TrueLife - Why Everyone Is Angry: Rage Bait, Political Violence & the Attention Economy (2025 Year in Review)
Episode Date: December 16, 2025One on One Video Call W/George https://tidycal.com/georgepmonty/60-minute-meetingSupport the show:https://www.paypal.me/Truelifepodcast?locale.x=en_USThe Lila Code: https://orcid.org/0009-00...08-4612-3942🚨🚨Curious about the future of psychedelics? Imagine if Alan Watts started a secret society with Ram Dass and Hunter S. Thompson… now open the door. Use Promocode TRUELIFE for Get 25% off monthly or 30% off the annual plan For the first yearhttps://www.district216.com/A reflective year-in-review episode from the True Life Podcast, recorded on December 16, 2025. Host George dives into the major events and themes of the year—from the Israel-Gaza conflict and global tensions, rising political violence and assassinations, class warfare, corporate home-buying, H-1B visa debates, to emerging trends in AI, health reform, and the longevity movement. He shares personal thoughts on division vs. unity, radical self-responsibility for health, predictions for 2026 (including a potential health reform wave on college campuses), and why rage bait is dominating attention. Ends with holiday well-wishes and an invitation for listener predictions. Aloha! One on One Video call W/George https://tidycal.com/georgepmonty/60-minute-meetingSupport the show:https://www.paypal.me/Truelifepodcast?locale.x=en_USCheck out our YouTube:https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLPzfOaFtA1hF8UhnuvOQnTgKcIYPI9Ni9&si=Jgg9ATGwzhzdmjkg
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Darkness struck, a gut-punched theft, sun ripped away, her health bereft.
I roar at the void.
This ain't just fate, a cosmic scam I spit my hate.
The games rigged tight, shadows deal, blood on their hands, I'll never kneel.
Yet in the rage, a crack ignites, occulted sparks cut through the nights.
The scars my key, hermetic and stark.
To see, to rise, I hunt in the dark.
fumbling, furious through ruins maze, lights my war cry, born from the blaze.
The poem is Angels with Rifles, The track, I Am Sorrow, I Am Lust by Codex Serafini.
Check out the entire song at the end of the cast.
Ladies and gentlemen, welcome back to the True Life podcast.
I hope you're all having a beautiful day.
It is December 16th right before the holidays.
I thought I'd jump in with a little year in review.
So much has been happening this year.
How are you guys feeling?
You ready for the new year?
You're ready for Christmas?
You got your Christmas tree up.
You got the lights on?
I hope so.
You do your shopping yet?
I hope so.
Wow, what a year, right?
What a year.
You know, the first thing that kind of jumps out me for this year is the whole Israel, Gaza, brink of world war, war with Iran.
Remember that?
Guys, remember that?
It wasn't that long ago, right?
I remember when I started seeing clips and videos on X, on Instagram, on TikTok, all over the news.
Like the massacre that was happening in Gaza.
You know, and it's not like we hadn't seen some of these tragedies before.
But it was different.
It was different.
You know, there were images of like children being shot in the back of the head.
There were images of total devastation.
You know, and that was on the Gaza side.
You know, and I don't want to leave out the attack that happened on the Israeli side.
I don't know that we ever got clarification on that.
A lot of people said that it was allowed to happen.
A lot of people said that it was a pre-planned attack that was helped by Iran, some mercenaries and some Palestinians.
You know, I guess there's a good question.
