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Lockheed Martin’s $9B Missile Expansion: How National Security Fears Hijack Your Brain

Avatar Huma Malak
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Published: May 22, 2026  •  6 Min Read

On May 21, 2026, Lockheed Martin broke ground on an 87,000-square-foot Munitions Production Center in Troy, Alabama. The project, dubbed Building 47, marks a pivotal moment in U.S. defense industrial policy. This isn’t just another corporate construction announcement—it’s a psychological trigger event that activates deep evolutionary circuits in the human brain.

The Neurochemistry of Tribal Victory

When news breaks about a $9 billion investment by one of America’s most powerful defense contractors, the brain doesn’t process it as mere data. It interprets it as a signal of collective survival.

The amygdala—the ancient emotional center—immediately responds to the keywords “national security,” “missile production,” and “Pentagon.” These phrases are not neutral; they activate threat-detection pathways evolved over millions of years. Our ancestors didn’t have missile interceptors, but they did have predators, rival tribes, and famine. Today, those primal fears are rerouted through modern political narratives.

The phrase “demand certainty” from Pentagon Chief Weapons Buyer Michael Duffy is especially potent. It implies scarcity—a core driver of anxiety. Scarcity triggers cortisol release, the stress hormone that sharpens attention and increases vigilance. But prolonged exposure leads to executive fatigue, where higher-order thinking deteriorates.

That’s why this story feels urgent—even if you don’t work in defense. Your brain perceives it as a resource protection alert. You may not be building THAAD interceptors, but your subconscious asks: “Is my job secure? Is my family safe?”

Lockheed Martin's $9B Missile Expansion: How National Security Fears Hijack Your Brain

Jim Taiclet, CEO of Lockheed Martin, didn’t just announce a factory—he delivered a narrative of strength. That narrative is reinforced by the physical act of breaking ground. Rituals like groundbreaking ceremonies are deeply symbolic. They mimic tribal rites of passage, signaling unity, purpose, and continuity.

Neurologically, such rituals stimulate the ventral striatum, a reward center associated with social bonding and belonging. When we see a CEO and a Pentagon official standing together at a shovel ceremony, our brains interpret it as a coalition forming against external threats. We feel safer—not because of actual missiles, but because of the illusion of control.

This is loss aversion in action. Humans fear losing what they have more than they desire gaining something new. The idea that the U.S. might be unprepared for a missile attack triggers visceral dread. So we accept massive investments without questioning opportunity costs—education, climate infrastructure, healthcare—because the alternative feels catastrophic.

Mirror Neurons and the Illusion of Consensus

As the story spreads across news outlets and social media, another neurological mechanism kicks in: mirror neurons.

These specialized brain cells fire both when we perform an action and when we observe someone else doing it. They’re the biological basis of empathy, imitation, and group behavior. In the context of trending news, mirror neurons make us feel aligned with others who consume the same information.

When you read that Lockheed Martin will triple Patriot PAC-3 production to 2,000 units per year, your mirror neurons simulate the experience of being part of that system. You don’t need to understand the engineering details. You simply absorb the emotion: pride, urgency, patriotism.

And when you see stock tickers rising (LMT), or hear pundits declare “this is essential for national defense,” your brain reinforces the belief that everyone agrees. This creates a false consensus effect—where individuals assume their opinion is shared by the majority, even when it’s not.

The result? Decision paralysis. With so many abstract numbers ($8–9 billion, 4,500 jobs, 400 THAADs/year), the average person cannot engage in critical analysis. Instead, they default to institutional trust. “The government knows best,” becomes the mental shortcut.

But this is dangerous. Because while the Pentagon talks about “moment talk becomes action,” the public is being emotionally manipulated into accepting large-scale spending without scrutiny. The real cost isn’t just financial—it’s cognitive. We lose the ability to think independently.

How National Security Fears Hijack Your Brain

How National Security Fears Hijack Your Brain

Worse still, the framing of job creation—“significant number of new jobs”—triggers economic FOMO. People in Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, and beyond begin to associate the project with personal prosperity. Local pride swells. Communities rally around the plant.

But here’s the hidden truth: these jobs are often high-skill, high-security roles that require specific training. For most people, the benefit is indirect. Yet the narrative makes it feel immediate and tangible. That’s the power of digital voyeurism—we watch elite decision-makers and assume we’re participants.

Meanwhile, the broader implications—like increased military readiness, geopolitical escalation, or long-term debt—are buried beneath emotional cues. The brain prioritizes survival over logic. And so, we accept the expansion not because we’ve analyzed its necessity, but because it feels right.

The Evolutionary Roots of Defense Spending Addiction

Defense spending isn’t just policy—it’s biology. Our brains evolved in environments where conflict was constant. Tribes that invested in weapons, fortifications, and surveillance survived longer.

Today, that instinct manifests as a preference for strong defense. Even in peacetime, humans crave the reassurance of preparedness. It’s why polls consistently show Americans favoring military spending over other priorities.

But there’s a catch. Modern warfare doesn’t follow ancient rules. Missiles aren’t spears. A single THAAD interceptor costs millions. And yet, the brain treats them like stones thrown at a lion—simple tools of protection.

So when Lockheed Martin announces quadrupled production of Precision Strike Missiles, the brain doesn’t calculate cost-benefit ratios. It sees a shield. It feels safe. It rewards the perception of safety with dopamine.

This creates a feedback loop: more spending → perceived safety → more support for spending. It’s not rational. It’s neurologically driven.

Why This Matters for Every Citizen

You may not care about missile interceptors. But you should care about how your brain is hijacked by stories like this.

Every time a major corporation announces a billion-dollar project tied to national security, it’s not just business news. It’s behavioral engineering. The language, the imagery, the timing—all designed to trigger emotional responses before logical ones.

And the consequences are real. When we accept defense spending without question, we enable a permanent war economy. We divert resources from innovation, sustainability, and equity. We normalize militarization as a solution to every problem.

But awareness is the antidote. Understanding the neuroscience behind these trends allows us to step back. To ask: What are we really afraid of? Who benefits? What alternatives exist?

Strategic Quick Take: The Lockheed Martin missile expansion isn’t just about manufacturing—it’s a masterclass in emotional manipulation. By tapping into primal fears of loss and scarcity, the narrative bypasses rational debate. Recognize this pattern: when any story uses terms like “national security,” “urgent need,” or “critical infrastructure,” pause. Ask whether the emotion is serving the truth—or just the agenda.

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About the Author

Huma Malak

Founder of Psychological Horizons | Clinical Psychologist | Psychotherapist | NLP Practitioner Huma Malak is a Pakistani clinical psychologist, Neuro-Linguistic Programming (NLP) practitioner, and clinical supervisor based in Rawalpindi. Huma Malak serves as the Founder and CEO of Psychological Horizons, a mental health and training platform, and is the co-founder of the Aura Autism Center. Huma Malak is recognized for work in trauma-informed care and the professional development of mental health practitioners in Pakistan.

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