Tuesday, 16 June 2026

When people stop believing and stop listening

For centuries, cult leaders and religious fanatics have successfully used division and social unrest to attract and manipulate followers. They read the room and strike at the point of greatest unrest, uncertainty and doubt. To do this, they:

  • Identify an enemy, or in some cases several enemies.
  • Offer simple explanations for complex problems.
  • Create a sense of crisis.
  • Present themselves as the solution.
  • Discourage scrutiny or dissent.
  • Reward loyalty and punish doubt.

They trade on the fact that many people have become more receptive to emotional appeals than to careful scrutiny, evidence and inconvenient facts.


And from that point, manipulation becomes far easier.


All it takes is an enemy or two and a powerful voice willing to tell people what they already want to hear.


“I hear you.”


“I understand your anger.”


“I alone can fix it.”


“I will save you if you follow me.”


Cult leaders and religious extremists have relied on this formula for centuries. Some of the same tactics are increasingly visible in modern politics.


The method is simple: identify a villain, amplify fear, promise salvation and demand loyalty. Complex problems are reduced to simple slogans. Doubt becomes betrayal. Questioning becomes disloyalty.


I watched a documentary recently about Dov Charney and his rise and fall at American Apparel. Charney was reportedly an admirer of Robert Greene’s controversial book The 48 Laws of Power.


Whether one views Greene’s work as practical realism or a handbook for manipulation, many of its themes echo tactics often used by those seeking power and influence: use enemies, conceal intentions, court attention at all costs, keep others dependent on you and exploit people’s need to believe.


Several former associates interviewed in the documentary described the culture around Charney as cult-like. Loyalty was prized. Critics were attacked. Dissent was often treated as betrayal.


Whether in business, religion or politics, the pattern is remarkably familiar.


The oldest trick of all is to convince people that disaster is just around the corner and that only one leader, one movement or one cause can save them from it.


Fear is a powerful motivator. So is anger. Both are often more effective than reasoned debate.


That is why societies should be wary whenever emotion begins to replace evidence, and tribal loyalty begins to replace critical thought.


The moment people stop listening, stop questioning and stop testing claims against facts, they become vulnerable to those who seek power not through persuasion, but through manipulation.

Monday, 15 June 2026

The Industry of Rage : The War of Self

There is no question that many Australians have found life harder in recent years. Housing costs have risen. Groceries cost more. Power bills are higher. Traffic is worse. Governments, including the current Labor government, bear responsibility for some of these pressures. And whilst many refute this, global upheavals do impact this.

But there is another question worth asking.


Is life as catastrophic as some would have us believe?


A great deal of modern political discourse depends on convincing people that society is permanently on the brink of collapse. Every inconvenience becomes a crisis. Every disagreement becomes an existential threat. Every policy failure becomes evidence that the country is broken beyond repair. You only have to consider the years of catastrophic climate change predictions to see this. But behind every single one of these narratives there is a motive. Someone benefits, the question is who?


This is where another dynamic comes in: the way truth itself is often subordinated to narrative. The old saying that “never let the truth get in the way of a good story” is not just a cynical quip, it is a live operating principle in much of modern discourse. But there is a nuance often missed. It is not always that the truth is actively rejected. More often, it is reshaped, simplified, or selectively presented so that it fits the story people want to tell. A complex reality is compressed into something emotionally satisfying, even if it loses accuracy in the process.


This is not to say the problems are not real. They are.


Immigration is too high. Housing affordability is a genuine crisis. Cost-of-living pressures are biting. Infrastructure in many places has failed to keep pace with population growth. These are legitimate concerns that deserve serious discussion.


Yet there is a difference between acknowledging a problem and convincing people that catastrophe is around every corner.


Most Australians are still housed. They may be struggling with a mortgage or rent, but they have a roof over their heads. The people who should command our greatest attention are often those who do not. The homeless. The vulnerable. The people sleeping in cars, couch surfing, or living in temporary accommodation. Yet they are frequently lost amidst the noise of political outrage. Few even acknowledge this is a problem.


Most Australians still manage to put food on the table. They may be making sacrifices, postponing purchases or feeling financially squeezed. Yet the people who cannot afford basic necessities often receive far less attention than those competing to express the loudest grievances.


Traffic is worse. Congestion is real. Commutes are longer. But most people still get from A to B. The people who cannot—whether through disadvantage, disability or lack of transport options—rarely become the focus of public debate.


The loudest conversations are not always about those suffering the greatest hardship.


This raises an uncomfortable question.


Who benefits from keeping us angry?


