Violent events are raw energy.
They don’t inherently move society in any direction.
Players with agendas convert that energy into momentum.
Those who benefit most from escalation are not always visible, and rarely those closest to the victims.
The decisive factor is who successfully frames the meaning of the event in the public mind during the first 72 hours.
Once framed, escalation becomes self-reinforcing.
The Key framing questions are “Was this random violence or symbolic violence?”, “Was it isolated or representative?”. “Was it a security failure, a cultural failure, or an ideological failure?”
Whoever answers these first, and most emotionally, gains leverage.
This event can escalate along four non-exclusive Axes. An internal social fragmentation being the most volatile and least controllable axis. This is not about disagreement, it is about loss of shared reality, mutual suspicion between civilian groups, and identity-based attribution of risk. Once activated, the state itself becomes a secondary actor, not the driver.
We are already seeing early signals of the Australian authorities leading with emotional statements
This matters because emotion precedes attribution. Moral language before factual closure, use of collective language (“we”, “our values”, “who we are”), external leaders responding quickly before investigation stabilizes, are all key signals.
Fragmentation does not start with hatred. It starts with risk reallocation. The public subconsciously asks “Is this something people like me should now worry about?”, “Is this random, or patterned?”
If the answer becomes patterned, people begin with avoidance or start profiling (informally, not necessarily malicious), they start self-grouping. This is is how everyday behaviour changes without ideology.
There are three fragmentation pathways. The first being a community-level withdrawal reflected by reduced public presence, event cancellations, increased private security, or quiet self-segregation. This is fragmentation without rhetoric, the most dangerous kind because it’s invisible. The second is contestation of the narrative where different groups push mutually exclusive explanations. “This proves X”, “This is being exploited to target Y”, “The real danger is Z”
Once explanations compete, trust collapses faster than facts can repair. The third is a moral asymmetry where some groups feel hyper-visible, some collectively blamed, or even selectively protected. This creates grievance reservoirs, latent resentment that doesn’t need leadership to erupt later.
Those who speak the loudest do not necessarily benefit from internal fragmentation. Primary beneficiaries are those identities who thrive in divided societies, groups that gain cohesion by contrast, or external observers who prefer a distracted, inward-looking Australia. Fragmentation lowers institutional trust and crisis resilience, as well as breaking down social cooperation. Which raises long-term manipulability.
Internal fragmentation escalates sharply if there is premature attribution before legal closure. Collective language tied to identity, even indirectly will also cause an escalation, along with any uneven empathy where some victims are named, and others abstracted. Introduction of community-based security measures whether perceived or real, also add a re-enforcing element. In fact once any two of these appear together, fragmentation becomes self-sustaining.
There are de-escalation signals that indicate a slowing of this axis, however they are rare, but decisive. These are represented by repeated insistence on individual culpability only, long delays before symbolic acts or memorial framing, clear separation of grief from policy, and silence over speculation (hard politically) An absence of these signals implies acceptance of fragmentation risk.
Internal social fragmentation is the fastest axis, hardest to reverse, least visible at first, and once it solidifies, it feeds every other axis we are about to explore.
The next axis is State Power Expansion. A top-down consolidation of authority under the guise of crisis management and public safety. It’s important to understand that expansion does not always need legislation, it can take the form of administrative extension, executive orders, or even informal norms in crisis periods. The fact that the Australian authorities have been the first to make emotional statements indicates not just managing a crisis, but positioning itself. Key signals for this are any statements about long-term security rather than immediate containment. Emergency powers and response (police, military involvement, and changes to public assembly laws). Increase in calls for increased intelligence gathering. Public appeals for unity tied to greater surveillance or security enforcement as a remedy. It’s about narrative control where the government asks for permission to act beyond normal democratic checks.
State Power Expansion operates on the principle that immediate security concerns often outweigh long-term liberties. In these situations the government may expand its control over civil society without formal declarations of emergency. Surveillance infrastructure (police drones, enhanced databases, and more invasive checks) are incrementally adopted under the pretext of public safety. This is often positioned as temporary, but the temporary window stretches over time.
