The Media Machine: Fear, Lies, and a Screen Near You (Fear-mongering, outrage-baiting, ad-selling theater. Welcome to the broadcast)
10 Things Killing America | Part 3
WELCOME TO THE MACHINE
“The most effective way to destroy people is to deny and obliterate their own understanding of their history.”
— George Orwell
Picture this.
You’re sitting there, face lit blue by a screen. Your thumb’s doing its ritual swipe, eyes half-dead but fully locked in. “BREAKING NEWS” flashes in red — again. That same dramatic jingle you’ve heard a thousand times cues up, like Pavlov’s bell. Earthquake in California. Protest in D.C. A celebrity said something racist. Weather alert. Political scandal. Another TikTok challenge gone wrong. There’s a war — somewhere. Probably. Who knows anymore?
But it feels urgent. It feels important. So you keep scrolling. You’re not really sure why.
And just like that, the machine hums to life.
This isn’t journalism anymore. This is industrial-strength dopamine drip — with ad breaks. It's propaganda in HD, brought to you by Big Pharma, Big Tech, Big Government, and about fifteen commercials for antidepressants, SUVs, and chicken sandwiches. This is the media machine — and it runs on your fear, your outrage, and your attention span.
They don’t want you thinking. They want you reacting. And clicking. And buying. And hating the “other side.” They want you busy debating slogans while they quietly sell out your future one broadcast, banner ad, and brain cell at a time.
We’ve reached the point where watching the news feels like getting screamed at by a toddler with a sugar addiction and a megaphone. Everyone’s either a Nazi, a Marxist, a terrorist, a victim, or all of the above depending on what channel you land on. Headlines aren't designed to inform you — they’re designed to keep you angry, confused, and deeply suspicious of your neighbor.
Because fear sells. Rage sells faster. And nuance? That died somewhere around 2008 — right next to the last independent newsroom.
What you’re seeing isn’t just biased reporting. It’s a business model. A dirty one. The media figured out that instead of informing the public, it’s more profitable to inflame it. Divide people, trigger them, feed them simplified storylines, and run ads in between. Rinse. Repeat. Monetize.
In this piece, I’m taking a scalpel to the beast. I’ll show you:
How the death of journalism gave birth to clickbait propaganda.
Why outrage = revenue.
How ads have replaced editors.
How fear is manufactured on a loop — and you’re the product.
And why everything from the morning news to your curated social feed is part of the same manipulative echo chamber.
You're not being informed.
You're being programmed.
And it’s killing the country.
CHAPTER 1: FROM REPORTING TO PROGRAMMING — WHEN JOURNALISM DIED
“The goal isn’t to deliver truth. It’s to keep you watching.”
Once upon a time — not that long ago — journalists smoked too much, asked uncomfortable questions, and pissed off people in power. The job wasn’t glamorous. It was gritty. You dug into stories, you double-sourced, and you didn’t give a damn if a senator or CEO lost sleep over your headline. Journalism was a public service. A watchdog. A necessary nuisance to the corrupt.
Then something happened. Journalism got a facelift. A corporate sponsor. A ratings department. A little Botox. And somewhere between Watergate and BuzzFeed, the watchdog got house-trained.
Gone are the days of Woodward and Bernstein. Now we get clickbait, Twitter threads, and talking heads with $200 haircuts pretending to care. The suits took over the newsroom, fired the old-school editors who believed in boring things like facts, and handed the mic to actors with teleprompters.
Make no mistake: journalism didn’t die naturally. It was murdered, slowly and strategically — strangled by profits, politics, and the attention economy.
How It All Fell Apart: A Brief Autopsy
It started with 24-hour news cycles. CNN led the charge in the 1980s, and suddenly the news had to fill airtime all the time, whether there was news or not. When there’s no real crisis? Create one. Rehash an old one. Bring in twelve pundits to yell about it from different angles. Problem solved.
