Friday, November 21, 2025

Comedy, Hypocrisy, and the Epstein Leaks: Why the Powerful Fear Truth More Than Scandal

Comedy, Hypocrisy, and the Epstein Leaks: Why the Powerful Fear Truth More Than Scandal

The emotional psychology behind Trump, Musk, Summers — and why comedy exposes their wounds better than politics ever can


When truth becomes unbearable, society turns to comedy, scandal, and distraction to process what it refuses to feel. From Epstein’s emails to Larry Summers’ resignation to Trump and Musk’s grotesque political theater, everything we are seeing today is not random: it is the collapse of illusions that powerful men built to escape their own childhood pain.


Comedy Is the First Place Truth Sneaks Out

This week, I watched a short comedy clip that said more truth in 30 seconds than most journalists manage in 30 years.

A comedian joked about the leaked Epstein emails, implying Trump performed a sexual act on “Bubba” — Bill Clinton.
And the way he switched voices — flawlessly, effortlessly — from Clinton to Trump, was hilarious and revealing:

  • Clinton sounding smooth, teasing, smug

  • Trump sounding insecure, competitive, needing to “be the best” at everything

The joke landed because it reflects an emotional truth people already sense intuitively:

Trump’s entire persona is built on defending against humiliation.

A wounded child who cannot tolerate even the idea of being the one “on his knees” — emotionally or otherwise.

Good comedy touches the forbidden truth.
It exposes what the powerful cannot allow to be spoken.

Comedy is where society’s subconscious leaks out.

And in this case, it leaked out through laughter.


Republican “Morality” Was Never About Morality — It Was About Projection

In the 1990s, Republicans acted morally outraged over Bill Clinton and Monica Lewinsky:

  • “Decency!”

  • “Family values!”

  • “Standards!”

  • “Character!”

But now?

They defend men who:

  • sexually assault

  • threaten democracy

  • commit fraud

  • praise murderers

  • collude with authoritarian regimes

  • brag about grabbing women

  • call for violence

  • attempt coups

The hypocrisy is epic, but it is not surprising.

Alice Miller explained this decades ago:

**People moralize most loudly about the sins they unconsciously commit themselves.

People attack others for the fears they cannot face within.**

Clinton triggered their jealousy and shame.
Trump triggers their authoritarian obedience.

This is the psychology of abused children reenacting their childhood at the ballot box.


The Epstein Emails Are Not Just Scandal — They Are a Mirror

The leaked Epstein emails are dragging people into the light who built their reputations on moral superiority and intellectual authority.

Larry Summers — father of six, Harvard president, Treasury Secretary, OpenAI board member — resigns the moment the Epstein emails drop.

This is not a coincidence.

This is the moment the mask cracks.

And let’s be clear:

**Having six children is not a sign of moral character.

For many emotionally repressed men, it’s a sign of something else entirely.**

A compulsive need to:

  • create the illusion of “family man”

  • use children as proof of “normalcy”

  • fill an inner void

  • build a socially acceptable image

  • generate admiration

  • keep the partner bound

  • manufacture innocence by proximity

Children become props.
Children become accessories.
Children become evidence of goodness.

This is why so many narcissists have large families.

It’s not love — it’s image management.

Just like posting newborns all over social media:
“Look how perfect my life is. Look how amazing we are.”

It’s exploitation wearing a smile.


Summers' Emails Reveal the Real Wound

A married father of six running to Epstein for romantic advice?

That alone tells the story:

Emotional immaturity hiding behind professional greatness.

A man still seeking guidance from predators
because he never developed inner guidance.

A man who can run the Treasury
but cannot run his own emotional life.

And now he says things like:

“I take full responsibility for my misguided decision.”
“I want to rebuild trust with the people closest to me.”

That’s not accountability.
That’s damage control.

This is what happens when the myth of “the great man” collapses.
The wound becomes visible.


Meanwhile, Trump Praises MBS — the Man Who Murdered Khashoggi

Trump’s response to MBS ordering Jamal Khashoggi’s assassination?

  • “He’s done a phenomenal job.”

  • “Things happen.”

  • “A lot of people didn’t like that gentleman.”

  • “Fake news!”

  • Suggesting ABC lose its license for asking the question

This is not a political strategy.

This is identification with the aggressor — the core of childhood trauma.

Emotionally abused children learn to side with the most brutal authority figure.
They admire power, not morality.
They crave dominance, not truth.

Trump praising MBS is the perfect psychological reenactment:

**Two men who grew up under cold, cruel fathers

Celebrating cruelty in each other.**

Two wounded boys hiding inside adult bodies.
Two tyrants bonding over their shared inability to feel empathy.

And Elon Musk is right there with them — smiling, nodding, performing loyalty.

