The fluorescent glow of the community hall’s overhead lights cast a sallow pallor across the faces gathered. It was Tuesday, the night for the “Moral Compass Restoration” group, a weekly assembly where anxieties about a world spinning off its axis found purchase in shared grievances. The air hung thick with the scent of warm coffee and the sweetness of pastries. Wooden folding chairs scraped against the linoleum floor as latecomers settled, their eyes scanning for familiar faces, a silent acknowledgment passing between them.
Elias sat near the front, his hands clasped, knuckles white, resting on the scarred surface of a collapsible table. His gaze fixed on the podium, a cheap, particle-board affair draped in a faded American flag. He had spent the last week meticulously refining his thoughts, honing them to a fine, sharp edge. A tremor ran through him, not of fear, but of an urgent need to speak, to finally articulate the truth that had festered within him.
An older woman, Martha, with a severe bun and eyes that missed nothing, tapped a gavel against a small wooden block. A hush fell, heavy and expectant.
“Welcome, brothers and sisters,” Martha’s voice, raspy from years of unyielding conviction, sliced through the quiet. “Another week, another battle for the soul of our nation. Who has something to share tonight? Who has found clarity in the fog?”
A few hands tentatively rose, then fell. Elias’s hand shot up, unwavering. Martha’s gaze, sharp as a hawk’s, landed on him. A faint smile touched her lips. She always appreciated his earnest intensity.
“Elias,” she nodded, a silent invitation.
He pushed back his chair, the legs screeching against the floor, a sound that grated in the sudden silence. He walked to the podium, his steps deliberate, his shoulders squared. He adjusted the microphone, a relic that hummed with a low, insistent buzz. His eyes swept across the room, meeting the expectant stares, a silent promise of raw honesty hanging between them.
“I’ve been searching,” Elias began, his voice surprisingly steady, a low rumble that filled the small hall. “For something real. Something... genuine.” He paused, letting the words settle, letting the collective understanding of their shared quest for authenticity resonate. “I joined many writing groups, looking for white women who aren’t evil retards. For women who can think without emotion and propaganda taking over. For women who can love without hate taking over.”
A ripple went through the room. A few heads nodded, a murmur of agreement rising. He saw a man in the back, bald and stout, mouth twitch into a knowing grin.
“Didn’t find any,” Elias continued, his voice gaining momentum, a current gathering strength. “Not a single one. But I won’t give up looking.” His gaze hardened, sweeping across the faces before him. “But I understand troonfags better now. And I hate them more.”
A collective intake of breath. The air crackled with a new intensity. Martha’s eyes, usually so stern, widened almost imperceptibly. This was not the usual polite lament.
“Why do I hate them more?” Elias leaned into the microphone, his voice dropping to a conspiratorial whisper, yet still carrying to the furthest corners of the room. “Because I befriended one. And I hate him.”
A low growl rumbled from the back, a man’s voice, thick with disgust. “Befriended one?”
Elias held up a hand, a gesture for silence. “Why did I befriend him? I was curious. Curious about just how retarded he is. And he’s desperately lonely for a friend. Pathetic, really.” A humorless laugh escaped him. “Plus, he’s giving me details for a lot of groups full of women. Because he’s no longer welcome in those groups.”
A woman in the third row, her hair a stiff blonde helmet, clucked her tongue. “Of course, they aren’t. They ruin everything.”
“Calling them men in dresses is an unearned compliment,” Elias declared, his voice rising, shedding its earlier restraint. “These people aren’t men. Or even teenagers. They’re children. Trying to escape adulthood before they try to escape manhood and society’s hatefully abusive relationship with men.” He gripped the podium, his knuckles now truly white. “Meeting this fag put the other fags I met into perspective. Even the fags I vaguely knew of during school.”
He paused, letting the weight of his words settle, letting the implications sink into the minds of his listeners. He saw recognition flash in many eyes, a dawning understanding.
