Rush Psychology
“They don't hack you. They rush you.”
V10 locks the BFDM urgency-manipulation doctrine. After V9 disrupted false confidence about what scams look like, V10 exposes the actual mechanism: time pressure, emotional pressure, and rushed decision-making are the exploit — not technical intrusion.
People think scam risk is mainly about whether something looks fake or technically suspicious. V10 corrects this: speed and urgency are the weapon. The viewer may still be vulnerable even if they can spot an obvious fake.
Attackers manufacture time pressure specifically to prevent the pause that would expose them. They only need to rush one person for one second. The line is short, memorable, and maps directly to the core defensive behavior.
Every time they've felt rushed by a message and reacted before thinking. The account-closure warning, the 'your package is held' alert, the 'act now' banking notice.
Pause before you react. Check it anyway. They only need one second — your pause costs them everything.
Urgency reframing. V10 shifts the threat model from technical hacking or obvious deception to time pressure, emotional pressure, and rushed decision-making.
V10 is the urgency-manipulation doctrine post. Canonical phrase confirmed. Brian-forward poster with low text density. V10.2 public-environment placement candidate. Very high reuse potential across formats.