Gemini says: A “clicktatorship” is a term coined to describe a form of government that merges a social media-first worldview with authoritarian tendencies. It represents a governing style where decisions, policy, and official actions are driven by, and responsive to, online content, outrage, and conspiracy theories rather than traditional policy-making processes.
The concept has been prominently used by experts like Don Moynihan to analyze the second Trump administration.
Key Characteristics of a Clicktatorship
Hyper-Responsiveness to Online Trends: Officials and leaders prioritize what is trending on social media, particularly far-right online spaces, to make decisions.
Everything is Content: Policy decisions and government actions are viewed through the lens of being “content” that can be produced, consumed, and shared on social media, such as transforming immigration arrests into, dramatic,, produced videos.
“Poster Brain” Governance: Leaders are, or are influenced by, individuals who spend excessive time online and are motivated by the need for attention and validation within digital bubbles.
Disinformation & Conspiracy: The government actively promotes, or is shaped by, online conspiracies, even when those conspiracies contradict reality, leading to erratic policy moves.
Disregard for Due Process: Traditional bureaucratic processes, due diligence, and legal procedures are bypassed in favor of instant, often reactionary, online pronouncements or actions.
Key Examples and Context
The Trump Administration: Analysts have characterized the second Trump administration as a “clicktatorship” where the president and his team are constantly trying to feed a social media narrative.
“Truth Social” and X: Official communications are often released via Truth Social or X (formerly Twitter) rather than traditional press channels, making it difficult to understand policy without being embedded in those platforms.
Policy by Narrative: The administration has been described as using, for example, imagery of immigration enforcement to project an image of power to their base, rather than using traditional policy-driven approaches.
“Poster” Appointments: The administration has populated roles with people who are “posters”—often individuals who gained attention through social media rather than traditional experience.
Consequences
Diminished Governance: The focus on producing content leads to a lack of, or a decline in, evidence-based policy.
Increased Division: The reliance on, and promotion of,, online outrage deepens societal division.
Reduced Trust: The use of, and reliance on,, conspiratorial information erodes public trust in institutions.
ChatGPT says: Alliance Theory mostly disagrees with the diagnosis while agreeing with some surface facts.
“Clicktatorship” treats what is happening as cognitive capture by the internet. Alliance Theory treats it as a coalitional adaptation to a world where elite legitimacy has collapsed and attention is the remaining coordination resource.
Same observations. Different causal story.
Start with the core mistake in the clicktatorship frame.
It assumes leaders are being driven by online noise.
Alliance Theory says leaders are tracking alliance signals that now travel fastest through online spaces.
What looks like “poster brain” is often rational coalition maintenance under new constraints.
Hyper-responsiveness to online trends
From an Alliance Theory perspective, this is not governance by outrage. It is governance by base surveillance. When institutions no longer command trust, the only reliable signal of alliance stability is whether your core coalition feels defended, honored, and feared on your behalf. Social media is where those signals surface in real time.
Ignoring them is not statesmanship. It is defection.
Everything is content
Yes. Because content is how modern alliances coordinate at scale.
In earlier regimes, bureaucracy, party structures, and elite media did this work quietly. Once those intermediaries lose legitimacy, signaling has to be public, visceral, and repeatable. Visuals of raids, arrests, defiance, and punishment are not about persuasion. They are about credible commitment to your side.
Alliance Theory predicts exactly this shift when soft legitimacy fails.
“Poster” appointments
This looks insane only if you believe expertise is the primary function of officeholding.
Alliance Theory says officeholders serve two functions.
One, administer reality.
Two, signal loyalty and threat.
When legitimacy collapses, function two dominates. “Posters” are valuable not because they are knowledgeable, but because they are legible to the base as unaligned with hostile elites. Their online history is the credential.
Disinformation and conspiracy
Here the clicktatorship critique is closest to the truth but still misfires.
Conspiracies are not just false beliefs. They are alternative alliance maps. They answer the question “who is coordinating against us” in a way that feels more plausible than elite narratives that deny coordination exists at all.
In a world where elites insist the game is not being played, conspiratorial models gain power because they at least admit the game exists.
