Thanksgiving — the annual ritual of thanksgiving, family gatherings, and most recently, death stares.
This year, more than just the turkey is heating up. it isPanic fueled by the media Project 2025 is said to be a conservative roadmap that threatens to plunge America into a dystopian, fascist nightmare.
It's no longer about exposing disinformation (was it ever?). It's about silencing the “weird old man” who dares to question the script.
Headlines scream that President Trump's return is the end of democracy as we know it, as if four years of his first term haven't already passed without collapsing the republic into chaos. It seems so. Here we are still standing.
Türkiye on the TDS side
Adding spice to this story is hysteria around it incel – “Involuntary celibates,” most of them marginalized young people, whom the media claims have formed a secret Trump army. However, this myth falls apart under scrutiny.
Many self-proclaimed incels are not conservatives. In fact, a significant number of people support radical leftist ideology. Psychologist Andrew G. Thomas, an authority on incel culture, highlight diversity Within this group, more than a third are non-white, and the most politically left-wing. As Thomas points out, “some of the stereotypes about what incels are are inaccurate.” — is a complete understatement.
The Thanksgiving table has become a battleground where Trump Derangement Syndrome reigns supreme.
For the uninitiated, TDS is a devastating condition that turns even the most trivial moments into mind-altering meltdowns. Some people manage to get it under control.
Some, like Sam Harris, have been completely consumed. Recently, neuroscientists where is my mind He criticized Trump's appearance on Joe Rogan's podcast, deriding him for not replacing the Wall Street Journal.
No, Sam, you're right. Logan's marathon, frank conversation upgrade From WSJ. He only answers to the audience. This audience is a vast and diverse group that craves raw, unfiltered discussion, not organized headlines tailored to please corporate stakeholders.
But sadly, Sam Harris represents millions of Americans who are so consumed by fear and illogical thinking that they refuse to acknowledge reality.
methamphetamine in the masses
Some might argue that Americans simply avoid politics at the Thanksgiving table. But that's like expecting a dog not to bark or expecting a smooth flight on Spirit Airlines. That won't happen.
How can you avoid politics when half the table believes we are witnessing the collapse of American ideals? Trump and Harris are more than just politicians. They are totems of dueling ideologies, each symbolizing conflicting visions of masculinity, femininity, and identity. In many ways, they represent conflicting visions of what America represents.
Karl Marx once called religion “the drug of the masses.” If he were alive today, he would argue that politics has now become a stimulant for the masses.
Have you ever tried reasoning with someone who has been swallowed up by TDS? It's a never-ending chase through extreme situations, manic predictions, lots of screaming, and doomsday scenarios. Politics is no longer a topic to politely avoid. It is an intoxicant, a substance as addictive as it is divisive.
Conversations that once allowed for polite disagreement have now devolved into heated, almost gladiator battles in which both sides believe they are defending civilization itself. Every Thanksgiving, political fanaticism trumps reason, leaving no room for compromise, and new battle lines are drawn.
In the new American climate, Thanksgiving is just another front in a broader culture war, and while the pie may be sweet, the mood is always sour. And while Trump may be the star of this American drama, the real villain of this story is the CIA.
Agency schedule
Yes, it's the CIA.
After all, it helped popularize the term “conspiracy theory.” The term, like blue jeans and bald eagles, is an American term coined to discredit critics and label opposing views as delusional.
After JFK's assassination, the Warren Commission skeptics were quickly labeled conspiracy theorists, a calculated smear deployed by the CIA to corral public opinion and silence dissent. This wasn't just a tactic. It was a master class in psychological manipulation, a move so effective that it embedded suspicion and ridicule into the American lexicon for generations.
The CIA worked with mainstream media to popularize the term and infiltrate the public consciousness through carefully crafted editorials and op-eds. Prominent newspapers published articles denouncing skeptics as unstable or unpatriotic, and embedded the term “conspiracy theory” as shorthand for insanity. Through its alliance with this news organization, the CIA rewired public discourse and turned critical thinking into a sign of dangerous aberration. This subtle and insidious conditioning continues to this day.
Decades later, conspiracy theories remain a blunt weapon wielded by everyone from politicians to newscasters to your neighbors. It's no longer about exposing disinformation (was it ever?). It's about silencing the “weird old man” who dares to question the script.
What is most alarming is how this fight against opposition has dismantled the very fabric of society. Mutual trust collapses when every policy is a zero-sum battle, with each candidate cast as either a savior or a threat. The tacit agreement that once allowed Americans to coexist despite their differences is weakening by the day.
This Thanksgiving, as we pack and prepare for the political barrage, let's remember that the CIA's most enduring operations took place not in some faraway land, but right here at home. Please. Its greatest act of subversion may be turning “conspiracy theory” into a divisive slur, one that tears apart the fragile unity of families, friendships, and nations.





