Vote. But read first.
The answer to being lied to was never fewer voters. It’s better reading. Nobody here is telling you to sit down — the opposite. Vote. God, please vote. Just read first, and read the ones who disagree with you hardest. Here are the three tests that sort the argument from the noise.
1. The kindergarten test
A five-year-old knows the rule: when you’re wrong, you say sorry and mean it. That’s the floor. So here’s the dare, and it’s falsifiable — the whole point is you can win it if I’m wrong:
Show me one verified time Donald Trump apologized for a mistake and meant it — owned it, asked forgiveness, made it right. One. With a source. I’ll put it on this page myself if you find it.
The receipt that opened the case, in his own words: asked in 2015 whether he’d ever asked God for forgiveness, he said, “I’m not sure I have ever asked God’s forgiveness… I don’t bring God into that picture.” If you can’t produce one — and I don’t think you can — then you’re not defending a man; you’re defending a broken rule you’d never let your own kid break. Fuck the dodge; be honest about what it is.
2. The cult test
One question tells a movement from a cult: can you criticize the leader? A healthy politics does it constantly. “Blue is a cult” — no: the left tears its own guys apart in public, every day, by name. That isn’t weakness; it’s the immune system working.
A cult can’t do it. If you can’t name one thing your guy got wrong, and you can’t stand to hear him criticized, that’s the tell — not an insult, a diagnostic. And criticizing the president is the most First-Amendment thing a citizen can do. The entire point of that amendment was the right to trash the king without going to jail for it. That’s not disrespect. That’s the job. It’s yours.
3. The Dunning-Kruger test (and yes, on me too)
The Dunning-Kruger effect: the less you actually know about something, the more confident you feel — because you don’t know enough to see what you’re missing. It isn’t a slur; it’s a mirror, and it faces everybody.
So check where the certainty is coming from. If it’s a meme and a guy yelling, that’s the effect in real time. And here’s the line that keeps this honest instead of smug: I am not as smart as I think I am, either. Nobody is exempt — the second you decide the bias only lands on the other guy, you’ve become the example. The fix was never more confidence. It’s reading, doubting, checking. That’s the whole house.
Vote. But read first — and read the ones who disagree with you hardest.
The machine drafts the test. Only a human reads, doubts, and votes. ;