Following the Migration Paths of TwitterBrains

The TwitterBrain is a fascinating animal.

In the wild, it feeds off of controversy. Whether it’s Smedium assed heroines in a video game, or buying Hogwarts Legacy because it upsets people – and you name your character Imma Biggit, or Ultra MAGA fascists who are destroying America, the TwitterBrain will swoop in like a real world vulture and gobble everything up.

I’ve been studying these fascinating animals for years. They are quite amusing!

But be careful, the more you stare in the Abyss, the more the Abyss stares back.

First, political TwitterBrains will take stands that ultimately could damage their physical health. Whether they get fired for things they say online, or they get arrested for their politician hero, or they get killed like Ashley Babbit, Joseph Rosenbaum or Anthony Huber – it is a great risk to your physical health.

TwitterBrains don’t have the ability to critically think and ask, is this even worth ruining or ending my life over?

They only know the next controversy.

As social media use goes up, so does the frequency of mental health issues. The TwitterBrain shows no difference, in fact, I would argue their mental health is probably worse than the majority.

Chasing after one fight-or-flight argument after another for years will permanently put you in a level of paranoia that may take years for you to recover from. They only live for the dopamine hit when they click post.

And they never ask themselves, are things getting better.

When asked by an outsider like myself, it’s because “Normies” aren’t getting involved. That’s right, they choose the easy way – other people are to blame for the state of the world. Blaming things like sports ball for the state of our culture.

Ask Andrew Torba, the creator of Gab.com, how he feels about sports?!

And the more deeply they get involved in their parasitic world of controversy, the more you can see people who forsake connection.

If you hate women because some MGTOW videos spoke to you, I’m sorry to tell you, you’re not going your way, you’re going their way. And the same goes with the opposite side of the coin, if you blame privilege-straight-white males for the state of the world, you’re going to lose connection with many people that could change your life.

Ultimately, getting sucked into the TwitterBrain lifestyle of feeding of the latest controversy, fighting with strangers on social media, and hating and blaming everyone and everything will only hurt your outer life, your inner life, and your connected life.

The TwitterBrain is fascinating, because it’s so utterly desiccated by its life style you’d think it’s already dead.

Don’t be a TwitterBrain, it’s never worth it.

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