Gaslighting in America: Don’t Buy the Lie
Gaslighting is when someone tells you not to believe what you see. That’s what’s happening in America right now.
We see New York hotels packed with illegal migrants while veterans sleep on the street. But leaders call it “compassion.”
We see Chicago’s weekends soaked in gunfire, but are told the problem is the police.
We see San Francisco covered in tent camps, needles on playgrounds, businesses fleeing downtown—but city hall says it’s “progress.”
We see stores in Portland, L.A., and Philly locked down behind steel gates because of theft, yet the media calls it “shopper inconvenience.”
That’s not compassion. That’s not progress. That’s not inconvenience. That’s chaos—and we’re told it’s normal.
We’re told capitalism is oppressive while millions climb into the middle class through hard work. We’re told communism is “fair” when it left a hundred million dead. We’re told America is racist even as millions risk everything to get here.
None of it adds up—unless the goal is to make you doubt reality itself.
And the cruelest gaslight of all? White fragility. You live right, treat people with respect, reject racism—and you’re still told you’re guilty by skin color. Defend yourself, and they call that “proof.” It’s a trap to silence you.
The truth is simple: families are fleeing liberal-run cities because crime is real. Businesses are closing because lawlessness is real. Migrants are storming the border because freedom is real.
They want you to doubt your eyes. Don’t. Trust reality. Trust the truth. As Sophocles said: “What people believe prevails over the truth.”
So don’t buy the lie.