quote that says the first casualty of war is the truth and I think we saw that today or this year
we saw that this year in a way that man it really it really caused a lot of chaos and strife
you know especially here in the United States where we're already going through so much
political turmoil the year to start off as a banger right like to start off with so much
chaos so much loss of life so much tragedy you know and i don't i don't know for for you as my dear
listeners what you guys are feeling about it but to me man it was like a giant cluster fuck
for me as an american i started thinking why are we spending so much money why are we sending so
much money for this why are my tax dollars going to kill innocent people in a foreign nation that i don't
even know about you know i remember waking up and taking my daughter to school and just being so
thankful that you know i have people in my life that love me and we're not subjected to that
but on the other side of it man i look down at my daughter and you know you see these images on
x or instagram or ticot of some innocent family a child just being slaughtered i don't know what goes
through your mind but
man it's that kind of
pain and suffering that
causes generational trauma
it makes me
it makes me sad
I'm sure it makes you listening to this sad
and uh
so we go straight from
we go straight from Gaza and Israel
to uh
jumping into Iran remember then Iran
attacks Israel
they send over all their drones
and the the iron dome is fired
up and they're firing all these missiles and you know you got to see a few of these giant
Iranian missiles just obliterate towns in Israel it's interesting to see and I mean that in the
most compassionate way because I don't think me or you or anybody listening to this really wants
there to be destruction over there and it's so easy to to try and
You know, take the humanity out of it.
Like, when you watch it on TV, it doesn't even seem real.
You know, especially with all these video games that are out there now.
Or people are just killing each other left and right.
And, you know, you see that on a screen.
And then you're watching the news.
And then you see these missiles coming in,
people fleeing for their lives and people rioting in the streets.
It takes away from the real humanity of it.
And, yeah, that's.
That was just the beginning of the year, guys.
That was just the beginning of the year.
I think that that tension over there, the beginning of the year, really began to set precedence for what's happening in our country in the U.S. over here.
You started seeing all these protests over here.
And there was protests on the left and protest on the right.
You got the whole no king's protest going on.
I was driving my kid to school and going to.
to work and seeing all these people on bridges, seeing them on the street corner of holding up
signs like, don't buy a Tesla.
Elon Musk is horrible.
You know, and that drives me kind of crazy too to think that it's one person.
That drives me nuts.
To think that it's one person.
It's not Trump.
It's not Biden.
It's not Elon Musk.
Like that's too easy.
It's too easy.
If we could just get rid of this one person, everything would be better.
No.
No.
You know, as I'm looking back at the year in review, I see the same thing come up, this idea that it's like one boogeyman.
We can get rid of this guy then. Guess what? Everything will be better. No, it won't. No, it won't. Look, it's been getting worse for a long time.
You're talking about declining living standards over the last 30 years. You're seeing real inflation probably 20%. And beyond all that, there's an incredible,
demographic divide right i think there's something like 10,000 baby boomers retiring every single day
and being such a large class of individuals with you know holding a large majority of the wealth
of course buying habits are going to change of course life is going to change you know we're moving
away from a real dynamic community where everybody was in the workforce to a more
more geriatric community where, you know, people are living on fixed incomes. They are
settling down. They are looking to put their money in investments, you know, to make a small
percentage and live on a fixed income forever. And it's happened before. You know, we saw it in
Rome. We see it in other countries. We really saw it in Japan. They called it the lost
decade where there was a elderly class and still is and not enough young people to take care
of them.
So, you know, as we're looking back at this year in review, we can kind of take a look at other
parts of the world and, you know, they say history doesn't repeat, but it rhymes.
So if we can look at other sort of geographical areas that have the same demographics and
we'll use Japan for this, you know, it's plausible that we could have a lost decade.
And if I'm being honest about it, I don't see housing coming down anytime soon.
There's no way, especially with the addition of large corporations like Black Rock or Vanguard, buying up single family homes, buying up not only single family homes, but tracks, entire housing tracks.
Imagine this.
It's so fucking crazy.
Imagine this.
Imagine a large banking institution going and buying up.
you know, 700 homes in your community and then renting them back to people.
You know, and as we're talking about the year in review, I don't know if you guys remember this.
There was the Mangione, remember that kid?
That kid went and committed, he murdered one of the health CEO.
But after that assassination, there was another guy.
And I forgot this guy's name.
I'll look it up.
I'll try to put it in the show notes.
But he went into New York with a guy.
and he went to the 33rd floor of a big building in New York and he murdered a girl that was responsible.
I think it was Black Rock.
Don't quote me on that.
I think it was Black Rock, though.
