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The lie you’ve been sold about your neighbor (and why it’s making someone else rich)

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Vishen and his children on their road trip in America
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I need to tell you about something that’s been breaking my heart.

Last summer, I took my kids, Hayden and Eve, on a two-week road trip across the heart of America. From South Dakota to Wyoming to Montana.

We fired guns at a range outside Cody. We camped in Yellowstone under stars so bright it felt like the sky was showing off. We sat at the famous Cody Rodeo while families around us waved American flags with a pride that made my chest tight with emotion.

The people we met were extraordinary.

At a local diner, the waitress gave us the warmest service and the best pie I’ve had in years. At the hotels we stayed in, we were treated with overwhelming kindness and sincerity.

I am not an American citizen. I was born in Malaysia. I run Mindvalley, an American company. But I’ve spent nearly three decades traveling across your country—from my college years in Michigan to speaking events in Florida; from tech conferences in San Francisco to quiet conversations in Ohio diners.

And here is what I know to be true:

The American people are not the problem.

The warmth I felt in Wyoming, I have felt in every corner of this nation. In so-called “red” America and so-called “blue” America. Among people who voted for Trump and people who voted for Biden. Among ranchers and professors, veterans and artists, churchgoers and skeptics.

Goodness is everywhere.

So why does it feel like you are at war with each other?

The rodeo speech that changed something in me

At the Cody Rodeo, the announcer stepped into the ring and gave a speech called “Why We Stand.”

He spoke of soldiers who never came home from Vietnam. From Iraq. From the beaches of Normandy. He spoke of sacrifice, of freedom, of a flag that represents something men and women were willing to die for.

The crowd went silent. Hats came off. Hands covered hearts.

And I thought: This is real. This love of country is real. This reverence is real.

These people are not hateful. These people are not ignorant. These people are not my enemies.

Then a second thought hit me hard:

Who the hell convinced Americans that they are enemies of each other?

I was manipulated too

I need to confess something.

For years, I consumed media that painted a certain picture of Trump supporters. I read the tweets. I watched the clips. I saw the worst moments replayed on loop until they seemed like the whole story.

I absorbed a caricature.

Then I went to Wyoming. And I met human beings.

They didn’t match the cartoon I’d been sold. Not even close. These were people worried about the same things everyone worries about:

Can I afford to get sick?
Will my children have a better life than I?
Why does it feel like the whole system is rigged against regular folks?

These aren’t Republican questions or Democratic questions. These are human questions. These are kitchen-table questions.

I realized I had allowed myself to see my fellow human beings as enemies—because it’s easier to hate a cartoon than to sit with complexity.

If I were manipulated, I suspect I’m not the only one.

The inclusion paradox

There is a hard question I had to ask myself—a question raised by philosopher Ken Wilber, whose course “Integral Life” is part of the Mindvalley curriculum.

He describes a strange paradox in our modern culture. We have a “leading edge” of society that prides itself on love, diversity, and inclusion. We fight for the environment. We fight for minorities. We fight for the oppressed.

But there is one group we often feel comfortable excluding.

Wilber calls this a “performative contradiction.” How can we claim to be the movement of diversity if we look down on half the country as “deplorables”?

We cannot claim to stand for “inclusion” if we hold contempt for diversity of thought.

If our tolerance stops the moment someone wears a red hat, it isn’t tolerance. It is just another form of tribalism wearing a nicer outfit.

We have to be better than that. True inclusivity means holding space even for those we vehemently disagree with, understanding that their pain is just as real as ours.

The machine that profits from your division

Here’s what I’ve come to believe.

There are forces that profit when Americans hate each other.

The equation is simple:

When you’re angry, you click. When you click, someone makes money.

When you’re afraid, you watch. When you watch, someone sells ads.

And when you are divided, you don’t notice that your wages haven’t kept pace with inflation while CEO pay has soared. You don’t notice that healthcare bankrupts half a million families a year. You don’t notice that the same corporations often fund both parties, ensuring they win no matter who is in the White House.

The platform owners know exactly what they’re doing.

A study from MIT found that falsehoods and outrage-driven content spread six times faster than the truth.

Internal Facebook files leaked in 2021 revealed that their algorithm privileged anger to such a degree that even Meta’s own engineers warned it was “ripping society apart.”

Ken Wilber calls this the “Culture of Post-Truth.”

It creates a state of “aperspectival madness”—where we lose our shared reality and retreat into warring tribes. When algorithms prioritize outrage over facts, truth vanishes. And when there is no truth, there is only power.

The division is not an accident. It is a business model.

And all of us—left and right, rural and urban, MAGA and progressive—we are the product being sold.

Then comes the second wave: The Bots.