Then came the internet. And social media. Suddenly, everyone was a journalist. Or thought they were. You could publish a blog from your mom’s basement, rack up a few thousand views, and call it breaking news. Traditional media panicked. So what did they do? They dumbed down. They played catch-up by copying the internet’s worst instincts.
Objectivity? Too slow. Nuance? Doesn’t trend. What trends is outrage. What sells is division. What keeps you hooked is a story that makes you feel something — angry, afraid, superior, morally righteous. Doesn’t matter if it’s true. What matters is if it clicks.
So news stopped being about facts and started being about feelings.
Now, depending on what network you watch, you’re either in a collapsing fascist hellscape or under siege by woke Marxist overlords. Same country. Same news story. Completely different realities.
Welcome to narrative-driven news — where the facts take a back seat to how you’re supposed to feel about them. The line between reporting and programming? Gone. Erased. Vaporized.
Every segment is now a performance. The anchors smirk, scoff, and use loaded language. The graphics scream in red. The tone is always urgent. The script is always clear: there’s a good side (ours) and a bad side (yours). Pick one. No time for complexity — there are ads to run.
Enter: Infotainment
This unholy hybrid of cable news and reality TV is what most Americans now mistake for journalism. It's not the Fourth Estate. It's The Hunger Games in suits. The same faces argue every night in primetime slots like it’s professional wrestling, and we just eat it up.
Tucker, Maddow, Lemon, Ingraham — it doesn’t matter which side you’re on. It’s all the same game. Pick your favorite cult leader and let them spoon-feed your opinions to you. It's not about being informed anymore — it's about being validated.
And when that gets stale? They bring on Breaking News Barbie to read a teleprompter about a tornado, a mass shooting, or a TikTok challenge where teenagers drink NyQuil. Tragic? Maybe. But don’t worry — after the break, there’s a feel-good story about a three-legged puppy and a sponsored segment by Home Depot.
The end goal is always the same: keep you watching. Keep you scared. Keep you loyal. Keep you consuming.
Where We Are Now
Ask yourself this: when was the last time you watched a news story that didn’t tell you how to feel about it? When was the last time the news trusted you to make up your mind?
Right. Exactly.
We’re not being informed anymore — we’re being handled. Programmed. Conditioned. And every time you click, every time you rage-share a headline without reading the article, you’re helping build the cage.
Meanwhile, real journalism — the kind that digs, risks, questions — is gasping for air in the margins. Independent reporters are fighting algorithms, shadow bans, and financial ruin just to keep a candle lit in the darkness. Because truth doesn’t pay as well as propaganda.
But hey — at least the news is never boring, right?
Right?
CHAPTER 2: CLICKS, FEAR, AND THE BUSINESS OF OUTRAGE
“It’s not journalism — it’s attention economy warfare.”
You’re not being informed. You’re being hooked.
Every headline you see, every ping from a news app, every breathless anchor voice screaming BREAKING NEWS is not just trying to tell you something — it’s trying to trigger you. Not subtly. Not thoughtfully. Biologically.
Your attention is the commodity. Your fear is the fuel. Your outrage? The currency.
Let’s call it what it is: we’re not in the information age. We’re in the manipulation age — and your brain is the battlefield.
Fear: The Oldest Trick in the Book
Your brain loves fear. It hates it, sure — but it loves it. Because fear feels urgent. Fear hijacks your nervous system. Evolution wired us that way. A rustle in the bushes? Could be a tiger. You react now or you’re lunch. That’s your amygdala firing up like a car alarm.
Modern media figured this out decades ago. But now? They’ve perfected it.
Every breaking headline is a modern-day rustle in the bushes. It lights up the same neural circuitry: Fight. Flee. Click. Share. Rage.
You don’t process it like a rational adult. You react like a cornered animal. Because that’s the design. You’re not supposed to pause. You’re not supposed to question. You’re supposed to click.
Welcome to neurological marketing — where your primitive survival response is the product they’re selling.
