From community meetings to comment threads to dinnertime debates—anger is everywhere.
Why? And why now?
America isn’t just frustrated.
We’re furious.
But this isn’t the kind of anger that drives progress.
It’s the kind that fractures families, poisons public life, and turns neighbors into enemies.
You hear it in public forums.
You see it online.
You feel it in headlines, in traffic, even in the checkout line.
But this rage didn’t just happen.
It’s being engineered.
By media companies chasing ad dollars
By social platforms wired to amplify outrage
By influencers who profit from division
By algorithms that know: if it enrages, it engages
What used to be “if it bleeds, it leads” has evolved into something more dangerous:
Anger is now monetized.
Disinformation isn’t a bug—it’s a business model.
Truth moves slow. Lies go viral.
We didn’t get here overnight.
Years of partisanship, distraction, and neglected critical thinking brought us here.
But we don’t have to stay here.
Anger doesn’t have to define us.
The real question isn’t why we’re angry.
It’s: What are we going to do about it?
Use these questions to spark conversations at home, in classrooms, or community groups. Tailor them to the age and experience of your group—but always come back to one principle: Anger without reflection leads nowhere.
We inherited a mission—not a finished product.
The Preamble laid out the work: justice, peace, defense, shared well-being, liberty—for all.
The Constitution is the tool to pursue that mission.
But tools only matter if we know what they’re for—and are willing to use them.
That’s where we come in. Thinking isn’t extra—it’s the engine.
We do better when we think. That’s the deal.