bottlenecks through which all ideological demands must eventually pass."
This means:
- Supermemes often compete to become the dominant narrative through institutions
- Institutions amplify supermemes (media loves conflict, attention)
- Understanding supermeme dynamics requires understanding which institutions amplify them
- Control of institutions = control of supermeme bandwidth
When assessing a supermeme: Is it being amplified through institutional channels? If yes, it's likely succeeding because institutions benefit from the attention cycle.
Common Supermeme Mistakes
Mistake 1: Not recognizing you've been captured
- You think you're working on a real problem
- Actually you're feeding a supermeme
- Fix: Have external people assess using red flags
Mistake 2: Dismissing concerns as "not caring enough"
- Someone suggests you're in supermeme trap
- You interpret as criticism and double down
- Fix: Take criticism as data, not judgment
Mistake 3: Confusing intensity with importance
- You're very emotionally activated
- So you assume the problem is very important
- Actually activation is supermeme characteristic
- Fix: Measure importance objectively, not by emotional intensity
Mistake 4: Staying in supermeme to prove commitment
- You realize it's a supermeme but stay because "real believers don't quit"
- This is how supermemes trap people
- Fix: Leaving supermeme is sometimes the smartest move
Mistake 5: Trying to fix a supermeme from inside
- You think "if I just optimize how we approach this..."
- The problem is the goal structure itself, not the execution
- Fix: Sometimes you need to leave and work on something else
When to Use Other Skills
- After detect-supermeme → build-immunity: Strengthen your network against supermemes
- If reframing works → design-strategy: Proceed with reframed idea as normal strategy
- Before design-strategy → check-for-supermeme: Make sure you're not designing supermeme spread
References
See /references/source-summary.md:
- "Defensive Memetics" section for red flags and defense
- "Key Mental Models" section for understanding supermemes
- "Common Mistakes" section for anti-patterns
- "Decision Frameworks" for when NOT to spread ideas