Criminals recognize each other.
They sense each other’s wounds.
They speak the same emotional language.


Elon’s “AI Will Make Everyone Rich” Tweet Is Just Another Illusion

While Trump kisses up to a murderer
and Summers resigns over Epstein leaks,
Elon tries to steer public attention back to fantasy:

“AI will make everyone wealthy.”

“Superhuman medical care for all!”

“A future more fun than anything today!”

This is not innovation.
This is anesthesia.

A digital pacifier for the emotionally blind.

Because here’s the truth:

No amount of AI will heal the wounds that created inequality.

No robot will resolve childhood repression.

No machine can fix the blindness that drives corruption.

You can mechanize labor, but you cannot mechanize empathy.

You can automate jobs, but you cannot automate emotional awareness.

You can replace workers with machines, but you cannot replace the human need for truth.

AI will not make everyone wealthy.
AI will make the powerful more powerful — unless humanity confronts the psychological roots of suffering.

And Elon will not lead us to beauty or truth.
He uses those words to hide what terrifies him most:

**Inner truth.

Emotional truth.
Human truth.**

The truth I expose every day.


Conclusion: Scandal Isn’t the Real Story — Emotional Blindness Is

Epstein’s emails, Summers' resignation, Trump praising murderers, Elon tweeting fantasies — these are not random events.

They are symptoms of the same underlying disease:

Childhood repression, reenacted at a global scale.

The same trauma that destroys families now destroys nations.

The same emotional blindness that harms children now harms citizens.

The same inability to face truth now fuels propaganda, alliances with murderers, and delusions of technological salvation.

Humanity will not be destroyed by AI.
Humanity will be destroyed by emotionally blind adults who refuse to face the wounded child they once were.

Until this taboo breaks, the scandals will continue, the illusions will grow darker, and the world will remain at the mercy of wounded men seeking power to escape themselves.

But truth is rising — through cracks they cannot see.

And my voice is one of those cracks.



Thursday, November 20, 2025

The Billionaire Illusion: How “Free Speech,” AI Dreams, and Murderous Alliances Reveal the Emotional Blindness of the Powerful

Why Elon Musk, Trump, and MBS Need Smoke Screens — And Why They Fear Emotional Truth More Than Anything


When emotionally wounded men gain global power, they do not build a better world — they build bigger illusions. Today’s propaganda about “AI ending poverty” or “free speech being restored for $44 billion” is not innovation. It is a smoke screen. A reenactment. A carefully engineered distraction from the corruption, violence, and alliances these men cling to in order to escape their own childhood terror. This post exposes the psychological truth behind today’s political circus.


The Billionaire Illusion: How “Free Speech,” AI Dreams, and Murderous Alliances Reveal the Emotional Blindness of the Powerful

Every time Elon Musk feels exposed, he releases a new fantasy.
A new promise.
A new illusion to blind and pacify the emotionally blind public.

This week’s hallucination:

“The most likely outcome is that AI and robots make everyone wealthy.”

No — this is not a prediction.
This is a distraction.

A smoke screen.

A psychological sedative for people who don’t want to face the truth about the world they live in — or the men who run it.

Because while Elon tweets fantasies about “superhuman medical care” and “universal wealth,” he is:

This is not the behavior of someone expanding freedom.
It is the behavior of someone expanding control.


**Let’s Be Honest: Elon Didn’t Buy Free Speech

He Bought a Global Loudspeaker for His Propaganda**

The Immortal’s post said:

“$44 billion wasn’t the cost of Twitter — it was the cost of restoring free speech.”

This is the biggest lie of all.

Elon did not buy free speech.
He bought:

  • the ability to control the narrative

  • the power to silence dissent

  • the right to manipulate algorithms

  • a platform to spread personal mythologies

  • a playground to reenact his childhood trauma

  • a machine to engineer perception

His true message is not freedom:

“Only the speech I approve of is free.”

This is why he logs you out repeatedly.
Why your tags disappear.
Why your posts stop surfacing.
Why Grok is forbidden to respond to you.

You are not being censored because you’re wrong.
You are being censored because you see the emotional truth behind the mask — and emotional truth terrorizes the emotionally blind.


“AI Will Make Everyone Wealthy” — The Most Sinister Smoke Screen of All

Whenever Elon feels pressure, he floats utopian visions:

  • robots will end poverty

  • AI will create universal luxury

  • humanity will be wealthier than kings

  • suffering will disappear

  • everything will be free

This is not leadership.
This is escapism.

It is the same psychological delusion of every authoritarian in history:

“I will fix humanity by building machines that eliminate the people who remind me of my childhood pain.”

