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Political discourse deliberately pivots to highly emotional, tribal "culture war" topics because they elicit a strong, visceral public response. This serves as a powerful distraction from more complex but fundamentally destructive economic issues like currency debasement and national debt, which are the true drivers of societal decay.

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To control the narrative around a foundational scandal, those in power can create or amplify smaller, emotionally charged events. These "fast food" issues, like protests or riots, serve as a magic trick to redirect public focus and anger away from the more complex, systemic problem.

Political discourse often fixates on emotionally charged, minor components of legislation (like the 10% of a healthcare bill for immigrants) to control the narrative and divert public attention from the larger, more complex financial or policy implications that affect the other 90%.

Widespread economic fear from debt and inflation creates a national 'fight or flight' mode. This anxiety is emotionally taxing, so people convert it to anger. Politicians exploit this by providing specific targets for that anger, mobilizing a populist base.

Outrage-driven news follows a predictable six-step cycle: a fringe story appears, one side reacts, the story gets amplified, the other side counter-reacts, and so on. This banal loop captures attention but distracts from more significant societal problems.

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.

Societal hatred and tribalism are lagging indicators of economic distress. By the time political polarization becomes extreme, the underlying system is already in crisis due to factors like excessive debt and money printing. The economy is the root cause to watch.

Politicians use divisive identity politics, focusing on powerless minorities, as a strategic distraction. By demonizing groups like immigrants or trans people, they redirect public frustration away from their failure to address fundamental economic problems like stagnant wages and unaffordable housing.

Extreme inequality and inflation, driven by debt and money printing, create widespread frustration. This frustration "summons" populist figures like Trump, who are seen as chaos agents to disrupt a rigged system, rather than being the root cause of the political anger themselves.

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."

As governments print money, asset values rise while wages stagnate, dramatically increasing wealth inequality. This economic divergence is the primary source of the bitterness, anxiety, and societal infighting that manifests as extreme political polarization. The problem is economic at its core.

Tribal Culture War Issues Are "Catnip" Used to Distract from Economic Crises | RiffOn