Groupthink often manifests through various symptoms such as:
Illusion of invulnerability: Overconfidence in the group's decisions. Rationalizing warnings: Dismissing or minimizing the importance of potential problems. Unquestioned belief in the group's morality: Believing the group's decisions are morally superior. Pressure on dissenters: Coercing members to conform to the majority opinion. Self-censorship: Withholding opposing viewpoints to avoid conflict. Illusion of unanimity: Assuming that silence equals agreement.