The obvious answer is social media. Anger drives engagement. Engagement drives advertising revenue. The more outraged we become, the longer we stay online.


But the problem runs much deeper than social media algorithms.


Traditional media has its own algorithms, even if they are human rather than digital. Editors choose headlines. Producers choose stories. Talkback hosts choose callers. Television panels choose guests. Columnists choose frames through which events are interpreted.


The stories most likely to generate fear, outrage and tribal conflict are often the stories most likely to be promoted.


Talkback radio rarely selects callers who say, “Things are difficult, but let’s have a nuanced discussion about policy trade-offs.” It selects callers who are angry, frustrated and emotional because that makes compelling radio.


Opinion writers are often rewarded not for being balanced but for being memorable. Politicians are rewarded not for calming tensions but for mobilising supporters. Activists are rewarded not for moderation but for urgency.


An entire ecosystem exists that profits from our attention, and anger is one of the most effective ways to capture it.


The problem is not that people are angry. Sometimes they should be.


The problem is that outrage has become an industry. The incentives are obvious: anger attracts attention, attention attracts money, and money rewards those who keep the outrage machine running.


Too often, the people most invested in keeping us angry are the people least interested in solving the problems they describe. Outrage is easier to monetise than solutions. Fear is easier to sell than perspective.


This creates a subtle distortion. We begin to mistake the loudest voices for the most important voices. We begin to believe that what dominates our screens reflects the full reality of our communities.


It does not.


Most Australians are not spending every waking hour in political combat. Most are raising families, caring for ageing parents, helping neighbours, volunteering in local organisations, running small businesses and getting on with life.


The reality of Australia is often far less dramatic than the reality presented to us.


The greatest casualty of this outrage economy may be perspective itself.


We are encouraged to choose sides. To be perpetually offended. To view those who disagree with us not as fellow citizens but as enemies. We are told that everything is urgent, everything is a crisis and everything is a battle.


But perhaps the real battle is not between left and right, Labor and Liberal, progressive and conservative.


Perhaps the real battle is the war of self.


The struggle to resist manipulation. The struggle to distinguish genuine concern from manufactured outrage. The struggle to see reality as it is rather than as others need it to appear.


Because if someone can keep you permanently angry, they can usually keep you from asking the most important question of all:


Who benefits from your anger? What part of the story are they not telling you? And what questions would you ask if you weren’t angry? 


Friday, 12 June 2026

Who benefits from your anger?

I often wonder whether people ever stop to ask themselves a simple question:

Who benefits from my anger?

Because in today’s highly manipulative world, someone almost always does.

The activist leading a campaign. The political hopeful seeking votes. The media outlet chasing clicks. The social media influencer building a following. They all benefit, in one way or another, from stirring up anger, fear and discontent.

Why?

Because it gets results.

People react. They put their hands in their pockets. They sign petitions. They join groups. They share posts. They spread the message. Most importantly, they give their attention.

The more emotional the message, the more powerful the reaction.

What concerns me is how rarely the claims themselves are interrogated. It astounds me what is now passed off as fact, even by some of the smartest people. Increasingly, it seems to be less about evidence and more about rapid-fire slogans, emotional appeals and tribal loyalty.

We’re living in an age where outrage has become a commodity.

Calm analysis rarely goes viral. Nuance doesn’t attract clicks. Complexity doesn’t fit neatly into a social media post. Anger, however, spreads at lightning speed.

And there are powerful incentives behind that.

Political movements gain supporters. Activist organisations gain members and donations. Media outlets gain audiences. Social media platforms gain engagement. Influencers gain followers.

Everyone benefits from the outrage economy.

Except perhaps the public.

Because while we’re being encouraged to stay angry, trust in institutions continues to decline, communities become more divided, and meaningful debate becomes harder to find.

The voices urging caution, verification and nuance often struggle to compete with those offering certainty, outrage and simple answers. Why? Because there are no inflamed headlines. No emotional calls to arms. No viral moments designed to whip people into a frenzy.

Yet those quieter voices are often asking the most important questions.

Is it true?

Is it the full story?

What evidence supports it?

And perhaps most importantly:

Who benefits if I believe it?

Anger is not always wrong. Sometimes it is entirely justified. Sometimes it is necessary.

But before handing your anger over to someone else, it might be worth asking whether you’re being informed or whether you’re being used.

Perhaps before joining the next outrage campaign, sharing the next viral post, or embracing the next cause that demands your anger, ask one simple question:

Who benefits?

In a world where outrage can be converted into money, influence and power, that’s a question more people should be asking.