Culture War Exposed: The Dark Truth Behind America’s Obsession with Hate
- Bryton Gore
- Apr 1
- 3 min read
It’s not a Culture war it’s a Class War running on America’s Obsession with Hate.
People are numbing themselves to their own pain, obsessed with hatred, using it like a drug. When you're hurting, whether it's because you're trapped in a miserable relationship, stuck with a life you never chose, or tormented by your own insecurities, hatred becomes a quick fix. Instead of sitting with the pain and finding a real solution, it's so much easier to shout, “Look over there, that person is…” and distract yourself from your own wounds. But what you’re really insulting in others is a mirror of your deepest insecurities.

It’s amazing in 2025 that some people still believe they have the right to dictate how others should look or live. The legacy of slacktivism, born out of the social justice movement and fueled by endless online connectivity, has given rise to a pseudo-psychology culture. This culture claims that everyone needs to be “fixed” or analyzed, focusing on every perceived flaw rather than celebrating our strengths. And guess what? That obsession with flaws, and with hatred, is exactly what makes you easy to control.
Make no mistake: what’s being sold to you as a culture war is really a class war in disguise. The rich and the powerful have always thrived on keeping us divided. They manipulate narratives, twist information to fit their agendas, and now, in the age of social media, they’re doing it better than ever. The algorithms serve up niche extremist pockets of information, designed not to enlighten but to enrage, ensuring that our collective hate becomes a tool to keep us in line.
The people in power don’t want real solutions, they want ego strokes. They crave the feeling of superiority that comes from labeling others. That’s why, the moment someone they’ve branded as “toxic” actually starts to heal, they lose their minds. Fixing you was never the goal; it was always about keeping you confined under a neat little diagnosis, easily managed and controlled.
Then there’s the irony of the digital cesspool, where online psychology has devolved into a carnival of manipulative posers. These armchair experts, armed with 30-second TikTok buzzwords, throw around terms like “narcissist” and “trauma response” as if they’ve unlocked the secrets of the human psyche. But they don’t have real insight, they have scripts. They’re projecting their own insecurities, their own need for control, onto everyone else. Their pseudo-analysis is nothing more than intellectual posturing wrapped in academic cosplay.
Let’s get this straight: no one has the right to tell you how to live your life, how to express yourself, or what your identity should be. If someone is out there policing your choices, dissing your style, your sexuality, or your very being, they’re not looking out for you. They’re just another cog in a system that thrives on keeping you small and divided.
Real therapy, real psychology, is about untangling your own feelings, not about dissecting someone else’s life for the sake of control. Your therapist isn’t there to diagnose your neighbor or judge your choices; the therapy room is where you confront your own truth. Setting boundaries isn’t about controlling someone else, it’s about taking care of yourself when things get too much.
And here’s the kicker: online isn’t reality. It’s an extremist, interconnected swamp of opinions and manipulated narratives. You can’t diagnose a leftist virus or a right-wing disorder from your computer screen. The rich get the latest tech, the hottest innovations, and then they let the middle class drip-feed their narratives down through endless buzzwords until they lose all meaning.
So, wake up. Stop letting the pseudo-psychologists and culture warriors dictate your reality. The obsession with hate isn’t about making the world better, it’s about keeping you divided and controlled. And if you’re busy hating, you’re not busy changing the game.
No one but you has the right to define your life. Don’t let anyone tell you how to live, how to express yourself, or who you should be. The fight for genuine self-expression and equality starts with you.
留言