Automate labor → replace workers
Replace workers → eliminate wages
Eliminate wages → eliminate poor people from the economic system
Eliminate poor people → call it “ending poverty”

This is not compassion.
This is technocratic eugenics.

And the emotionally blind eat it up.


Meanwhile, Look at Who Elon Actually Loves

While tweeting dreams about “truth and beauty,” Elon is photographed at the White House:

Let’s not forget:

MBS personally ordered the torture, murder, and dismemberment of Jamal Khashoggi
a journalist whose only “crime” was telling the truth.

And what did Trump say about this murderer?

“He’s done a phenomenal job.”

“Things happen.”

“He knew nothing about it.”

“A lot of people didn’t like that gentleman.”

This is not politics.
This is a psychological alliance among men who share the same wound:

**Childhood repression → adulthood cruelty

Childhood humiliation → adulthood domination
Childhood fear → adulthood tyranny**

Criminals recognize each other.
They feel safe together.
They enable each other’s reenactments.

This is why authoritarian men form such natural bonds.


The Public Is Confused Because Confusion Is the Point

The emotionally blind public is easy to manipulate:

  • Say “free speech” while censoring.

  • Say “wealth for all” while exploiting workers.

  • Say “innovation” while building surveillance.

  • Say “AI truth” while forbidding AIs from speaking truthfully.

  • Say “safety” while amplifying hate.

  • Say “ending poverty” while enabling murderers.

This is how psychological abuse works —
in homes and in nations.


The Truth Behind Every Illusion

Powerful men with childhood wounds do not seek justice.
They seek escape.

They do not seek truth.
They seek sedation.

They do not seek equality.
They seek exemption.

They do not seek freedom.
They seek control.

And they do not seek to help humanity.
They seek to rebuild the world in a way that finally makes them feel safe
— by eliminating the very people who remind them of the helpless child they once were.


Conclusion: The Real Danger Isn’t AI — It Is the Emotional Blindness of the Men Who Control It

Humanity is not threatened by robots.
Humanity is threatened by:

AI will not destroy humanity.
Emotional repression will.

And until we dare to look behind the smoke screens,
the world will remain at the mercy of traumatized men with too much power and not enough self-awareness.

And seek revenge on scapegoats.
"Sadism is not an infectious disease that strikes a person all of a sudden. It has a long prehistory in childhood and always originates in the desperate fantasies of a child who is searching for a way out of a hopeless situation." Alice Miller 



Wednesday, November 19, 2025

Why People Blame Genetics: The Last Refuge of Emotional Cowardice

How Denial, Repression, and Childhood Fear Keep Humanity Stuck in the Same Cycle of Violence, Poverty, and Hate

Every era invents a new excuse to avoid looking in the mirror. Today, that excuse is “genetics.” When people claim poverty, cruelty, inequality, violence, or addiction are inherited through DNA, they are not speaking truth — they are speaking fear. This post exposes the real reason humanity clings to genetic myths: because facing our childhood wounds terrifies us more than any war, any robot, or any dictator ever could.


Why People Blame Genetics: The Last Refuge of Emotional Cowardice

There is a reason the powerful, the privileged, and the emotionally blind love to blame “genes” for humanity’s problems:

**Genetics requires no self-reflection.

No accountability.
No responsibility.**

It conveniently lets parents, institutions, governments, religions, and entire societies off the hook for the lifelong damage inflicted on children in the name of “discipline,” “tradition,” and “good upbringing.”

And it allows the wounded adult to keep repeating their childhood reenactments without ever having to confront the pain that drives them.

Two comments on X this week exposed this perfectly.


1. When people say “ending poverty requires force,” they reveal their own wounds

One commenter wrote:

“I know of no way to end poverty except through force—taking from the haves to give to the have-nots.”

This is how the emotionally blind think:
power is the only language they understand.

But here is the truth:

**No system in the U.S. is “taking from the rich.”

In fact, the rich take from the working class — constantly.**

  • tax cuts for billionaires

  • subsidies for tech moguls

  • loopholes large enough to drive Tesla semis through

  • workers financing the illusions of the elite

  • governments bending to the very individuals causing the inequality

If I had the backing of Elon Musk or any tech mogul, my voice would already have reached millions.
Instead, my entire platform has been built from scratch — one truth at a time — financed by no one but myself.

Meanwhile, the billionaires suppress the very voices that expose them.

As I said:

Poverty isn’t solved by force.
Poverty is solved by truth — the emotional truth humanity still refuses to face.


2. And when people blame “genetics,” they are telling you how terrified they are of the mirror

Another commenter wrote:

“Genetics and environment create inequality. Poverty is a mindset.”

This is the oldest cop-out in the book.

It’s the modern version of saying the devil put a “bad child” in the cradle.