And if you’re scared long enough, you become addicted to the fear. You keep checking the news, because it might help you “stay informed.” But deep down, you’re just checking to relieve the anxiety they gave you in the first place.
It's not a news cycle. It’s a panic loop.
The Science of Outrage
And fear? That’s just the appetizer.
The main course is outrage. Pure, uncut dopamine.
Rage is a hell of a drug. It makes you feel powerful, righteous, awake. That high you get when you're mad as hell and not gonna take it anymore? That’s brain chemistry, baby. And the media knows exactly how to get you there.
Every ragebait headline is a little hit of synthetic moral superiority:
“X politician DESTROYS Y politician in savage takedown!”
“Twitter MELTS DOWN over shocking new law!”
“You won’t BELIEVE what this celebrity said about YOU.”
It’s always exaggerated. Always tribal. Always designed to make you say:
“These people are insane. Thank God I’m on the right side.”
You share it. You comment. You argue. You give it engagement. And guess what? That engagement = ad money.
Every angry tweet is another coin in their pocket.
Every comment war you wage on Facebook? You’re boosting their algorithm.
Every time you scream into the void about how “they’re destroying society,”
you’re the product.
They don't care what side you're on.
They just care that you’re on.
Breaking News: You’ve Been Played
Let’s do a quick exercise. Think about the last five “breaking news” alerts you got. How many were:
Actually new?
Actually important?
Actually breaking?
Exactly.
“Breaking News” is now just code for “this one’s really juicy, please click it.” We get live feeds for celebrity divorces, courtroom drama, and influencers crying on Instagram. All under the guise of urgency.
Meanwhile, the stuff that actually matters? Global treaties, financial legislation, corporate lobbying? Buried. No clicks in complexity.
Because nuance doesn’t trend. Fear does.
Outrage does. Panic sells.
There’s a reason they don’t cover things that require thought.
They’re not trying to inform you.
They’re trying to distract you.
The Economy of Your Attention
The entire business model of modern media isn’t based on truth — it’s based on attention extraction. Think oil companies, but instead of drilling for fossil fuels, they’re drilling into your dopamine centers.
It’s surveillance capitalism with a megaphone. They watch what makes you click, cry, rage, and spiral — and then they give you more of it. On repeat. Until you don’t even know what’s real anymore.
We’ve moved from journalism to algorithmic stimulation.
Headlines are now A/B tested like candy bar wrappers. You are not a citizen being informed — you are a rat in a lab, and the cheese is outrage.
And yes — it’s killing us.
It’s killing critical thinking.
It’s killing civil discourse.
It’s killing our attention spans, our relationships, and our ability to process the world without flipping out.
This isn’t journalism.
This is attention economy warfare, and you’re losing.
CHAPTER 3: ADS IN DISGUISE — HOW YOU’RE BEING SOLD WHILE BEING LIED TO
“If Pfizer sponsors your news, how objective is your coverage of Pfizer?”
Imagine if every time your friend gave you advice, they ended it with:
“By the way, this message was brought to you by Coca-Cola.”
You’d start questioning that friendship real quick.
Now apply that logic to your nightly news.
Because what you’re watching, reading, and scrolling through?
It’s not just curated for clicks — it’s sponsored.
Welcome to the hellscape of native advertising, product placement, and corporate mouthpieces in journalist drag. It's not a press — it's a billboard that talks back.
Everything Is Sponsored — Including Your Outrage
Let’s start with native ads. Sounds innocent, right? Just a cute name for ads that look like content. Like a sheep that looks like a sheep… until it hands you a credit card offer.
These are articles that pretend to be journalism but are actually paid placements — carefully scripted by corporations, signed off by PR teams, and handed to you by a smiling journalist in sheep’s clothing.