Security Legislation is a common path for the speedy passage of bills expanding government’s powers for search and seizure, surveillance, online monitoring, and data collection. Examples include anti-terrorism laws or “security emergencies” declarations. This is often portrayed as necessary for future prevention, but it becomes permanent because legislative momentum can be hard to halt once the threat is perceived as existential.
While Australia has a strong democratic tradition, emergency mobilization of military resources or federal police powers under the guise of “securing public order” can lead to increased policing presence in public areas (i.e., “safety patrols”) or the militarisation of local police forces, or even potential curfews, border controls, or checks at transport hubs. This intensifies surveillance culture, and military or federal police norms can start to be integrated into civilian life.
In times of crisis, leadership can centralise it’s decision-making. This means top-down crisis management where executive branches (PM, President, etc.) acquire more unilateral decision-making power. Centralisation may involve dismantling regional or state-based governance temporarily, granting national agencies more say.
Several stakeholders stand to gain from greater authority and control over governance during periods of unrest. Security agencies (intelligence, military, police), directly benefit from expanded budgets and mandates. Political leaders, both local and national, who gain leverage by using security as justification for emergency powers (authoritarian-leaning governments find these periods especially fertile for power consolidation). Private security and surveillance firms profit from state contracts related to crisis management, security infrastructure, and data analytics.
Here’s the critical question. At what point does the state’s claim for more power become normative and permanent?
This happens when the state achieves ownership of the narrative and the government is the sole source of authority, especially when alternatives (e.g., community self-defense, civil society) are seen as unreliable. Citizens willingly give up freedoms in the name of security and public safety. Emergency powers become institutionalized even if the crisis recedes. New laws become standard once they are “temporarily” implemented, they become expected.
Effective de-escalation here requires transparency about temporary measures. Clear timelines or sunset clauses for laws and security expansions. High-level political pushback from civil society, the opposition, or certain government factions, publicly challenging the need for prolonged powers. International pressure on the state to maintain democratic norms (though not always effective).
However, power once gained is very difficult to return. State Power Expansion is self-justifying and enduring. Once the state controls more, it takes time to reverse. Without clear limits and oversight, power becomes exponentially harder to retract.
The next axis is an alignment with an international narrative, Where a domestic event is absorbed into global storylines. This axis is subtler than state power expansion, but longer-lasting. Once aligned internationally, narratives become hard to unwind, because they are reinforced externally, not just domestically. International narrative alignment occurs when other states, blocs, or institutions publicly interpret the event. Their interpretations lock Australia into a shared moral or strategic frame and future policy choices are judged against that frame. At that point, the event no longer “belongs” to Australia alone. This is not coordination, it is path dependence.
Early domestic framing becomes the template. Foreign leaders rarely investigate independently. They echo values language, mirror condemnations, or signal alignment with allies or blocs. This creates narrative harmonisation. Deviating later becomes diplomatically costly. Nuance looks like backtracking and a de-escalation can be misread as weakness. Similar to the situation I recently wrote about concerning “Russia, Ukraine, US, and Nato”. Once aligned, foreign expectations constrain domestic options.
There are three channels of Alignment. A Values-Based Alignment where use of statements framed around “Who we are”, “Shared democratic values”, or “An attack on our way of life”.
This has the effect of Australia being implicitly positioned inside a broader civilisational narrative. The event becomes symbolic beyond its borders. The Risk is that symbolic events invite symbolic retaliation elsewhere and the event is now precedent-setting.
A Security Alignment, where Allies may frame the incident as part of a global threat environment, or evidence it as cross-border ideological violence. This can lead to intelligence-sharing intensification, joint security postures, or pressure to harmonise counterterror laws. The key point here is that security alignment often outlives public attention.
A Normative Alignment where international organizations, NGOs, or blocs may call for specific legal, speech, or policing responses, or implicitly endorse certain interpretations of risk. Once norms are invoked domestic debate narrows and alternative approaches look “out of step” globally.