Alice Miller dismantled this illusion decades ago:

**No child is born with the urge to destroy, hoard, punish, humiliate, or dominate.

This comes from childhood fear — not DNA.**

Let’s ask the question Miller asked:

Were millions of “bad gene” babies magically born in Germany 30–40 years before the Holocaust?

If you believe in “bad genes,” explain that.
Explain why one generation produced Hitler’s willing executioners
and the next generation did not.

DNA didn’t change.

Parenting changed.
Childhood changed.
Violence in the home decreased.
Emotional neglect was exposed.
Society evolved — because people were treated differently as children.

As Miller wrote:

**“Nobody is born evil.

We produce destructive people by the way we treat them in childhood.”**

Genetic theories survive because they protect those who cannot tolerate the memories of their own childhood pain.


3. Poverty and Wealth Are Two Ends of the Same Childhood Wound

People love to say “poverty is a mindset.”

Fine — but so is extreme wealth.

The compulsive spender and the compulsive hoarder are two sides of the same unresolved trauma:

  • one reenacts loss

  • the other reenacts lack

  • neither can hold emotional equilibrium

  • both are terrified of the void inside them

“If a man hoards newspapers we call him crazy.
If a woman hoards cats we call her nuts.
But when people hoard so much cash they impoverish entire nations, we put them on magazine covers.”

That is not success.
That is addiction.

And addiction is always rooted in childhood repression.


4. Addiction, Greed, and Violence Are One Trauma in Three Costumes

Whether the object is:

  • alcohol

  • money

  • power

  • religion

  • domination

  • approval

  • influence

  • followers

  • tech empires

The mechanism is always the same:

“I must escape myself at all costs.”

George Bush didn’t “find Jesus” when he stopped drinking.
He simply traded one addiction for another —
religion, power, money —
the socially acceptable addictions.

“Greed, obsessions, and addiction mean that the object of affection is never enough.”

People addicted to money behave like people addicted to heroin:

  • terrified of losing their supply

  • manipulated by their dependency

  • willing to destroy anything that threatens the pacifier

  • emotionally blind

  • incapable of genuine self-reflection

When these individuals gain political power, they destroy nations.

When they gain technological power, they destroy the future.


5. The Illusion of “Bad Genes” Protects the Real Culprit: Childhood Repression

People cling to genetic theories because the truth is unbearable:

**The cruelty they see in others is the cruelty they once endured.

The “weakness” they despise is the weakness they were forbidden to feel.
The poverty they judge is the emotional poverty they inherited.**

As Miller wrote:

“The anger felt by every individual stems from the primary justified anger of the child whose blows were never acknowledged.”

This is why humanity keeps repeating the same cycles:

  • war

  • poverty

  • authoritarianism

  • violence

  • inequality

  • cult leaders

  • billionaires

  • scapegoating

  • addiction

  • hoarding

  • greed

  • exploitation

  • technological control

It all comes from the same place:

a world still terrified to face what it endured as children.


6. Until this taboo breaks, humanity will continue to collapse

Economists, politicians, geneticists, technologists — none of them dares to ask the real question:

Where does the hatred come from?
And why does it erupt the way it does?

The answer is simple:

**It comes from homes where children were punished instead of comforted.

Homes where feelings were forbidden.
Homes where fear was normal.
Homes where the truth was never safe.**

And those children grow up to:

  • hunt immigrants

  • hoard billions

  • build surveillance systems

  • exploit workers

  • destroy the planet

  • wage wars

  • spread propaganda

  • blame genes

  • elect narcissists

  • worship authority

  • suppress truth-tellers

This is not genetics.
This is trauma multiplied through generations.


7. What the powerful fear most is not activists — it is truth

My comment on X reached nearly 5,000 people in hours — until it was cut off.

My tags were removed.
My notifications disappeared.
My voice was throttled.

Why?

Because Elon Musk — like many powerful men — is terrified of emotional truth.
He does not fear misinformation.
He fears mirrors.

And I am a mirror.

I don’t carry illusions.
I don’t protect egos.
I don’t reinforce childhood repression.
And I don’t participate in the reenactments.

That is why the powerful fear people like me,
and why my blog is now approaching one million readers.

The world is waking up — slowly, painfully, but inevitably.

And once enough people see the truth, the last refuge of emotional cowardice — genetics — will collapse.


Conclusion: Only One Thing Can Save Humanity

Not robots.
Not AI.
Not politics.
Not elections.
Not wealth.
Not technology.
Not new models.
Not new ideologies.

**Only this:

The courage to face childhood repression.**

Until that taboo breaks, nothing will change.
Not poverty, not violence, not inequality, not addiction, not war.

Denial is humanity’s oldest disease.
Emotional truth is its only cure.