You’ve seen them:
“5 Everyday Habits That Could Be Hurting Your Heart” — (Sponsored by Big Pharma)
“What This New Study Says About Your Gut Health” — (Brought to you by a yogurt company pushing pills)
“How Defense Spending Creates Jobs in Your Community” — (Hello, Raytheon)
Disguised as “helpful info.” Stuff your grandma might email you. But it's marketing in drag. These ads are written to look like news, feel like news, and most importantly — not trigger your BS detector.
Because once you know it’s an ad? You start asking questions.
But when it’s wrapped in journalistic language and sandwiched between headlines about wildfires and political circus acts? You let your guard down.
That’s the point. You’re easier to sell to when you think you’re being informed.
The Editorial Leash: Who Really Owns the News?
Follow the money. Always.
Think your favorite news outlet is independent? Look at their ad partners.
Is Big Pharma buying commercial slots during your “hard-hitting” medical exposé?
Is Lockheed Martin running glossy ads during coverage of foreign policy?
Then ask yourself:
Can you bite the hand that bankrolls your paycheck?
Because here’s the dirty truth: The people writing the headlines aren’t always the ones calling the shots. The money is.
Pharmaceutical giants don’t just run ads. They influence coverage. There’s a reason you’ll get an hour-long debate on whether ibuprofen might give you headaches — but crickets when it comes to how many FDA panelists have worked for Pfizer.
Defense contractors run feel-good “support our troops” ads on the same networks that cheerlead every new bombing campaign like it's the goddamn Super Bowl.
Tech companies are covered by the same people they fund. You’ll get deep-dives on TikTok's data privacy, sure. But Apple? Google? Meta? The critique is strategically mild. They don’t want to spook the ad gods.
You think these massive entities are just “supporting journalism”?
No. They’re buying silence.
What we’re watching is not an independent press — it’s a corporate puppet show with news anchors for marionettes.
Lifestyle Propaganda: The Devil Wears PR
And if you think this kind of manipulation is limited to hard news, buckle up.
Corporate-sponsored propaganda is sneaking into your lifestyle content too.
That piece on “Why embracing microdosing could be the future of wellness”?
Guess who’s funding studies and quietly lobbying for regulation?
Biotech bros with patents.That human-interest story about a Ukrainian grandma learning to code while bombs drop?
Oh look — funded in part by a Silicon Valley nonprofit run by defense-adjacent investors.That op-ed about why it’s “liberating” to freeze your eggs at 25 and work until 50?
Guess what biotech firm just launched a new fertility app.
They don’t just sell you products. They sell you ideologies.
Consumerism isn’t just about what you buy anymore. It’s about how you live, how you vote, what you think is “progress,” and who you’re told to sympathize with.
It’s propaganda — but make it fashion.
We’ve Normalized the Sellout
Here’s the sickest part: We’ve gotten used to it.
We’ve been sold so hard, for so long, that we can’t even recognize authenticity anymore.
We watch morning shows with hosts holding branded coffee mugs, discussing “trending skincare” that's actually just an extended ad for Estée Lauder.
We read travel articles about “10 Underrated Cities” sponsored by airline companies with stakes in the tourism board.
We see tech reviews written by journalists who got their gear — and their paycheck — from the very company they’re “reviewing.”
The walls between editorial and advertising haven’t just crumbled.
They were bulldozed, and the rubble was sold to us as “content.”
So... What’s Real Anymore?
We are marinating in a stew of manipulation so thick, we don’t even taste it.
You’re not watching news.
You’re not reading journalism.
You’re consuming branded ideology, sold to you by a thousand smiling faces, each with a price tag dangling from their teeth.
And worst of all? You’re paying to be lied to — with your time, your attention, and your trust.
CHAPTER 4: DIVIDE & CONQUER — THE MEDIA’S FAVORITE TRICK
“The more divided we are, the more easily we’re ruled — and sold to.”
You’re not supposed to get along.
Not with your neighbor. Not with your cousin. Not with that random person online who voted differently, eats differently, or dares to use a flag emoji you don’t like.
You're supposed to be pissed. All. The. Time.
