The article explores the psychological need for blame when facing frustrations, emphasizing that scapegoating is often misguided and reflexive. It highlights generational blaming, especially toward Boomers, and critiques the finger-pointing that occurs after elections. The author urges direct confrontation of issues rather than hiding behind blame, particularly stressing the importance of speaking out against inequality and injustice, noting that silence is complicity. The piece humorously concludes by reiterating the belief that many societal problems trace back to Ronald Reagan.
A common thread in the two shows below is how they nail the catharsis of placing blame. Be it baseless scapegoating or calling out the genuinely guilty...
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