An International alignment where primary beneficiaries such as Allied governments who reinforce unity narratives demonstrate leadership without direct cost. Transnational institutions who expand relevance and justify frameworks, monitoring, or interventions. Narrative entrepreneurs with analysts, think-tanks or advocacy groups who gain authority by interpreting the event globally.
Importantly, the beneficiaries are rarely accountable to the affected domestic population.
International alignment escalates when The event is treated as a precedent, “This must never happen again anywhere”. Comparisons are made linking to other attacks or conflicts. Moral consistency tests appear adding pressure to respond similarly in future incidents. This creates policy rigidity. Australia may later find itself locked into stronger positions than intended and unable to modulate response without reputational cost.
De-escalation at this axis requires a deliberate diplomatic restraint, or re-framing the incident as context-specific. A Quiet bilateral engagement instead of multilateral declarations, or avoidance of symbolic international actions. Silence, here, is strategic, but often politically unpopular.
International narrative alignment converts a local tragedy into a global symbol and reduces Australia’s freedom of interpretation later as it feeds Axis 4 directly. Once the world agrees on what this event “means”, escalation elsewhere becomes easier, even if nothing further happens in Australia.
The final axis is Ideological Polarization (Importation of External Conflicts) When local violence is framed as part of a wider ideological or geopolitical struggle.
This is the most complex axis because it dissolves the local context and replaces it with global ideological dynamics. The original event, which might have had local, isolated motives, becomes just one node in a larger ideological web. The attacks are reframed as part of a larger ideological war (e.g., East vs. West, Democracy vs. Authoritarianism, Secular vs. Religious). External conflicts (often from different continents) are imported into the local scene, making it part of a proxy battle. The polarisation of ideologies occurs when groups within a society, or across different societies, begin aligning with one of the opposing ideologies that the attack is framed as a part of.
Early Signs of Ideological Polarization emerge by way of Extremist Groups & Movements immediately after the attack, radical groups may issue statements that frame the attack as part of a larger global ideological battle. For example: “This is what happens when [ideological group] is pushed to the brink.” Publicly or covertly recruit based on the symbolic resonance of the attack.
Media Amplification Media outlets, whether intentionally or through echo-chamber dynamics, pick up on ideological frames. Coverage often moves from “incident in Sydney” to “symbolic clash” between larger global forces. Conspiracy theorists, nationalists, and globalists exploit the event for their respective causes. International media coverage tends to conflate the incident with events that have similar ideological or sectarian undertones globally.
Polarization occurs when one group sees the event as proof of their ideology’s inherent threat (e.g., secular democracy vs. religious extremism, liberalism vs. illiberalism). It also occurs when External narratives start to co-opt the local event by casting it as part of a broader pattern of conflict that aligns with their global struggle. An attack in Australia could be framed as an outgrowth of a global religious war (say, between radical Islamism and secularism). Or, in a different scenario, far-right groups might portray it as an example of the invasion of Western values by external ideologies, citing the event as evidence of a broader, coordinated threat.
The ideological war doesn’t need to be directly connected to the event, it’s a leveraged narrative that the groups use to justify their worldview.
There are three pathways for Ideological Polarisation. Globalisation of local conflict where an event is framed as a microcosm of a larger ideological struggle (e.g., the “clash of civilizations” narrative). Attacks are seen not as isolated but as part of an interconnected war, whether it’s a religious, cultural, or political battle. Local actors (even if they had no global agenda) are co-opted into being agents of a global conflict. The effect once polarized have these ideological battles feed off each other, creating a feedback loop in which both sides see each other’s narratives as existential threats.
There is an emergence of external players (state or non-state) who begin to align with, support, or exploit local groups who are already polarised. Governments, foreign intelligence, or militant organizations use local events as opportunities to further their ideological goals in foreign lands, often via financial aid, training, or Public support. This creates proxy conflicts. External backers amplify local violence for strategic benefit, while ideologies become solidified across national borders.