And the media? Loves it. Feeds off it.
They hand you the matches, douse the ground in gasoline, and say, "Wow, why are people so angry these days?"
Welcome to the Theater of Manufactured Outrage — and guess what?
You’re the star.
Red vs Blue: Choose Your Cage
Nothing sells like a brawl.
Mainstream media figured out a long time ago that the best way to keep you watching isn't with truth, or even facts — it’s with a good enemy.
Someone to hate. Someone to fear. Someone to blame for everything wrong in your life.
That’s why political coverage looks more like a WWE match than a functioning democracy.
Cable networks don’t report the news — they script the feud:
“Tonight: Why the Left Hates America”
“Breaking: Right-Wing Lunatics Want to Ban Your Books and Burn Your Drag Queens”
“Can Democracy Survive Your Uncle’s Facebook Post?”
You’re not being informed. You’re being weaponized.
They split the country into teams, assign uniforms, and turn every issue into a war.
Not to fix anything — but to keep you watching. Keep you scrolling. Keep you angry.
Because rage has no off switch. And outrage is a renewable resource.
Rural vs Urban: The False Class War
Let’s zoom out.
It’s not just about politics. The media machine plays every angle it can find to keep us at each other’s throats.
City people are elitist snobs.
Rural folks are backwards hicks.
Suburban moms are Karen fascists.
Millennials are lazy. Gen Z is entitled. Boomers are evil.
Nobody’s safe. And that’s the point.
Because if we ever stop fighting each other, we might start noticing the people actually screwing us over.
Can't have that.
So instead, the narrative is carefully framed to make your neighbor your enemy — while the ruling class remains invisible.
The real divide?
Isn’t left vs right.
It’s top vs bottom.
But that doesn’t get clicks.
That gets revolutions.
Outrage is the Product — You Are the Inventory
You’re not a viewer.
You’re not a reader.
You’re data — and your anger is profitable.
Every hot take you react to, every comment you leave, every tweet you rage-share?
It’s monetized.
Ragebait headlines. Snarky opinion pieces designed to enrage. Carefully edited “gotcha” clips to make those people look insane.
It’s not journalism.
It’s bait.
They feed you emotional crack cocaine and then go sell your attention to the highest bidder.
And the more addicted you are to outrage, the easier you are to manipulate.
This isn’t news.
It’s emotional engineering.
Nuance is the Enemy
Nuance doesn’t trend.
Try tweeting a thoughtful, balanced take. You’ll get 6 likes and a bot reply calling you a centrist pig.
But call someone a fascist or a groomer?
Boom. Viral.
The media gets this. They know nuance doesn’t spark dopamine.
So they kill it.
Every issue gets flattened into a two-sided cage match:
You’re either pro-science or anti-vax.
You’re either woke or a Nazi.
You’re either for total open borders or literally Hitler with a clipboard.
Real conversations — the ones where two people with different experiences talk and learn from each other — don’t make money.
Division does.
Who Wins? Not You.
While you're fighting with your uncle on Facebook about pronouns or gas stoves, the same corporations who fund both political parties are quietly getting richer, lobbying harder, and pulling more strings than a drunk puppeteer at a kids' show.
You’re told to hate your neighbor, while bankers, Big Tech, and bureaucrats rob you blind — in bipartisan harmony.
Let that sink in.
The people telling you the country is falling apart?
Are the same ones profiting from your belief that it is.
Because panic sells.
And unity? Unity terrifies them.
Unity = Revolution
If we stopped yelling for five seconds and realized that:
Both parties are owned.
Most “activism” is astroturf.
The media lies with the same mouth that sells you pharmaceuticals and war...
...we might start organizing instead of arguing.
That’s the real threat.
Because if enough people across ideologies realize they’ve been played — if rural farmers and urban radicals stop screaming long enough to see their shared chains — the game’s over.
And they know it.
So they stoke the fires.
Divide and conquer.
Keep you mad.
