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Anger directed at a group, like the wealthy, leads to ineffective violence. Lasting change, as seen after the Gilded Age, comes from identifying and fixing the specific, underlying economic mechanism that is broken—be it monopolies, labor laws, or an unbalanced budget. The target should be the system, not the players.

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Focusing anger on one group's effective use of lobbying (e.g., the "Israel lobby") is a flawed approach. The real issue is the system that allows money in politics. Simply removing one player creates a power vacuum that another wealthy individual or group will immediately fill.

The real conflicts dividing society are not based on identity but on disastrous government policies. Issues like deficit spending, money printing, and anti-competitive regulations are the true "enemies" that create the economic pain fueling social division, while identity is used as a distraction.

While economic policies like raising the minimum wage have broad benefits, campaign finance reform like overturning Citizens United is more fundamental. It addresses the root cause of political gridlock and corporate influence, which prevents many other positive social and economic changes from being implemented.

Rising calls for socialist policies are not just about wealth disparity, but symptoms of three core failures: unaffordable housing, fear of healthcare-driven bankruptcy, and an education system misaligned with job outcomes. Solving these fundamental problems would alleviate the pressure for radical wealth redistribution far more effectively.

To be effective rather than just morally 'right,' activism should target the 'jugular' of a system. This means focusing on a small number of companies with outsized economic influence and vulnerability, rather than a broad list of all complicit actors, to maximize impact.

Populist figures don't create societal problems; they rise to power because existing economic and social issues create an environment where their message resonates. To solve the problem, you must address the underlying conditions, not just the leader who represents them.

The root cause of many social conflicts is not just ideology but deep-seated economic anxiety. When people struggle to pay bills, that stress turns into anger, which is easily manipulated into tribalism and fighting over a perceived "shrinking pie."

The recent wave of violence against CEOs and corporations is misdirected. The true source of the public's justified anger is not corporate greed but government deficit spending. This creates inflation, which systematically devalues worker wages while enriching the asset-owning class, rigging the system.

Traditional protests are ineffective against an administration that prioritizes market performance above public opinion. The most potent form of resistance is to create economic instability, as this is the only language such leadership understands and responds to, forcing a reaction where outrage fails.

In times of economic inequality, people are psychologically driven to vote for policies that punish a perceived enemy—like the wealthy or immigrants—rather than those that directly aid the poor. This powerful emotional desire for anger and a villain fuels populist leaders.