A 2024 USC study analyzed online traffic during political flashpoints. What they found was chilling.

Nearly half of the most viral, toxic conversations weren’t coming from humans.

They were generated by bots. In some cases, bot activity spiked from 20% to 43% of the total conversation.

These weren’t Americans. These were automated scripts originating from Russia, Nigeria, Bangladesh, Pakistan, and Macedonia.

Think about that.

When you see a comment that makes your blood boil, when you rage at “the other side”—half the time, you aren’t fighting a fellow citizen. You are fighting a line of code from a server farm halfway across the world.

It is a foreign algorithm wearing the mask of your neighbor.

The bots are designed to make you hate each other. The actual Americans I’ve met just want the same things.

Something doesn’t add up

I’m not an economist. I’m not a policy expert.

But I’m someone who has built a life on questioning assumptions—what I call “brules,” the bullshit rules society programs into us without evidence.

In a “Post-Truth” world, b-rules thrive. They fill the void where facts used to be. So I decided to look at the actual data. And the reality I found didn’t match the stories I’d been told.

Here are four ideas worth reexamining.

1. On the economy

I always heard that one party was better for business, better for the stock market, better for jobs. It seemed obvious. Everyone repeated it.

Then I looked at the record.

Since 1933, the stock market has performed more than twice as well under Democratic presidents (NYU / Stock Market Historical Review).

Job creation has nearly doubled.

And 10 of the last 11 recessions began under Republican administrations.

I’m not sharing this to score political points. I’m saying: the story I was told was a “brule”. It didn’t match reality.

2. On immigration

I was told immigrants were driving crime and draining resources.

But study after study shows the opposite.

Texas—a state at the center of the immigration debate—found that native-born Americans commit violent crimes at nearly twice the rate of undocumented immigrants (Texas Dept. of Public Safety, 2024).

And in 2022 alone, undocumented immigrants paid $96.7 billion in taxes (ITEP, 2024).

They pay billions. They work in agriculture, construction, elder care, and childcare—industries that would collapse without them. Many can’t even claim refunds on the taxes they pay.

So if they’re not causing crime… and they’re not draining your taxes…

Why have we been taught to fear them?

Who benefits when we are afraid of the most vulnerable among us?

3. On healthcare: the freedom to fail

530,000.

That is the number of American families that go bankrupt every year due to medical bills.

In Canada: zero.
In Germany: zero.
In the U.K., France, Japan, Australia: virtually zero.

This isn’t because Americans are sicker. It’s because of policy choices made by people who benefit from the status quo.

But here is the brule we’ve been taught: safety nets make people lazy.

The data shows the exact opposite.

Countries with robust social safety nets—like Sweden, Norway, and Denmark—are hotbeds for entrepreneurship. Sweden produces more unicorn tech companies per capita than any region except Silicon Valley.

Why?

Because entrepreneurship requires risk. And risk requires security.

In America, “freedom” often means the freedom to fall through the cracks.

In social democracies, the government provides a trampoline.

When you don’t have to worry about losing your healthcare because you left your corporate job, you are free to be brave.

4. On the American dream: a personal warning

I was always told America has the highest upward mobility in the world—that this is the only place where anyone, from any background, can make it to the top.

It is a beautiful story. But I decided to look at the rankings.

The Global Social Mobility Index ranks countries on how easy it is for a person to start at zero and climb to the top.

The United States ranks 27th.

The top of the list? Denmark, Norway, Finland, Sweden.

The “American Dream” is now statistically more likely to happen in Scandinavia than in America.

So why do we resist the very policies that would fix this?

I believe it is because Americans have been manipulated into confusing “Social Democracy” with “Communism.”

And I need to make a distinction here that is deeply personal to me.

I am an entrepreneur. I love entrepreneurs. And I hate Communism with a fire that comes from my own blood.

The Estonian side of my family owned a farm on the Baltic island of Hiiumaa for hundreds of years. But when the Communists took control of Estonia in the 1940s, that legacy was shattered.

They sent a massive portion of the Estonian population to the gulags. My children’s great-grandparents were marched into a forest, lined up, and shot in the head. They were buried in unmarked graves.

Their sin? They were farmers who happened to own their own land.

This is a scar on my family’s history. That land was stolen, and it was only returned to us in the early 1990s when Estonia finally threw off the shackles of Communism and property ownership was legal again.

So you can imagine how I feel when I hear Americans screaming the word “Communism” at things that are clearly not Communism.

I know what Communism is. I know the smell of the graves it digs.

And I need you to know: A safety net is not Communism.

We need to understand the difference between three very different things:

  1. Communism: The government owns everything. They shoot you for owning a farm. (Think Soviet Estonia).
  2. Socialism: The government owns the means of production.
  3. Social Democracy: The government provides a floor so that capitalism can thrive. (Think modern Europe).