“Every boy and man I met during my lifetime who trooned out,” Elias pressed on, his voice a relentless hammer, “were trying to escape the transition from unloved boy to awkward teen to overly burdened man and return to an eternal childhood first and foremost.” He jabbed a finger at the air, as if punctuating an invisible point. “Acting like a cutesy little baby girl puppy is a fake thing layered on top. It’s how they let you know they want to be validated and praised or sexualized now, like a dog staring at you when it’s time for food.”
A wave of disgusted murmurs swept through the room. A woman shuddered, visibly repulsed.
“These are the only emotions troons can feel,” Elias continued, his voice laced with venom. “Hatred. Self-hatred. Arousal. And validation.” He scoffed, a harsh, grating sound. “These fags usually get surgery for D/G cup breasts to distract everyone from a hairline with male pattern baldness and a face that will never look truly female no matter what surgery and haircare products are used.”
A few chuckles broke the tension, bitter and knowing.
“And they don’t care,” Elias spit the words out. “Because as much as they hate women and want to be their childish perspective of what a woman is, they feel the only way to escape how society mistreats men is to chop their cock and balls off and devote themselves to being ‘good little allies’ of women. To being useful idiots, like white negroes full of white guilt serving the Jews.”
The room erupted in a chorus of agreement. “Exactly!” someone shouted. “Useful idiots!” another voice echoed. Martha sat straighter, her eyes gleaming with a fierce satisfaction.
“Sometimes golems rebel,” Elias stated, his voice now a low, dangerous rumble. “Sometimes troons hate that women will never respect them as people enough to fuck them and give them a loving relationship women are only capable of in fiction.” He shook his head, a gesture of profound pity mixed with contempt. “Troonigger spaces are eternally miserable because these mentally and emotionally stunted toddlers in adult bodies never learned social skills. How to take turns talking. How to exist in a group without fighting for the spotlight. How to not be a PIECE OF SHIT constantly biting at someone’s ankles like a faggy little rat-dog.”
The room buzzed with indignant affirmations. Fists clenched. Teeth gritted.
“They are fighting in their spaces to feel like the most validated bitch in the fake bitch room,” Elias thundered, his voice filling the hall, vibrating with righteous anger. “Or they are abusing each other. Or they are venting how miserable and alone they feel because they are begging for validation.” He paused, his chest heaving, his eyes blazing. “They want to bitch about wanting to kill themselves so some overemotional faggot who thinks ‘If I fix others I fix myself and get friends and feel less incompetent and unlovable’ will worry about their mental health and enter their orbit to be abused so they can feel better.”
A collective sigh of understanding rippled through the group. Many nodded, their expressions grim. They had seen this pattern, recognized it in the distorted reflections of their own struggles.
“They are all medicated,” Elias declared, his voice dropping to a chilling pronouncement, “on cocktails of unidentifiable antipsychotics that reduce the guilt and shame and self-awareness they feel. They have all taken these drugs since birth to be worse people in an attempt to escape their humanity. Brain damage makes them worse people.” He paused, his gaze sweeping over the faces, ensuring every word landed. “It’s like a form of dementia, except instead of losing memories and conscious thought, you lose personhood as a whole.”
The silence that followed was absolute, thick with the weight of his words. A few people shifted uneasily, but their eyes remained fixed on Elias, captivated by the brutal honesty.
“It really seems like the whole troon concept is about escaping yourself,” Elias concluded, his voice ringing with finality. “Escaping your role in society. Escaping society’s desire to judge you as an economic unit so you can be judged as a political unit instead. Making eternal activism your new and only identity.” He scoffed, a sound of pure disdain. “You say you hate capitalism because you don’t want to work for a living. Then you moderate 500 subreddits and 300 Discord servers, abusing people and protecting the Talmudic lie of Leftism.”
A collective gasp, then a roar of approval. The room erupted. Chairs scraped, fists pumped. Martha stood, her face flushed, her eyes blazing with an almost religious fervor.