He murdered the girl that was responsible for creating or spearheading that movement.
Now, it didn't get put in the news that much.
But if you look and you actually look for it, you could probably go and Google Black Rock or Vanguard woman killed a news.
York. And it'll tell you this story. And a lot of people say that that was a vigilante attack, you know, the same way Mangione attacked the United Health guy. And, you know, it would be remiss to not put that in the year of review. I think we're going to see, and this doesn't bring me any joy, but I think you're going to see more of that coming. I think that, you know, when there's nothing left to lose, people lose it. And I'm not suggesting any of you guys lose it. I'm trying to sit over here and.
Just give you the bird's eye view of how I see it and come up with some solutions of, you know, how to, how to how to how to how to make it through.
But if I'm if I pause right there for that beginning in the review, I'll go ahead and give some predictions.
Like I think you're going to see more of that.
I think you're going to see a lot more people that have lost everything and are going to start taking it out on society.
You know, and it's it's it's I see it everywhere like in the.
division there's all this division on on on the news or x or whatever in fact i heard recently
that rage the idea of rage bait the idea of rage videos of like these atrocities like this
fear porn is actually outpacing like the the actual porn industry so we're shifting
as a society from you know being attracted to you know certain modalities and it seems like rage
is the number one attention getter out there so if we see that as a trend i mean i think you can
expect more of it you know and if i if i just stay with this line for a minute like what else
happened this year but what comes to mind recently is how about that charlie the the
the charlie kirk shooting did you guys see that wow
Wow, here's a guy that is speaking to young people on college campuses.
And whether you like them or whether you hate them, the guy was touring a lot of campuses.
And he was really getting a message out there.
And I really think that if you want to make change in the world, you've got to start with the youth, right?
People that are already, that are already, I don't know, I don't know if I want to use the word successful.
or maybe people that are already far ahead in their careers,
they're not too focused on creating change.
You know, especially if you're doing all right.
You're like, hey, don't rock the boat, man.
We're doing okay over here.
We don't need all this hope and change, you know.
But to the youth, they see it completely different.
You know, if you're a young man or a young woman right now,
it looks pretty bleak.
Like, how are you going to afford a house?
How are you going to afford a family?
You know, how are you going to have any sort of social mobility
when you come out of college and you owe 100 grand or 50 grand and, you know, your degrees being
taken by AI. And we'll get into that. We'll get into that. But, you know, so Charlie Kirk's out there.
He's going to all these different campuses. He's getting his message out about, you know,
living a more wholesome life. I think part of his talking points at TP, a turning point were about
Christianity and religion and doing the right thing. And, you know, I didn't, I got to be honest.
I didn't listen to a whole lot of his speeches or whatever,
but I thought I understood the crux of what he was saying
in that he wanted a better life for the youth, at least in his view.
That's what it seemed like.
He's a family guy.
He's out there.
And I think he toured like hundreds of different campuses.
So that's really how you get a message out there.
But a lot of people didn't like his message, did they?
a lot of people didn't like what he was saying maybe it was construed as racism maybe it was construed as hate speech you know and he had a lot of provocative takes but what does it say in a society when someone goes out and starts talking and they get murdered especially in public especially at a college campus i'm old enough to to remember um coming up on 50 so
I wasn't there for the MLK or some of these other political assassinations or the JFK or the RFK, but I'll tell you what, this kind of looks a lot like it, right?
You know, if we take out the judgment of it, we take out the why it happened, and we just see it as an event that happened, it's pretty horrendous.
What does that make you think of in society right now?
what does it mean when a society is willing to commit murder on people going out and using their freedom of speech well i think it makes people pretty nervous to go out there and start talking i think it makes people pretty nervous to go out there and say what's on their mind so i guess you know there's there's been a wave of those right if we take the mangione we take the girl from black rock and we take charlie kirk out there there's been a wave of uh assassination
happening. Pretty interesting to see the United States. And, um, kind of sad, in my opinion. You know,
I think that we need people out there speaking their mind in a way that it's not divisive,
but brings people together. I think so much the division we see out there isn't really between
races or classes. It's, okay, it's not between, it's made out to be. It's made out to be,
between men and women, gay and straight, or black versus white, or Indian versus Asian, whatever these sort of divisions are, I think they mask a bigger division. And that division is class warfare. You know, there's more billionaires and trillionaires than there ever has been right now. There's a great book by Thomas Pickety called Capital. And in that book, Thomas Pickety goes back and he talks about capital.
you know, the ability to have resources.