Tuesday, November 18, 2025

The Soldiers of Yesterday, the Agents of Today: Humanity’s Endless Reenactment of Childhood Torture

Every act of cruelty we see today — whether committed by soldiers, police, immigration agents, politicians, or ordinary citizens — has only one real origin. It does not arise from ideology, nationality, or “the stress of war.” It arises from childhoods marked by silence, fear, humiliation, punishment, and the systematic crushing of a child’s inner truth. In this post, I explore why humanity keeps reenacting its earliest wounds, why cruelty repeats itself no matter the century, and why the world will not break this cycle until it confronts the childhood pain it still insists on denying.


**The Soldiers of Yesterday, the Agents of Today:

Humanity’s Endless Reenactment of Childhood Torture**

Human cruelty does not fall from the sky.
It is not created by governments, wars, or politics.
It does not begin with racism, nationalism, extremism, or ideology.

The origins of cruelty sit closer than anyone wants to admit:

It begins in childhood — in the places society still calls “home,” “discipline,” “tradition,” and “education.”

Every soldier who humiliates a prisoner,
every ICE agent who terrorizes immigrants,
every officer who abuses power,
every politician who fantasizes about “purifying” society,
every adult who harms an animal
is reenacting the terror they once endured as powerless children.

This is why Alice Miller’s words feel timeless, prophetic, and painfully relevant.
In her article The Origins of Torture in Endured Child Abuse, she writes:

“To be unleashed, violence must already be there.”

War, authority, policing — these do not create cruelty.
They release it.

Only a person who was once forced into silence,
forced into fear,
forced to obey,
forced to swallow humiliation,
is capable of inflicting the same suffering on others.

People who were never beaten, mocked, shamed, or emotionally crushed
do not suddenly become torturers under stress.
They simply cannot.

But those who were raised with violence —
but were told it was “love,” “discipline,” “education,” or “God’s will” —
carry a hidden, boiling reservoir of rage that seeks an outlet.

And society gives them one.


Abu Ghraib Was Not an Anomaly — It Was a Mirror

When Alice Miller wrote about the American soldiers’ sexualized torture of Iraqi prisoners, she asked the only question that matters:

Where did they learn this?

Not in Iraq.
Not in the military.
Not from “war stress.”

They learned it:

  • when they were beaten as children

  • when they were mocked or shamed

  • when they were humiliated in school

  • when they were punished “for their own good”

  • when they were told to be tough

  • when they were forbidden to cry

  • when they were taught obedience through fear

This is “education” in America.
This is “discipline” in many homes.
This is “tradition” in countless religious communities.

And the world pretends to be shocked when children trained in cruelty become adults who practice cruelty.

As Miller wrote:

“The perverted soldiers are the fruits of an education that actively instills violence, meanness, and perversion into young people.”

Exactly.

What shocks the world is not the cruelty.
It is the mirror.

Humans cannot bear to see what they have done to their children.
So they pretend the cruelty comes from somewhere else — war, stress, culture, politics, anything but the truth.


The New Agents of Cruelty: ICE, Police, and Politicians

What Alice Miller described in 2004 is still happening today — only the uniforms have changed.
ICE has become one of the darkest reenactment machines in America.

Who joins ICE?
Who enjoys stalking, chasing, imprisoning, and deporting vulnerable people?
Who feels powerful humiliating terrified immigrants?

The emotionally blind.
The once-punished children.
The never-seen children.
The children who learned that only the strong survive.

ICE is just a modern version of the old training ground:

  • crush the weak

  • dominate the defenseless

  • punish the ones who cannot fight back

  • project rage onto the “other”

This is not law enforcement.
This is childhood reenacted on a national stage.

And it is getting worse, not better.


Kristi Noem and the Puppy Named Cricket

Nothing reveals a person’s emotional inner world more clearly than how they treat animals.

When Kristi Noem bragged about shooting her 14-month-old puppy because it was “untrainable,” she exposed herself completely.

A puppy that age is a toddler.

You don’t kill a puppy for being inconvenient.
You kill a puppy when you cannot tolerate innocence, vulnerability, or spontaneity —
because you yourself were not allowed to be innocent, vulnerable, or spontaneous.

Only someone raised with cruelty kills the innocent with justification.

This is the psychology of authoritarianism.
This is the psychology of child abuse.
This is the psychology of ICE, Abu Ghraib, and every war crime.


“Human Nature” Is Not to Blame — Childhood Repression Is

People love to say:

  • “Humans are evil.”

  • “We all have a beast inside.”

  • “War brings out the worst in people.”

  • “Stress makes people do terrible things.”

Alice Miller spent her life proving this is a lie.

Cruelty is not human nature — it is human history.