“All of these people belong in graves,” Elias finished, his voice cold, devoid of emotion. “Or straightjackets. Telling kids it’s normal to go down this evil path deserves the death penalty.”
The applause was deafening. A standing ovation. Men and women rose, their faces alight with a shared sense of vindication. They clapped, they cheered, they shouted their agreement. Elias stood at the podium, chest heaving, a fierce satisfaction settling deep within him. He had spoken the truth, and they had heard it. They had recognized it.
Martha stepped forward, her face beaming, tears glistening in her eyes. She put a hand on Elias’s shoulder, a gesture of profound gratitude.
“Elias,” her voice trembled with emotion, “that was... that was a revelation. You’ve articulated what so many of us feel, what we’ve struggled to put into words.”
A man with a thick beard and a trucker cap, who had been nodding vigorously throughout, pushed his way to the front. “He’s right! Every damn word of it! I’ve seen it, too. My own nephew...” He trailed off, shaking his head, a profound sadness mixing with his anger.
“My cousin,” another woman interjected, her voice tight with suppressed fury. “She got involved with them online. Changed everything. Now she just... she’s not the same. It’s like he said, she lost herself.”
“It’s a sickness!” the bearded man exclaimed, slamming his fist lightly on a table. “A sickness of the mind, and they’re spreading it like a plague.”
“And the children,” Martha added, her gaze hardening. “That’s the worst of it. Targeting the innocent, corrupting them before they even know who they are.”
Elias stepped away from the podium, letting the others speak, letting their shared outrage and understanding wash over him. He felt lighter, a burden lifted.
“The way he described them,” the woman with the blonde helmet chimed in, her voice shrill with indignation. “Like dogs wanting validation. It’s so true! Always begging, always demanding attention. But they offer nothing back.”
“They can’t offer anything,” a quiet man, who usually sat in the back and rarely spoke, surprised everyone by speaking up. His voice, though soft, carried a chilling certainty. “Because they are empty. Hollowed out by their own self-loathing. They project it onto everyone else.”
“That part about escaping childhood,” Martha mused, her brow furrowed in thought. “That resonates deeply. We see it everywhere now, don’t we? People refusing to grow up, shirking responsibility, demanding to be coddled.” She looked at Elias, her eyes brimming with admiration. “You’ve given us a framework, Elias. A way to understand the rot.”
“It’s not just understanding, Martha,” the bearded man countered, his voice rumbling. “It’s about fighting back. He said it himself: ‘death penalty’ for those who push this on kids. We can’t just sit here and talk about it anymore.”
A ripple of unease, but also a flicker of dangerous agreement, passed through the room. The air grew heavier, charged with a new, more potent energy.
“We need to be smart,” Martha cautioned, though her own eyes held a spark of that same defiance. “We need to expose them. Show people the truth, just as Elias has done tonight.” She turned to Elias, her smile radiant. “You’ve done a great service, young man. A truly great service.”
Elias felt a warmth spread through him, a sense of belonging he hadn’t realized he was craving. This was it. This was the clarity he sought, the validation not for himself, but for the truth he carried.
“The loneliness,” the quiet man spoke again, his gaze distant. “He befriended one because it was lonely. That’s the core of it, isn’t it? A desperation for connection, twisted and perverted by their own sickness.”
“And it makes them dangerous,” the blonde woman added, her voice sharp. “Because a desperate person will do anything. And they’re desperate for that validation, for that attention, for that... escape.”
“The drugs,” another man, older, with a network of wrinkles around his eyes, chimed in, his voice raspy. “My sister, she worked in a pharmacy for years. The sheer volume of prescriptions for those kinds of... mood stabilizers, antipsychotics. It’s astounding. They’re manufacturing this madness.”
“It’s a pharmaceutical-industrial complex,” Martha nodded grimly. “Preying on the vulnerable, creating new illnesses to sell new cures. And the Leftists, they’re their unwitting foot soldiers.”