A symbolic escalation has external players (states, advocacy groups, or ideological movements) who frame the attack as emblematic of a larger ideological failure. These groups will use the incident to justify escalating violence or more extreme political policies on both the domestic and international levels. “Retaliatory” attacks or escalating conflicts are justified as defensive actions against an existential threat.
Example: One ideological group may frame a domestic attack as “proof” of an ideology’s inherent violence, while another sees it as evidence that their ideology is under threat, triggering more radicalized responses.
Primary beneficiaries of ideological polarisation are extremist and ideological movements. Radical political or religious movements can exploit polarisation to recruit, mobilize, and justify violence. Once a global ideological frame is in play, it becomes a powerful recruitment tool for militant groups or extremist leaders. Foreign Governments and Powers or Nations with an interest in regional instability or weakened rivals may sponsor or support groups on the ground. Polarisation justifies intervention, whether through covert operations, military aid, or media campaigns. Global media networks (Profiteers of Fear and Conflict) benefit from the high-engagement narrative of ideological conflict. Polarized discourse sells, particularly in an age where emotional stories engage viewers more than nuanced analysis.
Once ideological frames are set, they reinforce each other. Violence becomes justifiable as “self-defense” or retaliation creates a narrative lock-in. External ideological battles import their domestic counterparts, leading to increased political violence, terrorism, and civil unrest and a rise in domestic extremism. The situation escalates into proxy wars in which external states, foreign fighters, or radical groups use local violence as a justification for larger regional conflicts.
A de-escalation at this axis requires Active disassociation of the event from broader ideological wars. Public efforts to relocalize the conflict to its immediate, local causes, making it clear that the incident was not part of a larger geopolitical or ideological narrative. Government players, international partners, and community leaders need to push back against ideological exploitation.
Once the ideological frame takes hold, local violence becomes globalized. The conflict is no longer just about the people involved; it’s about ideological positions that people, movements, and governments can mobilise to justify further actions. This feeds back into all other axes, particularly internal fragmentation and state power expansion, and quickly shifts a localized tragedy into a long-term geopolitical and social conflict.
The most likely scenario is polarized blame. The immediate aftermath sees a fractured public debate. Different groups, political parties, and media outlets begin competing to assign blame, either targeting an ideology, group, or broader issue. This creates entrenched camps that define the issue according to their own narratives (e.g., ideological, political, or cultural framing). Government responses focus on heightened security with larger police presence in public spaces, tighter monitoring of at-risk communities, and more pre-emptive arrests under counter-terrorism or hate crime laws. This is framed as a necessary response to prevent further violence, but increases public anxiety and tensions. Communities (especially marginalized ones) feel targeted or excluded from the narrative, further polarizing social relations. This creates a long-term sociopolitical fracture in the public consciousness, where different groups feel distrust or anger toward each other. While the situation might not explode into full-scale violence immediately, tensions remain high. Small-scale incidents or lone-actor violence might surface sporadically, but the overarching issue simmers under the surface for months or years, with the threat of greater violence remaining a constant undercurrent.
In the wake of the event, the government will quickly pass emergency legislation that grants expanded powers to security forces. This could include New anti-terrorism laws, Increased powers for police to detain, surveil, or search without warrants, and broadening definitions of what constitutes a threat, leading to pre-emptive actions. The laws will be justified as necessary for national security and public safety. While these laws and powers are quickly passed, public backlash will grow over time as the long-term implications are felt. People realise their civil liberties have been sacrificed for security, but reversing these laws becomes politically difficult because they are entrenched in governance. Public trust in the government erodes as they struggle with the balance between freedom and security. Policy shock can be cumulative, creating a ratcheting effect where every crisis justifies even greater expansion of power, thus transforming short-term policy measures into permanent changes in governance.
A retaliatory lone-wolf player violence, copycat or “answering” attacks could prevail. Individuals or small groups, emboldened by the original attack, may take matters into their own hands and commit revenge attacks. These could be loosely co-ordinated or even disconnected but will likely draw inspiration from the original event. For example, lone wolves motivated by similar ideological causes may carry out targeted shootings, bombings, or acts of terrorism.
