This weekend, Elon Musk appeared via video at a far-right rally in London, organized by extremist Tommy Robinson. Musk called for the dissolution of the U.K. parliament, urged a change of government, and told the crowd of over 100,000:
“Violence is coming. You either fight back or you die.”
These words are gasoline poured onto an already burning world. Instead of focusing on the truth that could liberate us all, Musk fuels violence with lies and illusions. He is proof that neither money nor power can free anyone from the chains of compulsion and repetition.
Repetition on the World Stage
Musk, raised by an authoritarian father, now treats the vulnerable—especially people of color who don’t look like him—as he was treated in childhood. He demands more children, but what he really means is more white children. His vision is not about life or love, but about control, dominance, and reenacting his own trauma on the world stage.
It is no accident that Charlie Kirk’s assassin in Utah came from a far-right family and that a far-right activist in London shares the same last name. These are not isolated incidents—they are threads in the same fabric of repression, projection, and scapegoating.
When Kirk was killed by one of their own, the far right still managed to blame the left. They are relentless. They preach free speech, but what they mean is free license for their lies and illusions. When Democrats are killed—like the Minnesota lawmaker, her husband, and even their innocent dog—the silence is deafening. The Democrats are too timid to respond with equal outrage.
Scottsdale Shadows
Charlie Kirk lived not far from me in Scottsdale, in a $5 million house. I live in a small home worth less than half a million, paid for with hard work and by staying true to myself. He made his fortune recycling lies and illusions. Yet we both walked the same streets, enjoyed the same city. I suspect I enjoyed it more—because I live with a free conscience.
The truth protects me. Those who want me dead can’t risk silencing me physically. If they did, the truth I carry would reach the masses, and that is their greatest fear. That is why they resort to psychological warfare—lies, manipulation, smear campaigns—hoping to drive me into silence or even suicide. But I am still standing.
The Illusion of Heroes and Villains
Musk frames the world as a battle between good and evil. But the real battle is between repression and liberation. What we are witnessing is not good versus evil, but evil versus the lesser evil—each side projecting its disowned pain onto the other.
There are no “good” or “bad” people. There are unconscious people, repressed people, acting out of childhood wounds. Some wear sheep’s clothing, pretending to be good while doing their damage behind closed doors. Others do their evil openly and are caught, punished, or imprisoned.
The level of repression is what makes a person dangerous. The more repressed, the more destructive. Only a few have had the courage to face their childhood repression honestly, to live with authenticity. That is where true goodness lives—not in illusions, not in money, not in power.
Truth Versus Violence
Musk says, “Fight back or die.” But violence is always the trap. It feeds the cycle of repression and scapegoating. As Alice Miller showed, the real roots of war and violence lie in childhoods where children were unwanted, mistreated, and forced to repress their pain. Those wounded children grow up to become leaders, activists, and billionaires who continue the cycle—passing the wounds of their past into the future.
What the world needs is not another call to violence, but the courage to confront truth. Because only truth—not illusions, not propaganda, not authoritarian slogans—can set us free.
Notice: Transcript is AI and human-generated
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