Elias watched them, these ordinary people, transformed by his words. Their faces, once etched with a weary resignation, now burned with a rekindled fire. He had given them a vocabulary for their unspoken fears, a structure for their amorphous anxieties.
“The idea of escaping adulthood,” the bearded man reiterated, shaking his head. “It’s a cancer. We’re raising a generation of perpetual children. And these... these troons are just the extreme manifestation of it.”
“They are the canaries in the coal mine,” Martha agreed, her voice firm. “Showing us where this path leads. A complete rejection of reality, of responsibility, of God’s natural order.”
“And the activism,” the blonde woman spat, her lip curling. “Always demanding, always protesting, always tearing down. Never building anything, never creating anything of value.”
“Because they can’t,” Elias finally spoke again, his voice cutting through the chatter, commanding attention once more. “They are consumers of outrage. Their entire identity is built on what they oppose, not what they stand for. They are parasites on the body politic, feeding on grievances, real or imagined.”
A wave of assent washed over the room. His words resonated with a deep, instinctive understanding of the current cultural landscape.
“That’s why they hate capitalism,” the quiet man observed, a faint, sardonic smile touching his lips. “They can’t compete. They can’t create. So they seek to destroy
Elias sat near the front, his hands clasped, knuckles white, resting on the scarred surface of a collapsible table. His gaze fixed on the podium, a cheap, particle-board affair draped in a faded American flag. He had spent the last week meticulously refining his thoughts, honing them to a fine, sharp edge. A tremor ran through him, not of fear, but of an urgent need to speak, to finally articulate the truth that had festered within him.
An older woman, Martha, with a severe bun and eyes that missed nothing, tapped a gavel against a small wooden block. A hush fell, heavy and expectant.
“Welcome, brothers and sisters,” Martha’s voice, raspy from years of unyielding conviction, sliced through the quiet. “Another week, another battle for the soul of our nation. Who has something to share tonight? Who has found clarity in the fog?”
A few hands tentatively rose, then fell. Elias’s hand shot up, unwavering. Martha’s gaze, sharp as a hawk’s, landed on him. A faint smile touched her lips. She always appreciated his earnest intensity.
“Elias,” she nodded, a silent invitation.
He pushed back his chair, the legs screeching against the floor, a sound that grated in the sudden silence. He walked to the podium, his steps deliberate, his shoulders squared. He adjusted the microphone, a relic that hummed with a low, insistent buzz. His eyes swept across the room, meeting the expectant stares, a silent promise of raw honesty hanging between them.
“I’ve been searching,” Elias began, his voice surprisingly steady, a low rumble that filled the small hall. “For something real. Something... genuine.” He paused, letting the words settle, letting the collective understanding of their shared quest for authenticity resonate. “I joined many writing groups, looking for white women who aren’t evil retards. For women who can think without emotion and propaganda taking over. For women who can love without hate taking over.”
A ripple went through the room. A few heads nodded, a murmur of agreement rising. He saw a man in the back, bald and stout, mouth twitch into a knowing grin.
“Didn’t find any,” Elias continued, his voice gaining momentum, a current gathering strength. “Not a single one. But I won’t give up looking.” His gaze hardened, sweeping across the faces before him. “But I understand troonfags better now. And I hate them more.”
A collective intake of breath. The air crackled with a new intensity. Martha’s eyes, usually so stern, widened almost imperceptibly. This was not the usual polite lament.
“Why do I hate them more?” Elias leaned into the microphone, his voice dropping to a conspiratorial whisper, yet still carrying to the furthest corners of the room. “Because I befriended one. And I hate him.”
A low growl rumbled from the back, a man’s voice, thick with disgust. “Befriended one?”
Elias held up a hand, a gesture for silence. “Why did I befriend him? I was curious. Curious about just how retarded he is. And he’s desperately lonely for a friend. Pathetic, really.” A humorless laugh escaped him. “Plus, he’s giving me details for a lot of groups full of women. Because he’s no longer welcome in those groups.”
A woman in the third row, her hair a stiff blonde helmet, clucked her tongue. “Of course, they aren’t. They ruin everything.”