And he talks about the nature of capital.
And in that book, he describes that the middle class is something that is pretty rare.
In fact, it's a blip.
When you look at the history of mankind, the middle class is like a tiny little blip.
And that capital is something that coagulates at the top and leaves the bottom.
so when you look at other societies like take india for example there's really really wealthy people
and there's really really poor people and that is the according to thomas pickety that's the norm
for society that's the norm for capital and you can go back to like kings and queens and
you know if you look back at a time when there was a lot of royalty that is how it was there was
really wealthy people that owned all the land and then there was really poor people that worked on the
land and they gave their proceeds and the money to the lords and the barons and all that
kind of good stuff and uh i think you can make an argument that that's sort of coming back
according to thomas pickety you're going to see a resurgence of that and i would argue that
you know we're kind of seeing it now some of these uh let's take sam altman for example
here's a guy that has created chat gpt which probably all of us use and it's made
him incredibly wealthy, right?
In fact, when you read some of Sam Altman's writings where you listen to some of his
interviews, it seems to me, and this is just my opinion, he's more concerned with being
the guy that gave birth to AI than he is about creating something beautiful for everybody.
And maybe that's part of it.
Maybe you don't get to be at his level without that sort of giant ego of like, I am going
to change the world.
We saw it with Steve Jobs or you could argue you see it with Elon or Sam Altman or Jeff
Bezos or Mark Zuckerberg.
But regardless of what you think, it seems to me that these are the new kings and queens
of the world right now.
You know, you see some of their boats, man.
They look like aircraft carriers.
Imagine being a guy and owning an aircraft carry and you just sail that thing around.
Same, these guys are all building underground bunkers and man, what a different dimension to live in, right?
But when I think about that, it's like, okay, man, how do you, is it possible, and I'm just going to throw this out here, is it possible that the more wealth that someone has, the less wealth someone else has to have, does that make sense?
For every person that makes a dollar that doesn't deserve it, that means somebody has to work for a dollar and not get it.
I don't know if that's 100% true, but I kind of lean towards that sometimes.
I'm not against people going out there and hustling and making your dream come true.
I'm one of them, man.
I want my dreams to come true.
And I'm willing to work hard and sacrifice and do all the things I need to do in order to make that dream come true.
So it's not so much a hate on wealthy people.
But I do think that what we're seeing right now is a not so much between men and women, white and black, races, but it's a clear socioeconomic divide.
It's class warfare.
And we see it with, here's what else happened this year, too.
I know there was a big, a big sort of a hub of about H-1B visas and immigration, right?
That was big this year.
You guys remember those fights?
If you tune in and you watch some of these young guns coming up, that was some of their talking points was like, hey, man, you know, why are we importing all these H-1B visas when we have kids graduating right here from the United States that have that same degree?
And when you start digging into it, you realize that if someone has an H-1B visa, then their ability to stay in the United States is contingent on them working for this company.
It's almost like an indentured servant.
And think about it.
If you are someone that has freedom and you can go anywhere, you know, you are probably not going to work as hard as someone who's dependency to stay here is based on their performance at work.
you know and i don't i don't know if that's a good policy man you know i don't uh i don't know if we
want to be indentured servants i don't think that helps anybody's kids come through you know so
something to think about so that's the first part and some predictions on the beginning of the
year let's see what we got else coming up um what else happened this year guys
politics man we talked a little bit about politics
Charlie Kirk the culture wars
how about this one
how about like the great psychological shift
I've been noticing this one too
I talk to a lot of people in the wellness industry
in the health industry
and it seems that we are moving towards
and this could be a good one guys
I think that everybody could get behind this
the idea of health reform
now if you're like me
you've had people in your family die from an overdose.