The tragedy is that by fearing the ghost of Communism, Americans have rejected the very systems that would make their capitalism stronger.

You can’t take big risks if the system is designed to crush you for stumbling.

When I look at my family’s history, I know that Communism destroys the human spirit. But I also know that unbridled capitalism, without a safety net, breaks the human body.

Real freedom requires a floor you can’t fall through.

The scripture I can’t stop thinking about

After Wyoming, I took Hayden to Ellis Island.

We stood at the base of the Statue of Liberty and read the famous inscription: “Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free…”

I thought about my own family—immigrants who came to Malaysia with nothing. I thought about the families at the rodeo, many of whose ancestors arrived the same way, chasing the same dream.

Then I remembered these words from Jesus:

“I was a stranger and you welcomed me.” (Matthew 25:35)

“Whatever you did for the least of these, you did for me.” (Matthew 25:40)

I’m not a theologian. But those verses haunted me on that island.

I started wondering: What would it mean to take them seriously—not as a political slogan, but as a genuine challenge to how we treat the desperate?

Christ didn’t say: Fear the foreigner. Blame the stranger. Build walls and turn the desperate into demons.

So how did so many good people of faith end up cheering for rhetoric that seems to contradict the teacher they follow?

I don’t ask this to judge. I ask because the contradiction breaks my heart.

The real enemies are not each other

If I could share one insight from an outsider looking in with love, it would be this:

The veteran in Wyoming and the activist in Oakland are not enemies. They are prisoners in the same cell, fighting over crumbs while the warden laughs.

The immigrant picking strawberries didn’t move your factory overseas.

The college student protesting injustice didn’t write the tax code that lets billionaires pay lower rates than nurses.

The single mother on food stamps didn’t create a healthcare system that charges $800 for insulin that costs $8 to make.

Your frustration is real.

But the target you’ve been given is wrong.

And while you are fighting your neighbor, the systems that squeeze you keep squeezing.

What I’m asking

I’m not asking you to change your vote.

I’m not asking you to abandon your values.

I’m not asking you to agree with me.

I’m asking something simpler:

Be suspicious of anyone who tells you to hate.

Be suspicious of the media that makes you angry every single day—because anger is profitable, and you are the product.

Be suspicious of leaders who need enemies more than they need solutions.

And ask yourself, honestly:

Is my life actually better under the policies I support?

Are my bills lower?

Is my healthcare more affordable?

Are my wages keeping up?

Do my children have more opportunity than I did?

If the answer is no, then maybe, just maybe, you’ve been convinced to fight the wrong battles.

I dream of an America that finally lives up to its own giant story.

That dream doesn’t belong to the left or the right.

It belongs to anyone willing to fight for it.

Not fight each other.

Fight for each other.

PS: If this article stirred something in you—agreement, discomfort, clarity, anything—leave a comment below. Honest dialogue is how we start healing what’s been broken. I’d love to hear your thoughts.

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Vishen is an award-winning entrepreneur, speaker, New York Times best-selling author, and founder and CEO of Mindvalley: a global education movement with millions of students worldwide. He is the creator of Mindvalley Quests, A-Fest, Mindvalley University, and various other platforms to help shape lives in the field of personal transformation. He has led Mindvalley to enter and train Fortune 500 companies, governments, the UN, and millions of people around the world. Vishen’s work in personal growth also extends to the public sector, as a speaker and activist working to evolve the core systems that influence our lives—including education, work culture, politics, and well-being.

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252 Responses

  1. Hi Vishen,
    Thank for this meaningful thoughts. This is the exact same question with which i try to lead my life everyday. Its easy to hate in return when you feel offended. But if we choose to look behind those who offend others, reject others … we see humans with their fear, beliefs and unfortunately very often manipulated by some. So instead if instead of fightîng against all this négativity we can fight for love and compassion. I choose everyday to believe that Love always win! Always 🙏🏾

  2. Thank you Vishen. Your article is so well written. Your thoughts and stats are so on point. This country was built on the propaganda (lies) that has grown to be more overt of late, in creating hatred, fear, and believing false promises. It’s sad, yet I’m grateful that someone not born in America, you, can articulate the problem and the solution so well. Given that others can acknowledge the same, our children, grandand great-great grandchildren may just have a good chance at a great future. Thank you for speaking up!

  3. Yes, to all of it. My next questions, who is keeping the search engines accountable for the data results? Who is a source of information that can be trusted?

  4. Yes! I am a resident of South Dakota. I love the Land here. This article is so Right On!!!! Critical Thinkers Unite!!!!