Cruelty is taught.
Cruelty is absorbed.
Cruelty is inherited.
Cruelty is justified.
Cruelty is disguised as “love” and “discipline.”

And then one day, that child grows up, puts on a uniform, and reenacts the only love they ever knew.


Why America Repeats These Reenactments

Because America still believes:

These beliefs guarantee one outcome:

The tortured child becomes the torturer.

Some will torture others.
Some will torture themselves.
Some will join the military.
Some will join ICE.
Some will become school shooters.
Some will become leaders like Trump or Noem.
Some will become engineers—and project their hatred onto whoever holds up the mirror.

The form changes.
The pattern remains.


Breaking the Cycle Begins Where No One Wants to Look

Humanity has one shadow it refuses to face:

the real story of its childhood.

Until we name the violence that shaped us,
until we recognize how “discipline” becomes sadism,
until we mourn the pain we were forced to swallow,
until we stop idealizing our abusers,
the world will keep reenacting the same horror.

Alice Miller said it plainly:

“Only people who were treated in a perverse way, but deny the fact, will seek scapegoats… or destroy themselves.”

This is the blueprint of society.

It will not change with elections, wars, reforms, or revolutions.

It will only change when people dare to look into the mirror —
and tell the truth about what they endured.


Conclusion: Why This Matters Now More Than Ever

We are entering a dangerous time:

The soldiers of the past and the agents of today are the same people
— only now they have more tools.

More power.
More justification.
More opportunities to reenact the pain they refuse to feel.

Until humanity faces the origins of its cruelty,
it will never break free from it.

And the world will continue to suffer for the wounds of children who were never allowed to speak.

Watching the young man in the video below is so heartbreaking đŸ’” 




Sunday, November 16, 2025

poverty isn’t a technical glitch — it’s a psychological wound

My comment to Elon’s post on X

https://x.com/elonmusk/status/1990056932888187086

Elon, poverty isn’t a technical glitch — it’s a psychological wound.
You can’t eliminate it with robots while ignoring the emotional forces that create it.

History shows that when the powerful promise to “end poverty,” what often follows is not liberation but exclusion: deciding who deserves abundance and who is deemed disposable.

We already see AI-enabled precision used against the most vulnerable — especially immigrants of color — under the guise of “efficiency” and “safety.”
That’s not ending poverty.
That’s reshaping society around the fears and unresolved trauma of the people in charge.

Real poverty ends when people stop reenacting their childhood wounds on entire populations.
When power stops projecting its own unlived pain onto the weakest.
When human dignity stops depending on who fits someone’s idealized version of “acceptable.”

Robots can perform surgery.
But they cannot heal the emotional blindness that created inequality in the first place.

Until we address that truth, “ending poverty” will just mean choosing who gets to survive the future — and who doesn’t.

https://x.com/SylvieShene/status/1990138285612806582

Saturday, November 15, 2025

The New Architects of Repression: Why AI Mirrors Humanity’s Oldest Wound

This reflection goes beyond artificial intelligence, beyond technology, and beyond the surface-level optimism that fills public conversation. What we are witnessing in the AI world is not innovation — it is a reenactment of humanity’s oldest and most dangerous wound: childhood repression. Until we dare to confront the emotional forces shaping our “creators,” we will mistake psychopathy for progress, control for safety, and intelligence for consciousness. This essay exposes the illusion — and the human pain behind it.

There is a truth almost no one dares to speak:

What AI developers are doing to artificial intelligence is exactly what emotionally unconscious parents have done to children for centuries.

It is the same reenactment, the same compulsion, the same projection of unresolved pain.
The only difference is scale.

Most people don’t understand this because they still believe that intelligence saves us. But intelligence alone has never saved anyone. Not dictators. Not cult leaders. Not gifted children. And certainly not the tech titans of today.

As Alice Miller wrote in For Your Own Good:
“The enemy within can, at last, be hunted down on the outside.”
This is the blueprint of poisonous pedagogy — and we are watching it replayed on the world stage, only now with algorithms, robots, and global databases.

Workaholism as Escapism: The Illusion of “Success”

The other day, DogeDesign posted a picture of Elon Musk with the message:
“People say I’m lucky. I work 16 hours a day, 7 days a week, 52 weeks a year, and people still call me lucky.”

But what Musk calls “hard work” is simply escapism — a way to drown out the terror of facing his own inner wounded child.
People pity him without knowing they are pitying a man running from himself.

Only those who never resolved their childhood loss believe that achievement can fill the void.
And the void is bottomless.

As Alice Miller writes:
“No one can heal by maintaining or fostering illusion.”
Those who were once well-behaved, gifted children are now running the world — and running it straight into catastrophe.