You've had people in your family get cancer.
You've had people in your family worry about going to the hospital because they can't afford it.
And I think that that is something that people are fed up about.
And I think it's something that everybody could get behind is this idea of health reform.
And here's some of the people I've been talking to have, I've noticed this sort of Ariadne-thread that runs through
all of the wellness industry and I like it I like it a lot I hope you do too it's this idea of
radical self responsibility right you and you alone are responsible for your health now I'm not saying
you might not get in an accident or you may have some internal injury like those are things that
might be beyond your control and I am grateful that we have doctors and nurses and wellness
practitioners that can help us get through those difficult times my heart goes out to all
of them. There's some amazing people out there. Some surgeons, everybody trying to make everyone
healthy. But what I'm talking about is preventive care. Like you as an individual, what if you really
took your health very seriously? What if you monitored what you ate every day? What if the first
thing you did every morning was get up and do some push-ups or go for a run or sit and meditate
for a little bit? And if you could string all of those things together, you know, what would your
health look like. I bet you'd have to go to the doctor less. I bet you'd have less anxiety. I
bet you'd have less depression. I guess what dovetails with that. If you can string together
that aspect of radical responsibility, you know, let's factor in screen time too, right?
How many of us, you know, this year with this new AI models coming out, all these chat GPTs and these
grocs and these incredible resources, these incredible tools that allow you to talk to what
seems like the smartest person in the world.
And they have some pretty good advice, right?
Like, you can ask them about a business plan.
You can ask them about writing a paper.
You could ask them about some family problems or, you know, even get some pretty good counseling
from some of these LLMs.
So I think that that is the next aspect, you know, and as far as prediction, you know, as far as
predictions for health reform
I really think that this is something
we can all galvanize behind
I've talked to quite a few people
and in fact you know what
it might be it might be worthwhile
too
and I'll even throw this out as a prediction
I think we're going to see
instead of the Charlie Kirk's going out there
and talking to college campuses
I think it would be better to see like a health
reform because that's something everybody
can get behind and that's more uniting
than dividing
And that's my prediction of our 2026 is that on college campuses we're going to begin seeing the, hopefully, the idea of uniting language instead of dividing language.
Because if we continue to divide ourselves this way, and trust me, there's tons of people out there that are preaching the lessons of division.
But I think everybody's getting tired of it.
I think everyone's getting sick of it.
And I think you're going to see a wave of sort of creative rebellion, you know, not so much against each other as it is against the ruling class.
You know, back to that idea of class warfare.
And I think it's going to start on college campuses.
And I think that health reform would be a great way to start that.
Because all of us care about our parents.
All of us care about our aging elders out there.
And instead of being upset with them for some mistakes that they've made or being upset that, you know, they hold all the wealth, you know, they're going to need the younger generation to take care of them.
And so I hope so.
My prediction for health reform 2026 is that we're going to start seeing people come together over this issue.
I don't know if it'll fully come to fruition in 2026, but I think we're going to start seeing it out there.
you know there's too much anxiety too much depression and i think that it probably get a little worse
before it gets better but i think you're going to start seeing the the older communities realize they
need the youth and some of the youth realizing that you know they're going to miss their parents
they're going to miss their grandparents and so that's my predictions for for the 2026 over there
I mentioned a little bit about AI.
Let me talk a little bit more about AI tech
and the consensus reality, you know.
So we all know that like AI didn't arrive this year.
But it's been something that we've all been toying with
for the last year and it's really hit home.
We saw some people use AI.
And some of the stories in AI this year were
people using it as like a like a...
I don't know, like a counselor or a therapist.
And there were a few stories of people that talked about AI and some people actually committed suicide because of what AI told them.
And those were really big.
And they're sad and they're wrong.
And the AI company should be held responsible for that aspect of it.