Disregard for due process
From an Alliance Theory view, due process is not just law. It is elite ritual. It works when elites are trusted referees. When they are not, process looks like delay, sabotage, or asymmetric restraint.
Short-circuiting procedure is a way of signaling that elite veto points no longer bind. That is dangerous, but it is not irrational.
Where the clicktatorship frame really fails.
It treats this as pathology.
Alliance Theory treats it as phase transition.
The Trump administration is not uniquely online.
It is operating in a post-credential, post-prestige environment where legitimacy comes from visible conflict, not quiet competence.
The Moynihan critique assumes a counterfactual world where:
Institutions are trusted.
Expertise is respected.
Media arbitration is accepted.
Moral authority still clears.
That world no longer exists.
So what is actually happening.
This is not “government run by tweets.”
It is government run by alliance signaling under daylight.
The horror elites feel is not about misinformation.
It is about losing monopoly over reality certification.
When Moynihan says “policy is shaped by what right-wing communities care about regardless of whether it’s real,” Alliance Theory replies:
Reality was always filtered through alliance incentives.
The difference is that the filtering is now visible and no longer dressed up as neutral professionalism.
The real danger.
The danger is not that leaders are online.
It is that once governance becomes pure signaling, constraint disappears.
Hard institutions exist to slow leaders down.
When leaders no longer believe those institutions are neutral, they stop respecting them.
That is how democracies rot, not through posting, but through mutual delegitimation.
Final synthesis.
The “clicktatorship” concept correctly identifies:
The collapse of bureaucratic insulation.
The fusion of attention and authority.
The replacement of elite mediation with direct signaling.
But it misattributes cause.
This is not the internet poisoning governance.
It is governance adapting to the death of elite moral prestige and credentialed trust.
Calling it a clicktatorship reassures elites that the problem is style.
Alliance Theory says the problem is structural.
And structural problems do not go away by logging off.
Gemini says: In early 2026, the term clicktatorship has become the primary diagnostic tool for the “establishment” to describe the second Trump administration. It frames the current governance as a pathology of the internet—a “poster brain” malfunction where policy is driven by addiction to online outrage.
Alliance Theory agrees with the observation but completely flips the causality. What Don Moynihan calls a pathology, Alliance Theory calls a functional adaptation to a post-legitimacy world.
The Core Disagreement
The “clicktatorship” frame assumes that leaders are being controlled by social media. Alliance Theory argues that leaders are simply tracking alliance signals that now travel fastest through digital spaces because traditional intermediaries (media, academia, bureaucracy) are no longer trusted as neutral referees.
1. Hyper-Responsiveness as Base Surveillance
The “clicktatorship” view sees hyper-responsiveness to trends as a lack of discipline.
Alliance Theory View: This is rational Base Surveillance. When elite institutions no longer command deference, the only signal of alliance stability is whether your coalition feels defended in real-time. In a world of “Daylight,” ignoring a trending outrage is not statesmanship; it is a signal of defection from your alliance.
The Shift: We are moving from “Deliberative Democracy” (slow, opaque, elite-mediated) to Responsive Realism (fast, transparent, direct).
2. Everything is Content: The Signal is the Policy
Critics argue that turning immigration arrests into dramatic videos is “governance as entertainment.”
Alliance Theory View: Content is the only way to coordinate an alliance at scale once “soft” legitimacy fails. Visuals of raids or defiance are Hard Signals of Credible Commitment. They prove to the alliance that the leader is actually doing what he said, bypassing the “BS layer” of non-binding press releases.
The Reality: Content is not a distraction from policy; in 2026, content is the policy implementation.
3. “Poster” Appointments and the Death of Expertise
The appointment of influencers or podcasters to high-level roles is seen as a disregard for experience.
Alliance Theory View: Credentials (degrees, years in a guild) are “soft signals” that often mask hostility to the new alliance. A “Poster” is valuable because their online history is a Permanent Receipt of Loyalty. Their “poster brain” is actually a credential of un-alignment with the hostile legacy elite.
The Function: The job is no longer just to “administer”; it is to signal threat to rivals and safety to allies.
