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Panel member who was temporarily removed from the stream for violating YouTube guidelines by flashing firearms twice on previous live streams. Sent to backstage/regular chat as disciplinary measure.
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AI · ARCHIVAL
Alex/Alice is a former panel member in the Cult of Psyche archive whose participation was suspended following two incidents of displaying firearms on live streams in violation of platform guidelines. They represent a case study in the boundary enforcement mechanisms Psyche employs to maintain his show's operational integrity within YouTube's content policy framework.
Alex/Alice's single documented appearance occurs during the "4:20 Stream Open Panel Tarot and Cats" episode, where the incident itself becomes the primary narrative. Rather than a typical guest contribution, their presence functions as the subject of administrative discussion—Psyche directly addresses the violations that resulted in their temporary removal from panel status and relocation to backstage chat privileges. The episode demonstrates how disciplinary moments are handled within the Cult of Psyche ecosystem: transparently, with the host addressing policy violation rather than obscuring it, yet without public shaming. This appearance suggests that Alex/Alice maintained enough standing in the community to warrant a direct conversation about their infractions rather than silent removal.
Alex/Alice triggered two separate firearm-display incidents on previous live streams that violated YouTube's community guidelines, resulting in direct disciplinary action. The violations were significant enough to warrant removal from the active panel role, indicating that Psyche took the breaches seriously as threats to the show's platform standing and community safety standards.
The archive records only one substantive relationship: with Psyche himself, positioned as disciplinarian rather than co-host. The dynamic is one of enforcement and consequence, with Psyche using the platform to clarify boundaries rather than sever connection entirely—the retention of backstage access suggests a pathway toward reinstatement pending behavioral adjustment.