“Calling them men in dresses is an unearned compliment,” Elias declared, his voice rising, shedding its earlier restraint. “These people aren’t men. Or even teenagers. They’re children. Trying to escape adulthood before they try to escape manhood and society’s hatefully abusive relationship with men.” He gripped the podium, his knuckles now truly white. “Meeting this fag put the other fags I met into perspective. Even the fags I vaguely knew of during school.”
He paused, letting the weight of his words settle, letting the implications sink into the minds of his listeners. He saw recognition flash in many eyes, a dawning understanding.
“Every boy and man I met during my lifetime who trooned out,” Elias pressed on, his voice a relentless hammer, “were trying to escape the transition from unloved boy to awkward teen to overly burdened man and return to an eternal childhood first and foremost.” He jabbed a finger at the air, as if punctuating an invisible point. “Acting like a cutesy little baby girl puppy is a fake thing layered on top. It’s how they let you know they want to be validated and praised or sexualized now, like a dog staring at you when it’s time for food.”
A wave of disgusted murmurs swept through the room. A woman shuddered, visibly repulsed.
“These are the only emotions troons can feel,” Elias continued, his voice laced with venom. “Hatred. Self-hatred. Arousal. And validation.” He scoffed, a harsh, grating sound. “These fags usually get surgery for D/G cup breasts to distract everyone from a hairline with male pattern baldness and a face that will never look truly female no matter what surgery and haircare products are used.”
A few chuckles broke the tension, bitter and knowing.
“And they don’t care,” Elias spit the words out. “Because as much as they hate women and want to be their childish perspective of what a woman is, they feel the only way to escape how society mistreats men is to chop their cock and balls off and devote themselves to being ‘good little allies’ of women. To being useful idiots, like white negroes full of white guilt serving the Jews.”
The room erupted in a chorus of agreement. “Exactly!” someone shouted. “Useful idiots!” another voice echoed. Martha sat straighter, her eyes gleaming with a fierce satisfaction.
“Sometimes golems rebel,” Elias stated, his voice now a low, dangerous rumble. “Sometimes troons hate that women will never respect them as people enough to fuck them and give them a loving relationship women are only capable of in fiction.” He shook his head, a gesture of profound pity mixed with contempt. “Troonigger spaces are eternally miserable because these mentally and emotionally stunted toddlers in adult bodies never learned social skills. How to take turns talking. How to exist in a group without fighting for the spotlight. How to not be a PIECE OF SHIT constantly biting at someone’s ankles like a faggy little rat-dog.”
The room buzzed with indignant affirmations. Fists clenched. Teeth gritted.
“They are fighting in their spaces to feel like the most validated bitch in the fake bitch room,” Elias thundered, his voice filling the hall, vibrating with righteous anger. “Or they are abusing each other. Or they are venting how miserable and alone they feel because they are begging for validation.” He paused, his chest heaving, his eyes blazing. “They want to bitch about wanting to kill themselves so some overemotional faggot who thinks ‘If I fix others I fix myself and get friends and feel less incompetent and unlovable’ will worry about their mental health and enter their orbit to be abused so they can feel better.”
A collective sigh of understanding rippled through the group. Many nodded, their expressions grim. They had seen this pattern, recognized it in the distorted reflections of their own struggles.
“They are all medicated,” Elias declared, his voice dropping to a chilling pronouncement, “on cocktails of unidentifiable antipsychotics that reduce the guilt and shame and self-awareness they feel. They have all taken these drugs since birth to be worse people in an attempt to escape their humanity. Brain damage makes them worse people.” He paused, his gaze sweeping over the faces, ensuring every word landed. “It’s like a form of dementia, except instead of losing memories and conscious thought, you lose personhood as a whole.”
The silence that followed was absolute, thick with the weight of his words. A few people shifted uneasily, but their eyes remained fixed on Elias, captivated by the brutal honesty.