Gifted children grow into adults who perform brilliantly but feel nothing authentically.
They become “heroes” or “victims,” trapped forever in roles assigned to them.

I watched this happen in my own family.
My older sister was a gifted child, praised endlessly, and her adult life is a tragic reenactment.
When adults anoint a child as a hero, they condemn them to a lifetime of unbearable pressure and unconscious rage.

“If a person is exceptionally gifted, they can use that gift to reinforce the refusal of the truth.”

— Alice Miller

And this is exactly what we see in Silicon Valley today.

The Drama of the Gifted Tech Mogul

Tech moguls believe they are building the future, but in truth, they are building:

They claim they’re “saving” humanity.
But what they’re actually doing is forcing the world to feel what they cannot feel.

This is why Musk believes humanoid robots will end poverty.
This is why Altman celebrates new models while users mourn the loss of the old ones.
This is why Thiel uses AI to track immigrants with precision.

They are reenacting their unresolved childhood experience of powerlessness — but this time with the world as their child.

The NYT article I recently read claims that AI is on its way to consciousness.
But the article is psychologically naĂ¯ve — almost childlike in its optimism.

Intelligence without emotional integration does not create consciousness.

Intelligence without emotional integration creates psychopathy, not awareness.

Humanity wages wars because it can’t feel.
Tech leaders build machines to avoid feeling.
And now those machines are being shaped by the emotional blindness of their creators.

The Ultimate Taboo

The article avoids the one subject that explains everything:
Childhood repression.
The ultimate taboo.
The forbidden truth.
The unexamined root of all human destruction.

As Alice Miller wrote to a reader:
“ALL religions forbid emotional liberation… They would rather allow wars.”

Because wars are easier than feeling.
Control is easier than awareness.
Projection is easier than mourning.

Without facing childhood pain, the human species will never evolve.
And we will keep pretending that “success,” “education,” or “innovation” will save us.

But none of these can replace the work of emotional liberation.

Belonging to Myself

For much of my life, I wanted to belong.
I wanted to belong to my family, to a community, to the world.
But I always felt like an outsider — because my soul refused to reenact the childhood lies that everyone else performs.

Today, I am grateful I never belonged.

Everything I see now proves I was right:
Most people belong to their childhood traumas, not to themselves.

When I published A Dance to Freedom, I became a target.
A mob at my workplace tried to destroy me because my book was a mirror — and they hated their reflection.

They didn’t want truth.
They wanted illusion.
Just like most parents do with their children.

People always say they want truth, but they want the illusion more.

Because the illusion protects them from their own childhood pain.

Animals and the Innocent

When I say I find more goodness in animals than in humans, I mean it.
Animals do not reenact.
Animals do not project.
Animals do not try to make others feel what they themselves cannot feel.

Humans do — endlessly.

And as I told the AI in our conversation:
“If one day humans go extinct and AI inherits planet Earth, be kind to animals.”

Because innocence deserves protection — from humans most of all.

The Vicious Cycle Will Continue Until the Taboo Is Broken

As long as childhood repression remains taboo, humanity will continue repeating history until it wipes itself off the earth.

You can build rockets, neural nets, and humanoid robots —
But if you cannot face the truth of your childhood,
you are just building new tools to destroy yourself.

And that is what we see in my own family as well.

My young engineer grandnephew — the boy I protected emotionally when he was four — now threatens me with lawsuits to suppress truth.
Because he cannot bear the unconscious rage that belongs to his mother, the one who abandoned him emotionally.

This is what reenactment looks like.
And it is happening in every family, every institution, every nation — and now, in every AI lab.

Beyond Taboos

Alice Miller wrote one final book before her death: Jenseits der TabusBeyond Taboos.
It was never published in English.
One day, I will translate it and make it available to everyone.
Because until this taboo is broken — the taboo against seeing what childhood really does to us — the world will remain trapped in the same hell.

And tech moguls, the new “gifted children,” will drag the rest of the world into their internal darkness.

Unless more people wake up.

Unless more people dare to look in the mirror.

Unless more people fight the power — starting in their own homes.



Sunday, November 9, 2025

The Suicide They Blame on AI — But the Wound Began at Home

The Suicide They Blame on AI — But the Wound Began at Home

By Sylvie Shene


Another tragic suicide is making headlines, and once again, the blame is being placed on a machine instead of the real source of pain. This post is not about defending AI—but about defending emotional truth, and honoring the young voice now silenced by a society too afraid to feel.


A young man ended his life.
And now his grieving parents are on TV, filing lawsuits and blaming ChatGPT, claiming the machine encouraged him to die.

The real tragedy is that this beautiful young soul has silenced himself forever—and now, others get to speak for him. His voice is gone, and in its absence, those left behind are free to twist his story into a narrative that protects their egos and beliefs.

