01/18/2026
My honest take on Minneapolis: there seems to be a deeper issue around masculinity. We’re seeing both men and women mirror the same emotional extremes—anger escalating into violence. What’s troubling is that there doesn’t appear to be a single, grounded voice willing to acknowledge the full scope of the problem. Instead, unstable narratives spread and influence others who are already struggling mentally.
What’s even more concerning is that the world labels these men and women as heroes. Aren’t men supposed to provide safety, logic, and leadership? We then wonder why masculinity and femininity feel blurred today—not in all cases, but often enough to notice. How is a broken world supposed to heal if it can’t recognize the difference between guidance and chaos?
We twist context, form opinions driven by unstable emotions, and then treat those opinions as law or fact. How does that make any sense? It makes me curious about the people driving these narratives. Who are they? What are their lives like? Are they parents? Professionals? Where did they learn their values?
If they’ve lost their parents, that’s genuinely tragic—but even without guidance, right and wrong should still be understood. Healing requires accountability, clarity, and leadership that doesn’t repeat the same degeneracy it claims to oppose.