These lone-actor attacks are often timed to coincide with key dates (e.g., anniversaries, religious holidays, or significant political events), in an attempt to maximize their symbolic impact or send a message to both the public and authorities. These attacks tend to have high emotional resonance, especially in the media, due to the personal nature of the violence. The lack of coordination or planning means they are typically less effective in achieving strategic goals, but they remain powerful symbols and driving forces for future escalation. Lone-player violence is a major risk factor because it feeds into the narrative of ideological extremism and creates the pretext for further crackdowns. It’s difficult to predict and control, leaving society in a constant state of alert.
A unified leadership message of de-escalation is least likely. In this rare scenario, leadership across political and ideological divides comes together to send a unified message of restraint, calm, and a commitment to democratic principles. The government and opposition work co-operatively to avoid the use of the event for political gain and emphasize healing over division.
It is unlikely that the media and political leaders will actively suppress speculative, inflammatory narratives and focus on fact-based reporting. A focus on restoring unity, and public narrative centered around understanding, compassion, and collective responsibility is not something usually practiced within the political arena or the media.
The media could however choose to slow down coverage, focusing on long-term solutions rather than 24/7 sensationalism. This allows for a more thoughtful public discourse, which is less prone to polarization and fear-mongering. This scenario is the least likely, as it requires exceptionally strong leadership, media responsibility, and public willingness to avoid the blame game. The tendency to sensationalize, blame, and react quickly makes this difficult to implement in practice, especially when emotions are high.
The single most important question in the next phase is:
Does the dominant narrative define the threat as behavioral or identity-based?
If the dominant narrative treats the event as a behavioural issue, one that can be understood through patterns of action, individual choices, and psychological factors then the situation remains containable. The focus would be on the perpetrators’ motivations, criminal behavior, and specific causes of the attack. Policy responses would likely target individuals or networks directly associated with the attack. This would allow for a narrower scope of response, limiting escalation, and reinforcing existing legal structures to prevent future incidents. Behavioral Framing would mean a fact-based analysis of the event with emphasis on individual responsibility rather than collective guilt. Any security measures that are targeted and proportionate. This has a greater potential for de-escalation, as the threat is perceived as isolated and manageable.
However, if the dominant narrative reframes the threat as identity-based, it is infinitely harder to contain. This narrative assigns the event not to the actions of individuals, but to inherent characteristics of entire groups (e.g., ethnic, religious, or ideological communities). This expands the scope of the threat and implies that entire populations must be seen as either enemies or victims, exacerbating distrust and resentment. Policies, even if well-intentioned, begin to target entire communities, leading to discrimination, stigmatization, and a cycle of violence. Collective blame is assigned to a group rather than a set of behaviours. Us vs. Them narratives emerge, where entire populations are seen as complicit or at war with each other. The perception of the threat becomes existential (i.e., a conflict of civilizations or ideologies). Long-term instability and escalating polarisation are nearly inevitable.
If behavioral framing prevails, then security responses can remain focused and proportional, and social trust can begin to repair itself over time. If the situation slips into identity framing, then public discourse becomes entrenched in polarised, ideological battles, making de-escalation increasingly difficult. Political players, media outlets, and extremist groups can exacerbate this polarisation for their own ends. The event becomes just one chapter in a never-ending ideological war.
Every escalation and potential response discussed in earlier scenarios, from state power expansion to lone-player violence to international polarisation, flows from this question of whether the threat is framed as behavioral or identity-based. If it’s seen as behavioural, the crisis can be managed. If it’s seen as identity-based, the crisis becomes self-replicating and could lead to perpetual conflict. This fork will decide how we collectively view the threat and what actions we take next, both in the short-term and for the long-term future.
So let that question resonate as we move forward, it’s not about what happened, but how the world chooses to interpret it.
The scenarios are not random or purely theoretical, but are rooted in the idea that large-scale social and political events like violence or civil unrest tend to follow predictable patterns, especially when these events trigger strong emotional responses. These patterns emerge in several ways.