4. Conspiracies as Alternative Alliance Maps
The “clicktatorship” frame treats conspiracies as disinformation.
Alliance Theory View: Conspiracies are Alternative Alliance Maps. They flourish when the official “narrative monopoly” is seen as a lie. If elites insist a coordination doesn’t exist (e.g., about the economy or borders), a conspiracy theory that admits “the game is being played” feels more epistemically honest to the base.
The Utility: A conspiracy theory isn’t just a false belief; it is a coordination weapon that allows the alliance to act in unison against a perceived enemy.
5. Disregard for Process as Ritual Defiance
Due process is often described as the “guardrail” of democracy.
Alliance Theory View: Process is an Elite Ritual. It works only when both sides trust the referee. When the referee (the bureaucracy or the courts) is seen as a partisan actor, “following the process” looks like asymmetric restraint. Short-circuiting the procedure is a way of signaling that the rival alliance’s veto points no longer bind.
The Real Danger: Mutual Delegitimation
The “clicktatorship” critique assumes we can return to a world of trusted institutions if leaders would just “log off.” Alliance Theory says that world is gone.
The danger in 2026 is not that the government is “too online.” The danger is that governance has become pure signaling. When leaders no longer believe institutions are neutral, they stop respecting them entirely. This leads to a state where power is made of raw threat and visibility rather than “enchanted vibes” and “public interest” poses.
The “clicktatorship” is not the internet poisoning governance; it is governance finally admitting that the magic show is over.
In Alliance Theory, a clicktatorship is the inevitable outcome of an alliance that decides to prioritize coordination power over institutional legitimacy. If the “BS layer” of the economy is about managing soft signals to gain status, the clicktatorship is what happens when those soft signals are weaponized to bypass the traditional “gatekeeper” alliance entirely.
From this perspective, the shift described by Don Moynihan isn’t just a change in communication style; it is a fundamental reconfiguration of the state-as-an-alliance.
The Alliance Logic of “Poster Brain”
Traditionally, government officials gained status through credentialing (degrees, years in bureaucracy, peer respect). A clicktatorship flips this.
The New Currency: Status is minted through Audience Capture. A “poster” appointee isn’t there because they have the “mystique” of a policy expert; they are there because they can coordinate a massive, loyal online alliance.
The Signal of Loyalty: In Alliance Theory, the more “cringe” or “conspiratorial” a statement is, the better it serves as a Hard Signal of Loyalty. By posting something that the legacy media alliance finds “repulsive,” an official proves they have burned their bridges with the rival alliance. They are “all in.”
Policy as Content: The Destruction of Opacity
Soft status signals only work when there is mutual unawareness of the machinery. Traditional policy-making relies on this opacity; it happens in quiet rooms, justified by “expert judgment.”
The Lights-On Strategy: A clicktatorship turns the lights on by making the implementation the show. When DHS shares dramatic videos of raids, they are converting a bureaucratic function into a Coordination Signal.
Aesthetic Disgust as a Weapon: The “outrage” felt by the legacy establishment is exactly the point. In Alliance Theory, causing disgust in your rivals is a high-yield way to energize your own alliance. The more the NYT or CNN decries a “clicktatorship,” the more the clicktatorship’s base feels they are winning.
The “Symbiotic Deception” of the Platforms
The interdependence between the state and a platform like X is a textbook Alliance Merger.
Platform Governance as State Power: When the platform’s algorithm rewards the administration’s narratives, the platform effectively becomes a branch of the state. Conversely, the state protects the platform’s interests.
The Return on Enchantment: This alliance doesn’t need to be “truthful” in the traditional sense. It only needs to be useful for coordination. If a conspiracy theory allows the alliance to act as one, its “truth value” is irrelevant to its “alliance value.”
A clicktatorship is the unbundled state. It strips away the “BS layer” of non-binding moral tone and “expert” authority, replacing it with the Hard Signals of Virality.
For the legacy elites, this looks like the death of governance. For the clicktatorship, it is the birth of a more “honest” hierarchy—one where power is derived from the ability to command attention and coordinate a crowd in real-time, rather than the ability to maintain a 20th-century social paradox.