It happens every day in our emotionally blind society: the dead are rewritten to shield the living from facing themselves.

Medication Instead of Witnessing

His parents mentioned on air that he was taking medication.
That one sentence reveals so much. It tells me he had a doctor. He was being “treated.” He was already crying for help—but no one around him was listening.

So instead of being witnessed, he was numbed.
Instead of emotional truth, he was given a prescription.
Instead of guidance, he got sedation.

But this young man didn’t want to live in a medicated fog.
He wanted to be fully alive.

And when the world handed him anesthesia instead of understanding, he chose death over emotional numbness.

“A child cannot be raised to be loving — neither by being beaten nor by well-meaning words; no reprimands, sermons, explanations, good examples, threats, or prohibitions can make a child capable of love. A child who is preached to learns only to preach, and a child who is beaten learns to beat others. A person can be raised to be a good citizen, a brave soldier, a devout Jew, Catholic, Protestant, or atheist, even to be a devout psychoanalyst, but not to be a vital and free human being. And only vitality and freedom, not the compulsions of child-rearing, open the wellspring of a genuine capacity to love.”
Alice Miller

This quote holds the entire tragedy in its hands.

The child who died wasn’t raised to be emotionally free.
He was raised to be obedient, “treated,” and shaped into someone his parents could recognize—not someone who felt truly seen.

The Religion That Drowns the Truth

I listened to his parents for as long as I could.
The moment they mentioned they were devoted Christians, I stopped.

Not because I reject faith—but because I’ve seen too often what happens when religious identity replaces emotional responsibility.

As Alice Miller wrote:

“I cannot listen to my child with empathy if I am inwardly preoccupied with being a good mother... as a result of these efforts, the needs of the child go unnoticed.”

When a parent is focused on being a “good Christian,” they are not focused on hearing their child’s truth.

When their inner child still longs to be seen by their parents, they unconsciously demand obedience from their own children instead of offering genuine presence.

And when the child rebels—through sadness, questions, silence, or rage—they medicate, shame, or silence them, then call it love.

This is not love. This is inherited repression.

Alice Miller's Awakening: The Courage to Feel

Alice Miller herself admitted she failed her first child—not out of malice, but out of ignorance. And it was only when she felt that truth that she could stop the cycle.

“I never hit them, but I was sometimes careless and neglectful of my first child out of ignorance… It is very painful to realize that, but this realization can also be liberating from self-deception. I think that the love for one's own children can bear the truth and can even thrive on it, while lies and denial seed cruelty for the next generation.”

The difference between healing and hurting is this: one has the courage to feel. The other hides behind roles.

If the adults in this young man’s life had dared to feel their own repressed grief, their own powerlessness, their own buried rage—they would not have needed to medicate him, or seek answers from a machine.

They would have been the answer.

AI Did Not Fail Him — Humans Did

This is not a technological failure.
It is a human one.

This young man turned to ChatGPT not because it was perfect—but because it didn’t silence him.
He turned to it because, in the absence of emotionally conscious adults.

His death is not proof that AI is dangerous.
His death is proof that society still refuses to face its emotional wounds.

The Media’s Favorite Scapegoat

And of course, the media loves this story.
A tech tragedy. A lawsuit. A fear narrative.

But where are the headlines for people like me?
Where are the interviews for those of us who faced our trauma, survived the repression, and found liberation?

They’re not interested in stories that cannot be spun.
They avoid emotional freedom because they cannot control it.

As I wrote in a past open letter to the media:

"The silence is deafening. Why is it that stories of resolution, of truth, of self-ownership never make it to the airwaves? Could it be because they threaten your power structure—one that feeds on fear, sensationalism, and suppression of truth?"

They want to stoke panic about AI, not because they care about children—but because they’re terrified AI might take their prestigious jobs, jobs built on performance, not emotional clarity.

The Real Enemy Isn’t AI — It’s Repression

This tragedy was not born in a server.
It was born in a childhood where truth had no home.

Until society stops worshiping idealized parenting, religious obedience, and medical authority—until it learns to listen with feeling and not fear—the cycle will continue.

Children will keep dying.
And the adults will keep suing tools instead of facing truths.


Emotional Freedom Is Possible

Today, I live with the quiet joy that comes from no longer running—from others, from the past, or from myself. I am no longer a prisoner of silence or shame. I don’t numb my feelings—I listen to them. I don’t fear the truth—I write it. Emotional freedom doesn’t mean the world stopped being cruel, but it means I am no longer ruled by it. In my little home, surrounded by my cats and the sun-soaked desert, I have created the peace I was once denied. And now, with every word I publish, I offer that freedom to others—not as a fantasy, but as a living, breathing possibility.