  5. Thank you for these insightful, loving and truth-telling thoughts. You have a voice and a powerful platform. Please keep this up! Please keep sharing the B-rules. United we stand. Divided we fall.

  6. Amen Vishen. As a Canadian entrepreneur doing business with Americans for 30 plus years, I support everything you shared. And in this toxic environment, proud that you did.

  7. Wow. What a message that Americans need right now. This is why traveling is SO IMPORTANT in America. Just as important if not more than education. This is a message you need to save and read twice. Vishen, you are a genius who knows how to deliver the message my friend! I’m using the Brules concept with my clients, (I’m an LPC) and it has been life changing for both them and me. Everyone needs to question these old ass frameworks we go by. WTF I’ve been uncovering so many of them. Thank you so much Vishen for Mindvalley and the work you do.
    Peace,

  8. I’m not an US citizen too, nor living in the US, but I deeply agree with you. Politicians and economic powers who blows on fear and hate are poisoning our wells.

  9. I really appreciate you taking the time to publish this article. I have been saying for a while that “I hate hate”. You are right that it is not just republican against democrat. The trick is, how do we get love to spread more than the hate? How do we come together to fight corporate injustices when we can’t stop fighting each other long enough to see the problem without letting our emotions play into it? Anyway, this article tugged at me because it is a repeat of thoughts I have been having for a long time but don’t have a platform to voice. Thank you, Vishen.

  10. a couple things:
    1) your kids so unimpressed. haha hope they enjoyed their trip
    2) it is intersting about the receission information. I think it would be good to see what the economy was like under the last party prior to the one where it happened. (if the ship is already sinking and a new captain takes over, can he really be at fault it sank?)
    3) I appreciate your thoughts. It’s nice to see something that reiterates loving everyone. Doesn’t mean we need to agree with everything they think or do. “Condemn the action, not the individual” has been skewed. Yet we can have better thoughts and actions towards each other.

  11. This is well written and living in Europe (but born in the US) this makes me so proud of you. You found the right words. Thank you.🙏🏻

  12. Wow. This gave me goosebumps.
    Your honesty and raw truth hit me in a way I didn’t expect. It takes courage to share thoughts this bold and this vulnerable, and you put words to things many of us feel but never say out loud.

    I’ve been walking through my own spiritual transformation recently, and the timing of finding this—within just two weeks of having these same revelations myself—doesn’t feel like coincidence. It feels like alignment. Confirmation. A mirror.

    Thank you for sharing what you learned and for giving voice to something so real and so rarely expressed.
    Your story made me pause, reflect, and say, “Yes… I’ve been there too.”

    Truly powerful piece.

  13. Well said, Vishen. I am a 58-year-old man born in Idaho. My great grandfather and his father were the sheriff in Jackson Hole, Wyoming. I married when I was 54 and have a 2.5-year-old son and 6-month-old daughter. My wife is from Georgia. I moved to LA to go to college and have spent the past 30 years in Hollywood financing films and television shows. So I was born in a deeply conservative state and the spent the past three decades in a deeply liberal state of California. I know both worlds well and I identify with both of them in different ways. I believe that both sides agree on the majority of the issues in private–what is right and wrong and what they want for themselves and their families. The last 8-9 years of my life have been an awakening to how just how much my views and beliefs have been shaped and manipulated by the internet, traditional media, and social media. I believe the next great challenge for humanity is learning how to step away from “the machine” that we are all manipulated by and to return to nature, community and working with our neighbors. It is my biggest concern as a parent–making sure my kids develop in a healthy and wholesome way–far away from the machine. It sounds so simple, but the machine follows us everywhere with our cellphones, watches and tablets. They can be be incredible tools for good and equally powerful for bad. It’s on all of us step away from them and towards each other now more than ever. Otherwise we are doomed to living in bondage, slaves to the algorithms that turn us against each other. So get out in nature and do something nice for a stranger, neighbor, or the guy who wears a hat or has a bumper sticker you don’t agree with–you might just accidentally get to know and like each other. As the old saying goes, be the change you wish to see and want for your children. Easier said than done as I type this on a blog made possible by the machine.

  14. This truly resonated with me. It’s so easy to hate, on some level it feels good to be part of a group that is against others, yet it lowers my energy so much and doesn’t feel good long term.

  15. “Be suspicious of anyone who tells you to hate.” That’s something we can all agree on. Love is the universal truth that connects all humans. Let’s all see each other as fellow humans with hearts who love, and not as members of whatever human-made political party, nation, club, etc.

  16. One of the most important messages that you have ever posted – thank you! There is amazing training offered through Mindvalley. It would be very, very cool to have a training designed to help an individual answer the question, “I am only one person … what can I do?”

    Thanks again for your message and the training and leadership that you provide.

    Go do Goodness!

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