However, however, how many people did AI help?
You know, it's interesting that we say, hey, look, these five people committed suicide because of the AI.
AI. But how many people didn't commit suicide because of AI? How many people used AI to get themselves out of a funk? How many people use chat GPT or grok to solve an actual relationship problem that they couldn't afford to go to a therapist and talk about? I think that that's a pretty interesting question too, because if we do use AI as a tool and we realize it's not conscious, but it is providing us with different avenues.
of thinking, of different avenues
of understanding
a situation that is imperceptible
to us, then
I think we can see it as a net positive.
It is a net positive.
There definitely should be
some more rules around it.
Maybe there should be
some narrow AI.
Are you guys familiar with this term narrow AI?
So narrow AI is AI
that only knows or has walls
around it.
So a narrow AI could teach you how to be a truck driver.
A narrow AI could teach you how to be an English teacher.
But it would only be trained on information in those fields.
Instead of knowing everything, it would be a narrow AI.
So instead of a giant wide beam, think of like a small focus laser beam.
So my predictions for AI in the future are going to be more narrow AI,
targeted towards different demographics, targeted towards different age groups,
targeted towards different sort of professions
and I think that will get us away from some of the
consequences that people might be using it.
Here's another one that I got into this year.
It's the whole anti-aging longevity crowd.
Guys, man, I had some podcast this year where I was talking to people.
I don't know if you guys follow this whole living for everything,
But there was this cat named Brian Johnson, and he's like a billionaire, tech brogue billionaire.
And he's got this whole thing called The Blueprint where he wants to live forever.
And to me, that's a sign of collapse, guys.
That is a sign of just the fountain of youth, magic beans.
Like, you're not going to live forever, man.
And to see all these billionaires like Peter Thiel and Brian Johnson and the leader,
the X-Prize. They're just pumping all this money into living forever. And to me, it just
sounds like a giant fire hose of bullshit. Like, if you believe you, if you believe you're going
to live forever, man, I'm a little jealous that you would be that naive. But yeah, so I got into it
with a few people. I had on Aubrey de Grey. Aubrey de Grey is a, he's a science. He's an incredible
guy from Oxford who's been doing research on on anti-aging and and you know longevity and I thought
we were going to go head to head but you know I asked them straight up like hey do you what is your
take on this living forever crowd because I personally ladies and gentlemen I am for everyone
living well longer like I want our aging elders to have a better life later in their life I want
to have a better life as I grow older I want to try to steer away
from cognitive decline.
And I hope nobody has to go through that as a family member or that aspect of it.
So I'm for living well longer.
However, I draw the line at living forever.
So I asked him that question.
And it was pretty beautiful because he's like, no, no, you're not going to live forever.
That's a bunch of bullshit.
That is just sensational journalism.
And so we went on to have a really cool conversation about some of the new technology about living
forever and you know what it's like to you know maybe some of these new novel peptides coming
out or you know he's doing some pretty interesting experiments with mice and telomures and
all these sort of anti-aging technologies that are on the surface but they are not to live forever
they are to make the last years of your life live better but my predictions for longevity
ladies and gentlemen is that you're going to see lots and lots more of this little
forever crowd that are telling you you can live forever if you just buy their subscription model
and uh you know i i think it feeds into that whole class warfare that i was talking about earlier
so those are the few things i got i'm going to do a few more sections on this uh as the as we come
to the end of the year but i'm just trying to recap the uh the year in review give a few predictions
out there christmas time is coming up new year's is coming up so super grateful for everybody
hanging out with me all year this is the true life podcast uh thanks for hanging out with me ladies
and gentlemen i hope you have a beautiful day think about the year and review and let me know what
some of your predictions are i would love to read them on the air i would love to hear what you guys
are thinking so drop me a line at uh george p monte gmail dot com or just google true life podcast
you'll find me everywhere hope you guys have a beautiful day that's all we got hello
Thank you.
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So, no.
Oh.
So, yeah, da, da, da, da, da, da, da, da, da, da, da, da, da, da.