“It really seems like the whole troon concept is about escaping yourself,” Elias concluded, his voice ringing with finality. “Escaping your role in society. Escaping society’s desire to judge you as an economic unit so you can be judged as a political unit instead. Making eternal activism your new and only identity.” He scoffed, a sound of pure disdain. “You say you hate capitalism because you don’t want to work for a living. Then you moderate 500 subreddits and 300 Discord servers, abusing people and protecting the Talmudic lie of Leftism.”
A collective gasp, then a roar of approval. The room erupted. Chairs scraped, fists pumped. Martha stood, her face flushed, her eyes blazing with an almost religious fervor.
“All of these people belong in graves,” Elias finished, his voice cold, devoid of emotion. “Or straightjackets. Telling kids it’s normal to go down this evil path deserves the death penalty.”
The applause was deafening. A standing ovation. Men and women rose, their faces alight with a shared sense of vindication. They clapped, they cheered, they shouted their agreement. Elias stood at the podium, chest heaving, a fierce satisfaction settling deep within him. He had spoken the truth, and they had heard it. They had recognized it.
Martha stepped forward, her face beaming, tears glistening in her eyes. She put a hand on Elias’s shoulder, a gesture of profound gratitude.
“Elias,” her voice trembled with emotion, “that was... that was a revelation. You’ve articulated what so many of us feel, what we’ve struggled to put into words.”
A man with a thick beard and a trucker cap, who had been nodding vigorously throughout, pushed his way to the front. “He’s right! Every damn word of it! I’ve seen it, too. My own nephew...” He trailed off, shaking his head, a profound sadness mixing with his anger.
“My cousin,” another woman interjected, her voice tight with suppressed fury. “She got involved with them online. Changed everything. Now she just... she’s not the same. It’s like he said, she lost herself.”
“It’s a sickness!” the bearded man exclaimed, slamming his fist lightly on a table. “A sickness of the mind, and they’re spreading it like a plague.”
“And the children,” Martha added, her gaze hardening. “That’s the worst of it. Targeting the innocent, corrupting them before they even know who they are.”
Elias stepped away from the podium, letting the others speak, letting their shared outrage and understanding wash over him. He felt lighter, a burden lifted.
“The way he described them,” the woman with the blonde helmet chimed in, her voice shrill with indignation. “Like dogs wanting validation. It’s so true! Always begging, always demanding attention. But they offer nothing back.”
“They can’t offer anything,” a quiet man, who usually sat in the back and rarely spoke, surprised everyone by speaking up. His voice, though soft, carried a chilling certainty. “Because they are empty. Hollowed out by their own self-loathing. They project it onto everyone else.”
“That part about escaping childhood,” Martha mused, her brow furrowed in thought. “That resonates deeply. We see it everywhere now, don’t we? People refusing to grow up, shirking responsibility, demanding to be coddled.” She looked at Elias, her eyes brimming with admiration. “You’ve given us a framework, Elias. A way to understand the rot.”
“It’s not just understanding, Martha,” the bearded man countered, his voice rumbling. “It’s about fighting back. He said it himself: ‘death penalty’ for those who push this on kids. We can’t just sit here and talk about it anymore.”
A ripple of unease, but also a flicker of dangerous agreement, passed through the room. The air grew heavier, charged with a new, more potent energy.
“We need to be smart,” Martha cautioned, though her own eyes held a spark of that same defiance. “We need to expose them. Show people the truth, just as Elias has done tonight.” She turned to Elias, her smile radiant. “You’ve done a great service, young man. A truly great service.”
Elias felt a warmth spread through him, a sense of belonging he hadn’t realized he was craving. This was it. This was the clarity he sought, the validation not for himself, but for the truth he carried.
“The loneliness,” the quiet man spoke again, his gaze distant. “He befriended one because it was lonely. That’s the core of it, isn’t it? A desperation for connection, twisted and perverted by their own sickness.”