Keep you blind.
Keep you buying their version of reality.
CHAPTER 5: THE SOCIAL ALGORITHM — YOUR NEW PUPPET MASTER
“You’re not just watching the news. The news is watching you.”
Once upon a time, you picked up a newspaper, scanned the headlines, and more or less everyone saw the same front page. You might disagree on the interpretation, but at least you were all arguing from the same stack of facts.
Now?
You scroll. They curate.
You think you’re choosing what to see, what to read, what to believe.
But the joke’s on you: you’re not the customer anymore — you’re the product.
Welcome to the feed.
Welcome to the machine.
Welcome to a reality handcrafted just for you… by people who profit when you’re confused, addicted, and too distracted to notice what’s been scrubbed from sight.
Reality, Brought to You by Big Tech
Facebook. Twitter. TikTok. YouTube. Instagram.
They’re not neutral platforms. They’re reality editors.
They decide what’s “trending.”
What’s “misinformation.”
What’s “safe” for your consumption.
And they’re not doing it out of kindness.
They’re doing it to control the narrative — and cash in while doing it.
What you see in your feed is not the truth.
It’s your assigned reality. Based on:
What makes you angry.
What makes you click.
What keeps you scrolling.
If that means showing you a dozen stories about how everyone on the other side is insane, so be it.
If it means censoring legitimate news because it makes a corporate partner or political regime uncomfortable? That’s just “content moderation.”
This isn’t just biased reporting anymore.
This is algorithmic manipulation on a civilization-wide scale.
Echo Chambers: The Comfortable Prison
You used to seek out information. Now, it seeks you.
But only the information you “like.”
You watch one video about inflation? Suddenly your feed is a 24/7 doom-channel of economic collapse.
You post a meme about Ukraine? Get ready for a buffet of either State Department PR or Kremlin cosplay, depending on which team the algorithm thinks you’re on.
This is not education.
It’s indoctrination-by-personalization.
You're being surrounded by voices that sound just like yours — while dissent gets shadowbanned, throttled, or flagged as “harmful.”
Not because it’s false.
But because it doesn’t fit the script.
You don’t get smarter in an echo chamber.
You get radicalized.
You get softened up.
You get easier to control.
Shadowbans and Memory Holes
Here’s the terrifying part: you don’t even know what you’re not seeing.
That article that disappeared?
That video that got pulled?
That account that got nuked without warning?
Gone.
Vanished.
Never happened, according to the algorithm gods.
And they’ll never send you a letter.
No apology. No appeal. Just quiet erasure.
This is how digital memory-holing works. One day you’re questioning Big Pharma, and the next, your entire platform has mysteriously lost visibility.
You didn’t break the rules.
You just told the wrong truth.
Meanwhile, trending topics are bought and sold like ad space.
False stories get viral traction because they “engage.”
Real ones get buried because they “divide.”
This is not free speech.
It’s algorithmic authoritarianism with a smiley face UX.
It’s Not What’s Being Shown — It’s What’s Missing
We focus too much on what’s loud.
But the real power is in silence.
How many wars are going on right now that you haven’t seen a single post about?
How many protests?
How many whistleblowers ignored?
How many abuses of power swept under the digital rug?
And ask yourself — why?
Why did some stories vanish while others exploded?
It’s not coincidence.
It’s curation.
By code. By editors. By “trust and safety” teams whose job is not to protect truth, but to protect interests.
You don’t live in a free information society.
You live in a sandbox.
The Ultimate Surveillance
And while you’re watching all this content, it’s watching you back.
Everything you click, say, watch, buy, share, pause on — it’s all logged. Tracked. Mapped.
And not just to sell you shoes.
They build a profile of you — your fears, habits, opinions, vulnerabilities.
Not just to sell you ads — to sell you ideas.
They know how to push your buttons.
Because they designed them.
This isn’t journalism.
This isn’t social media.
This is behavioral engineering wrapped in cat videos and political memes.
