Every ping, every scroll, every push notification is not an accident — it is a transaction. In the modern attention economy, dopamine is the currency, and your nervous system is the market. Platforms engineer not for learning or depth, but for the fastest possible spike: outrage, arousal, humiliation, shock. That spike becomes a metric, a quarterly profit, a line on an investor slide deck. For adults, the damage is visible in compulsive scrolling, fractured focus, collapsing sleep cycles. For children, it is worse. Their dopamine circuits are still wiring — and the platforms teach them addiction as their first lesson. By the time they are teenagers, 'normal' means fractured attention and endless craving. It is not character weakness. It is conditioning. Companies know this. They hire neuroscientists, behavioral economists, UX manipulators. They run A/B tests not on software, but on your nervous system. The experiment never ends, because the business model requires you never stop clicking. Every generation of users becomes both customer and collateral damage. Society talks about GDP and productivity, but almost no one tracks the collapse of human attention as an economic loss. Yet that collapse is everywhere: classrooms where kids cannot read a page without grabbing for a phone, workplaces where adults cannot focus for ten minutes, families where conversation is replaced by screens glowing in silence. DeepTruth’s warning is blunt: the dopamine economy is not just unhealthy, it is unsustainable. You cannot keep strip-mining the human nervous system for profit without consequences. Collapse is not a metaphor. It is measurable, neurological, and underway.