These examples show Saad’s core warning: empathy without boundaries or brains turns a survival superpower into a self-destruct button. The smart move is to keep the heart but use your head first. Protect your own tribe, demand evidence, and never let guilt or virtue-signaling override reality.
1. California Soft-on-Crime Policies Theft under $950 is downgraded to a misdemeanor and repeat violent offenders are released early “compassionately.”
This is suicidal because it protects criminals over victims, leading to more crime, more deaths, and eroded public safety.
How to avoid it: Demand evidence-based laws that put victims first. Support politicians who restore real consequences such as jail time and restitution instead of excusing repeat offenders. Calibrate empathy for the innocent, not the predator.
2. Subway Attack Victim Refusing to Prosecute A woman is assaulted on the subway but won’t press charges because she doesn’t want to “send another Black man to jail.”
This is suicidal because misplaced empathy for the attacker leaves future victims unprotected.
How to avoid it: Teach that justice is not racism. Victims should always press charges, full stop. Society must back the rule of law over identity-based guilt. Protect the next potential victim with your brain, not your feelings.
3. Open Borders and Migrant Prioritization Billions in aid, housing, and benefits go to illegal migrants while American veterans and disaster victims wait in line.
This is suicidal because it strains resources, increases crime in some areas, and puts citizens’ safety and tax dollars behind non-citizens.
How to avoid it: Enforce borders first. Prioritize your own citizens such as veterans, homeless locals, and flood victims before unlimited strangers. Use reason: finite resources mean you must choose who gets helped, so choose the people who built and sustain the country.
4. British Grooming Gangs Authorities ignored or downplayed organized child sexual exploitation by certain immigrant groups to avoid “racism” accusations.
This is suicidal because empathy for the perpetrators and fear of offending their community sacrificed thousands of vulnerable British girls.
How to avoid it: Put children’s safety above political correctness. Report, investigate, and prosecute regardless of the offender’s background. Teach kids and officials that protecting the innocent is never racist, while ignoring evil is.
5. Trans Athletes in Women’s Sports Biological males are allowed to compete in women’s categories out of “inclusion” and empathy for gender dysphoria.
This is suicidal because it destroys fair play, women’s safety, and opportunities, trading biological reality for feelings.
How to avoid it: Stick to biology and evidence. Separate categories by sex, not “identity.” Show real empathy for girls who lose scholarships, medals, and safety, not for feelings that override science and fairness.
6. Luxury Housing for the Homeless California spends roughly $600,000 per “luxury” apartment unit for the unhoused while ignoring root causes like addiction and crime.
This is suicidal because it rewards dysfunction with taxpayer-funded comfort instead of enforcing rules that could actually help people recover.
How to avoid it: Treat homelessness as a behavioral and mental-health issue, not a housing shortage. Require treatment, sobriety, and accountability before free luxury units. Help the truly down-on-their-luck, but don’t subsidize chaos that hurts everyone.
The desire to make and keep things beautiful and create new things is unfortunately not within everyone. It’s an internal quality — a habit of mind and action that some people cultivate no matter their circumstances, while others let it atrophy even when they have every advantage.
There are pristine shanty homes and whole communities in Namibia where residents sweep the dust daily, plant what they can, and keep things orderly with whatever scraps they have. Yet there are mansions owned by messy hoarders in wealthy communities, buried under clutter and neglect. Pride in your surroundings and the effort to contribute time and energy are truly great qualities. It compounds.
It starts at home — with a clean counter, a tended garden, or fixing that one broken thing instead of ignoring it. From there it scales naturally to neighborhoods, cities, and even national symbols.
Real improvement isn’t top-down magic or endless funding. It’s millions of individuals simply choosing to put in the work.
The desire to make and keep things beautiful and create new things is unfortunately not within everyone. It’s an internal quality — a habit of mind and action that some people cultivate no matter their circumstances, while others let it atrophy even when they have every advantage.
There are pristine shanty homes and whole communities in Namibia where residents sweep the dust daily, plant what they can, and keep things orderly with whatever scraps they have. Yet there are mansions owned by messy hoarders in wealthy communities, buried under clutter and neglect.
Pride in your surroundings and the effort to contribute time and energy are truly great qualities. It compounds.
Start at home — with a clean counter, a tended garden, or fixing that one broken thing instead of ignoring it. From there it scales naturally to neighborhoods, cities, and even national symbols. Real improvement isn’t top-down magic or endless funding. It’s millions of individuals simply choosing to put in the work.
@SenSanders Hopefully the world gets the message, if you want redistribution of wealth don't move to America, it's designed for hard-working families that are self-reliant and only support their immediate communities.
@data_republican Stop pressurising them, its hard work working out how many more fake / coerced ballots they need to create and which nursing homes they need to visit in order to win.
You know you are now called "right wing" if:
- you want your party to beat the uniparty (winning is suddenly extreme)
- you want to buy a house without selling a kidney (owning a home is now extremist)
- you want to rent without queuing behind thousands of migrants (not competing with record migration is far-right)
- you want your wages to actually cover rent (sick of cost-of-living pain is officially right wing)
- you prefer honest leaders who listen (not being treated like an idiot is a right-wing fetish)
- you want to see people's faces in public (basic visibility is controversial now)
- you want kids learning maths not genders (rejecting gender theory is peak extremism)
- you want clean and safe streets (no tents, needles or chaos is right-wing)
- you want girls and women to be safe (female safety is a far-right dogwhistle)
- you put Australia First for local workers and tradies (prioritising your own country is radical nationalism)
- you want your suburb to still feel Australian (meat pies and beach vibe is a controversial hobby)
- you prefer policies that actually worked before (common sense is the most dangerous right-wing belief)
- you want the economy working for everyday Aussies not the laptop class (normal people winning is populism)
- you think pollies shouldn't get rich on fat pensions while you struggle (that's a right-wing conspiracy theory)
- you want fair elections that let outsiders in (open democracy is extreme)
- you want media reporting facts not elite narratives (demanding truth is radical right)
- you reject copying Europe's failed woke experiments (not wanting no-go zones is the most right-wing thing ever)
- you reckon NDIS and Aboriginal funding are rorted and not reaching those who need it (expecting value for money is peak far-right)
Thank you for inspiring this book.
I wrote it after living through the suspensions, board reprimands, public smears, and professional attacks that followed any attempt to offer patients safe, low-risk, off-label treatments—while institutions mounted an extraordinary, sustained effort to block physicians from even discussing or prescribing them.
The coordinated campaign to prevent these alternatives from reaching suffering patients, despite their established safety profiles, was nefarious. It prioritized narrative control over clinical judgment and human lives.
Science and medicine demand open inquiry, not enforced orthodoxy. I hope this copy prompts the honest reckoning our profession and future pandemics require.
Protecting girls and young women from organized rape and exploitation is a fundamental human obligation, not a "right-wing" stance. And the "culture of blindness, ignorance and prejudice" that led authorities to repeatedly shy away from the ethnicity of offenders—explicitly out of fear of appearing racist—is not just a policy error. It is inhumane.