You’re not a user. You’re a test subject.
The Puppet Master Has No Face
The worst part? There’s no villain to punch. No trench coat goon behind the scenes pulling levers.
It’s code.
It’s bots.
It’s policies written by HR departments and enforced by machines.
Nobody chooses to brainwash you.
They just optimize for engagement.
And if that optimization breaks the minds of an entire generation and destroys society in the process?
Oh well.
KPIs look great this quarter.
Burn the Script, Think For Yourself
“Turn off the noise. The truth is quieter — and it doesn’t come with a commercial break.”
If you’ve made it this far, congratulations — you still have a functioning brainstem.
A rare trait these days.
Because in the age of constant scrolling, manufactured outrage, AI-generated drivel, and hyper-personalized propaganda, the mere act of thinking is a form of rebellion.
You’ve spent your life being told what to care about.
What to fear.
What to hate.
What to buy.
You've been fed a script:
Here’s your villain. Here’s your hero.
Here’s what “informed” looks like.
Here’s the line to toe.
And you’ve played your part like a good little extra in someone else’s movie.
But it’s time to walk off the set.
Unplug the Machine
You are not a mindless consumer.
You are not a passive observer.
You are not a cog in this screaming, glittering outrage engine.
You are a sovereign mind.
And it’s time to act like it.
Start with the basics:
Turn off cable news.
Unfollow the fear peddlers.
Question anything that makes you feel instantly furious or terrified — it's probably not journalism, it's bait.
Ask who benefits every time a “breaking story” lands in your lap.
Dig. Don’t just scroll. Read. Listen. Doubt. Investigate.
And maybe — just maybe — stop sharing every goddamn headline before reading past the first sentence.
Because if you're not thinking, they are doing it for you.
And I promise you — they do not have your best interests in mind.
Reclaim Your Mind
This isn’t about going full tinfoil hat. This isn’t about unplugging from the matrix and moving into a bunker (though hey, I won’t judge).
This is about mental sovereignty.
This is about having the audacity to ask questions in an age that punishes curiosity.
You don’t have to agree with everything you read — especially not here. But if this series has done anything right, it should’ve pissed you off in a good way. Shaken something loose.
Because the moment you stop accepting the script and start writing your own?
They lose.
The outrage machine?
The algorithm?
The PR puppet show they call “news”?
It collapses when we stop performing for it.
Light the Fire, Not the Fuse
Let this be your spark.
Not to react — but to reflect.
Not to rage — but to reclaim.
Reclaim your focus.
Reclaim your peace.
Reclaim your damn sanity.
And maybe, if enough of us stop dancing to their tune,
we can write something better.
Louder.
Smarter.
Realer.
A world where truth isn’t bought by the highest bidder.
Where we don't hate each other on cue.
Where we’re not being farmed for data and sold like digital cattle.
That world?
It starts with you.
Yes, you.
Unscrolled.
Unbought.
Unbroken.
Next Week:
We go deeper.
Because if you think this was bad — wait until you see what’s next.
Spoiler alert: it’s not televised.
Kill the noise.
Kill the script.
Think louder.
See you next week. Bring your brain.
Ivana, I truly appreciate your post and hope that people of all backgrounds read it. I do have to wonder, however, (while falling squarely into chapter 4 of your outline) why is it only right-leaning folks who are having this nuanced conversation about all the points you made? My daily interactions are primarily with leftists in Europe and North America, but I find it’s only conservatives who are able to talk about this topic with presence, awareness, and concern. Anyone else immediately dismisses these ideas as conspiracy theories or just launches into that self-righteous rage.
Spot on... per usual. Here in AZ the land of sunny today with a chance of hot, the local news is mostly hour by hour weather, 10 top names for puppies, review of the latest bar and/or restaurant, latest social events, and hey we looked real hard and found someone somewhere that is being hurt by Trump's policies. More on that later, here are 5 new ads for drugs with neat sounding names.