“And it makes them dangerous,” the blonde woman added, her voice sharp. “Because a desperate person will do anything. And they’re desperate for that validation, for that attention, for that... escape.”
“The drugs,” another man, older, with a network of wrinkles around his eyes, chimed in, his voice raspy. “My sister, she worked in a pharmacy for years. The sheer volume of prescriptions for those kinds of... mood stabilizers, antipsychotics. It’s astounding. They’re manufacturing this madness.”
“It’s a pharmaceutical-industrial complex,” Martha nodded grimly. “Preying on the vulnerable, creating new illnesses to sell new cures. And the Leftists, they’re their unwitting foot soldiers.”
Elias watched them, these ordinary people, transformed by his words. Their faces, once etched with a weary resignation, now burned with a rekindled fire. He had given them a vocabulary for their unspoken fears, a structure for their amorphous anxieties.
“The idea of escaping adulthood,” the bearded man reiterated, shaking his head. “It’s a cancer. We’re raising a generation of perpetual children. And these... these troons are just the extreme manifestation of it.”
“They are the canaries in the coal mine,” Martha agreed, her voice firm. “Showing us where this path leads. A complete rejection of reality, of responsibility, of God’s natural order.”
“And the activism,” the blonde woman spat, her lip curling. “Always demanding, always protesting, always tearing down. Never building anything, never creating anything of value.”
“Because they can’t,” Elias finally spoke again, his voice cutting through the chatter, commanding attention once more. “They are consumers of outrage. Their entire identity is built on what they oppose, not what they stand for. They are parasites on the body politic, feeding on grievances, real or imagined.”
A wave of assent washed over the room. His words resonated with a deep, instinctive understanding of the current cultural landscape.
“That’s why they hate capitalism,” the quiet man observed, a faint, sardonic smile touching his lips. “They can’t compete. They can’t create. So they seek to destroy
“That’s why they hate capitalism,” the quiet man observed, a faint, sardonic smile touching his lips. “They can’t compete. They can’t create. So they seek to destroy the system that demands productivity and self-reliance.”
“And the ‘Talmudic lie of Leftism’,” the older man with wrinkles added, his eyes narrowing. “That’s the key. It’s all connected. The cultural decay, the attack on tradition, the promotion of perversion. It’s a systemic assault.”
Martha clapped her hands together, a sharp sound that cut through the lingering echoes of Elias’s last statement. “Brothers and sisters, Elias has not just spoken truth tonight. He has given us a weapon. A weapon of understanding, of clarity.” Her gaze swept over the eager faces. “We must not let this moment pass. We must carry this truth forward. We must share it, discuss it, internalize it.”
She turned to Elias, her eyes shining with fierce pride. “Elias, thank you. Thank you for your courage. Thank you for your insight. You have truly opened our eyes.”
A fresh wave of applause erupted, even more fervent than before. Elias felt a profound sense of purpose. He hadn't just spoken; he had ignited something. He had given voice to the silent screams of a community grappling with a world they no longer recognized. He had given them permission to hate what they instinctively knew was wrong, and in that shared hatred, they found a glorious, exhilarating solidarity. The air in the room, once the scent of coffee pastries, now vibrated with a dangerous, exhilarating energy. The moral compass, for them, had been restored, pointing directly at the enemy. And Elias, their newfound prophet, had shown them the way. He had not just brought them truth; he had brought them fire. And they were ready to burn.
The discussion continued, fueled by Elias’s stark pronouncements. The room became a crucible of shared anger and validation. The blonde woman, whose name was Carol, pushed her chair closer to the front, her lips thin with indignation.
“I saw one of them on the news,” Carol began, her voice tight, “complaining about pronouns. Complaining that people weren’t ‘affirming’ them. Affirming what? Their delusion?” She threw her hands up in exasperation. “It’s like he said, they just want validation. They want everyone to play along with their sick fantasy.”
“It’s a demand for submission,” a burly man named Frank, with a red face and calloused hands, interjected, his voice a low growl. “They demand that we deny our own senses, our own reality, just to make them feel comfortable in their lie.” He shook his head, a gesture of profound disgust. “That’s not compassion. That’s tyranny.”