Theories of social and political escalation come from “Escalation theory”, which tracks how conflicts, once ignited, tend to increase in intensity due to feedback loops between different parties (government, civil society, media, etc.). For example, the way narratives around violence evolve, or how security policies create more tension than they resolve. Once a crisis emerges, feedback loops occur. Initially, emotional responses (like fear or anger) can feed into political decisions (such as emergency powers or surveillance measures), which in turn can escalate social fragmentation or create new grievances, leading to more extreme responses or even violence. Another crucial principle comes from crisis governance, which looks at how states consolidate power or lose control during major events. In moments of crisis, governments often experience a legitimacy test. Do they manage the situation effectively, or do they overreach and risk a loss of trust? Governments often overreact or take extreme steps to consolidate power, which can either restore order or accelerate tension depending on the approach. A major goal of the state during a crisis is maintaining or enhancing legitimacy, but this is a delicate balancing act. Overreaching, like implementing draconian surveillance measures or imposing martial law, risks alienating the public, while insufficient action can undermine government authority. Much of the analysis around identity-based versus behavioral framing stems from “social identity theory”, which looks at how group identities shape people’s perceptions of social events and lead to polarisation. When a society is split along identity lines (e.g., ethnic, political, religious), an event that touches upon group identities becomes a symbolic battleground. Identity-based threats are not just about who did it, but about who is part of the “us” and who is part of the “them.” This dynamic turns the event into a proxy for a larger cultural or ideological war, making de-escalation difficult. The media and narrative framing play a central role in these scenarios. Narratives are political tools in the sense that they are used to shape public perception and direct collective action. Media framing can heighten or mitigate conflict by focusing on particular aspects of the event (individual behavior vs. group identity). The framing of an event as an act of terrorism versus a criminal act or a lone-wolf attack versus a collective movement has long-term consequences for how the public, government, and even international actors respond.
“The Act of War” and Escalation
The concept of “The Act of War” (or the triggering event in a conflict) plays a role in how these scenarios emerge. However, political escalation due to violence doesn’t always translate to military conflict in a direct sense. Instead, it’s more about how the response to violence can create a cascade effect of decisions that magnify the situation. An “act of war” or an initial violent event sets off a series of political, social, and security responses. These responses can range from legal changes (like new counterterror laws) to political polarisation (e.g., a shift in voting patterns or the rise of extremist movements). The central question is how the state and society respond. Is it through an approach that seeks containment, or does the event trigger a broader ideological battle, leading to a spiral of escalation?
When it comes to governance, here are some of the core strategies employed during moments of political crisis. Expansion of Surveillance & Policing is the classic approach in the wake of violence, especially when the public’s emotional response demands security measures. This includes things like emergency powers and intelligence gathering. Pros: Immediate response to control the situation. Cons: Escalates polarisation and can lead to overreach, eroding trust in government. Governments often consolidate authority in times of crisis to ensure control, but overreach can turn public sympathy into discontent. Centralized decision-making is often seen in the form of executive actions, emergency decrees, or militarization of local law enforcement.
Political De-Escalation is less common but possible if there is strong, cooperative leadership. Leaders attempt to downplay ideological division, opting instead for unity messages and non-polarized language. If the state doesn’t frame the event as contained, and if public trust is too fragmented, this strategy fails to achieve lasting peace. Government player can attempt to control the public narrative, particularly through media, which can either contain or amplify conflict. This strategy is critical in determining whether the event is framed as an act of behavioural violence or a broader ideological threat. Often, governments look to international allies to signal unity or gain external legitimacy in their actions, especially in matters of security or counterterrorism. However, this can backfire, leading to global ideological polarization.
Ultimately, the governance strategies chosen depend on how the event is framed. Does the government see the situation as an isolated act (behavioural) or a part of a larger ideological or identity conflict? This will determine whether responses will be containable or self-replicating.
If you’re interested in a deeper dive into real-world case studies or specific examples of these frameworks being applied feel free to join our group.
