this post was submitted on 12 Jun 2026
70 points (100.0% liked)

askchapo

23278 readers
72 users here now

Ask Hexbear is the place to ask and answer ~~thought-provoking~~ questions.

Rules:

  1. Posts must ask a question.

  2. If the question asked is serious, answer seriously.

  3. Questions where you want to learn more about socialism are allowed, but questions in bad faith are not.

  4. Try !feedback@hexbear.net if you're having questions about regarding moderation, site policy, the site itself, development, volunteering or the mod team.

founded 5 years ago
MODERATORS
 

I think I've asked this before a long time ago.

One of my paranoid tinfoil hat theories is that I think cringe culture was pushed by algorithms and has now has become a convenient tool for the right to groom people into policing 'otherness' more harshly. I think it's because it has that particular right-wing playbook stank to it and because I can smell that style of using shame to manipulate that right-wingers love from a mile away. Hell, this site came from a part of the left that was originally a reaction to that, using bullying but instead using it to punch back at the punchers, so to speak (although we've changed a little and good, it's not needed anymore because everyone bullies chuds now).

Cringe culture was big around 2016ish, while it mostly targeted blue hair liberals it often extended to making fun of whatever marginalized group you can think of.

It was always there, of course, but not enough to actually be taken seriously unless you had high-school bully brain. Anyone that wasn't a chud or too tech illiterate to curate their algorithm tended to lose interest. Fast forward to the 20s' and now instead of targeting specific marginalized groups or political stuff, there is a more widespread sort of bullying towards any sort of 'otherness'. Strong emotions, being passionate, being too quirky, looking out of place, being too young, being too old. Being too much of well, anything. Let's just say it's not a fun time to be neurodiverengent in particular.

So we know from those files that Gamergate (and I think some Chan spaces?) were involved with promoting right-wing idiology. Well, sure is interesting that after people started posting about the Israel genocide on tiktok, the US freaked out and took control. And now we see a massive resurgence of cringe culture, again. Alongside with other right-wing garbage (think manosphere and so on)

Of course, it's always been there and is likely just a totally organic consequence of people growing up with social media and the digital panopticon. But notice how everything that is cringe fits neatly into what the right think the left is? I wouldn't be surprised if we learn in a decade or so that all of this was at least taken advantage of by the right as a form of social policing, a way to undo all that pesky self acceptance and understanding the lgbtq community and other marginalised groups worked so hard to normalise. It's a way to punish outgroups while getting under the libs "safe to make fun of" radar (and many leftists too, you are not immune!) Seems like a good way for the right to bring back that repressive order they love so much and make everyone afraid to step out of their assigned role again.

you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] BanMeFromPosting@hexbear.net 10 points 20 hours ago* (last edited 19 hours ago)

Trevor Moore was thrown off that balcony by the CIA.

Kirk got merked by the CIA.

JFK got merked by the CIA, Poppy and Johnson.

The Doors was a psy-op by the CIA to make us enjoy the ramblings of an annoying drunkard.

COVID was a US bioweapon.

The Vegas shooting was an op or something. Very weird.

The protests in Iran were coopted by the CIA.

Pizzagate sort of.

The elite eats babies.

9/11.

Euromaidan was kicked off by the CIA.

The wave of serial killers that plagued the US in the '70s was either a side-effect from a series of CIA ops like MK-ULTRA or an explicit op to make Americans more fearful, distrustful of each other and more likely to support conservative "tough on crime" politicians.

LSD and large part of the new age hippie movement was CIA.

Large parts of "anti-conspiracy-thought" is due to a prevailing cultural narrative created by the CIA. A lot of explanations to conspiracies are made so you can feel super clever about "figuring it out" without ever looking any deeper into the thing itself. For example: JFK was actually shot on accident by a secret service agent. Teehee so clever, youre not a rube at all!
This is created through a multi-prong approach.

  • Create wacky conspiracies like Flat Earth and Chemtrails so as to be able to lump all into one ridiculous group.
  • Foster deranged racist online forums, so conspiracies become a field exclusively held by Nazis, thus making it more taboo (this has the extra effect of making the right wing more legitimate when conspiracies must be admitted by the popular culture).
  • Spread out easy "debunks" that dont actually deal with the case material. (Pizzagate cannot be real because the pizza Place doesnt even have a basement. No need to look anymore into elite child trafficking rings.)
  • Create explanations like the JFK one for those that feel the need to know more than the average person. These explanations need to be funny stories that allow one to dismiss further introspection, thus creating further separation between "conspiracy theorists" and "real people".

I'll write more as i think of them.