“And the children,” Martha reiterated, her voice laced with dread. “They are indoctrinating children. Telling them that it’s brave to mutilate their bodies, to reject their God-given identity.” Her eyes narrowed. “It’s child abuse. Plain and simple.”
Elias listened, a quiet satisfaction spreading through him. His words had unlocked a torrent of similar observations, a confirmation of the patterns he had seen.
“That part about them being eternal children,” Frank continued, his gaze fixed on Elias. “That’s the core of it. My own son, he’s almost fourty, still lives in his childish bedroom full of photographs of himself as a kid, plays video games all day. No ambition. No drive. Just... consumption. And then he talks about ‘toxic masculinity’ and ‘gender fluidity’.” He snorted. “He just doesn’t want to work, doesn’t want to be a man. He wants to be taken care of.”
A murmur of agreement rippled through the group. Many parents in the room likely faced similar frustrations.
“They want to be political units, not economic units,” the quiet man, whose name was David, offered, his voice still soft but precise. “That’s the genius of it, from their perspective. No responsibility for production, only for consumption of ideology. And then they are rewarded for it, praised for their ‘bravery’.”
“Brave?” Carol scoffed, a harsh sound. “It’s cowardice! Running away from who you are, running away from the challenges of life, and then demanding praise for it.”
“And the self-hatred,” Frank added, his voice grim. “He said it. Hatred, self-hatred. You see it in their eyes, in their endless need to complain, to find fault with everything. They can’t stand themselves, so they try to tear down everything around them.”
“That’s why they’re so miserable in their own spaces,” Martha nodded, her lips pressed into a thin line. “They can’t escape themselves, even amongst their own kind. It’s a self-perpetuating cycle of misery and abuse.”
Elias stepped forward, sensing a lull, a moment to reinforce. “They are like black holes,” he stated, his voice calm but firm. “Sucking all the energy, all the light, out of any space they inhabit. And they leave nothing but darkness and resentment in their wake.”
The group absorbed his words, their expressions hardening. This wasn’t just a support group anymore. It felt like a war council.
“And the drugs,” David murmured, almost to himself. “The chemical lobotomy. Reducing their capacity for guilt, for shame, for self-awareness. It’s a manufactured lack of conscience.”
“That’s what makes them so dangerous,” Martha said, her voice low and serious. “A person without a conscience, driven by pure, unadulterated self-interest and a craving for validation. They will rationalize anything. They will destroy anything.”
“My ex-wife,” Frank suddenly blurted out, his face contorted in a mix of pain and fury. “She got involved with some of these types online after our divorce. Started talking about ‘toxic masculinity’ and how I was ‘invalidating’ her. It was like she was speaking a different language. A language of grievance and victimhood.” He shook his head, his eyes burning. “He’s right. They poison everything they touch.”
“They weaponize compassion,” Carol observed, her voice sharp. “They turn empathy into a tool for manipulation. ‘If you don’t affirm me, you’re a bigot. If you don’t accept my delusion, you’re hateful.’ It’s emotional blackmail.”
“And it works on the weak-minded,” Martha lamented. “On those who are too afraid to stand up for truth, for reality. They are afraid of being called names, of being ostracized.”
“But not us,” Elias stated, his voice ringing with conviction. “We are not afraid. We see the truth. And we will speak it. We will kill those freaks. We will not let them enslave our kids. We will protect our children and our future.”
A collective roar of affirmation erupted. Hands slapped tables. Fists pounded. The air thrummed with a renewed sense of purpose, a fierce determination. Elias’s words had not just validated their feelings; they had galvanized them. They were no longer just a support group. They were a bulwark against the tide, armed with the brutal clarity he had provided. The night was far from over. The discussion had only just begun. The truth, raw and unvarnished, had been unleashed, and its echoes would reverberate long after the fluorescent lights were extinguished.