There’s a capped tweet floating around — one of those posts that lives forever even after the author tries to bury it. It reads: “there are two ways we get out of this. one is billions dead, oceans of blood, and continents turned to dust. the other one involves being a little mean and saying no to women sometimes.”
Sure, the original author vanished the post, but honestly, who cares? What matters isn’t who said it — it’s what was said. And yes, it’s clearly hyperbolic, but sometimes exaggeration is the only way to get people to look up from their phones and notice what’s marching toward us from just beyond the horizon.
And let’s admit something: we haven’t exactly been champions at recognizing obvious things lately. Joe Biden’s decline was obvious — until it became a “conversation.” A massive man entering and dominating women’s powerlifting was obvious — yet somehow still a debate. The University of Michigan faculty just voted to call “gender-affirming care” life-saving, despite it being neither gender-affirming nor life-saving. But hey, why let reality ruin the narrative?
Meanwhile, a third illegal alien holding a commercial driver’s license in California crashed into a newlywed couple, killing a 25-year-old groom and his 24-year-old wife on their way home from their wedding. But yes, we’re told the border is “secure.”
In Minneapolis, one Somali man was just booked on his third rape — after serving no prison time for the first two. Another Somali “allegedly” abducted a 12-year-old, held her at gunpoint with friends, and raped her. A local mosque explained it as a struggle with “assimilation.” Right — because in what culture is that acceptable?
Sadly, the answer is obvious: ours.
Because in today’s America, it seems perfectly acceptable to commit violent felonies, burn a woman alive on the subway, defraud taxpayers out of billions, and turn once-beautiful neighborhoods into crumbling third-world pockets — all under a political class too scared, too weak, or too “empathetic” to stop it. Some leaders, especially in places like Minnesota, won’t even act because a single organization might call them “racist.” Truly the profile in courage.
This brings us right back to the original quote’s point: sometimes someone needs to be a little “mean” and say no.
We’re living through an era of what Ingersoll calls “toxic empathy” — policymaking driven by hyper-feminized emotional impulses instead of rational governance. It starts with offering water and blankets and ends with luxury hotels, prepaid cards, and excuses for crime. Then comes the industrialized targeting of children — the medicalizing, the gender chaos, the push to turn kids into ideological soldiers. All applauded by people desperate to feel included at their elite little dinner parties.
And while Tanner may be “trans” in the world his mother built for social approval, on the metro surrounded by career criminals, he’s still a girl. Reality always wins.
So here we are: Dearborn turning into a madrassa, Minnesota sliding into a Somali province, and schools — from elementary classrooms to elite universities — sliding into ideological distortion.
What stops it? Look at the UK if you want a preview of the future.
It ends one of two ways: oceans of blood, or the courage to say no. Let’s hope — and work — for the latter. Because if we don’t stop what’s coming, things could get far uglier than most Americans can imagine.
But the good news? There’s still time. There are still people willing to stand up, push back, and say enough. And that alone is something worth believing in.