Fear and Politics: People Who Are Afraid Tend to Make Poor Decisions.

by | Feb 16, 2026 | Opinions & Commentary

Photo by Matthew Osborn, Unsplash

Fear and Politics: People Who Are Afraid Tend to Make Poor Decisions.

by | Feb 16, 2026 | Opinions & Commentary

Photo by Matthew Osborn, Unsplash

A lot of bad decisions based on fear brought us to this juncture of being faced with America's first dictator with his own secret police. This year we get to fix it.

Something I wrote 10 years ago on Facebook when Trump’s campaign was off and running, before the 2016 primaries, brought up a fact that needs to be punched up:

People who are afraid and angry tend to make poor decisions.

Trump continually harps on “they” and “them” as a class of people we have to be afraid of and that only he can protect us from them. Who are they? Now it has become pretty clear that “they” are anyone he and his associates are interested in excluding from society. We are supposed to believe his every utterance that “they: are rapists, murderers, the eaters of beloved pets. Somehow we are supposed to adopt the idea that these people are less than human, not worthy, erasable. We’re not supposed to care if they get illegally deported, shipped to countries they have never been to or outright murdered.

To adopt these ideas is to forsake one’s own humanity, one’s honor and trust in one’s own power of observation. That’s what the fear is supposed to do. Bad decisions are those that benefit the least of not just ourselves but those around us in the world. And those are precisely the decisions demanded by Trump and his ilk.

Racism itself is based on fear. The new racism promoted by fear-promoting candidates is against “immigrants.” We’re supposed to be afraid of immigrants according to Trump, Noem, Bondi, Vance and others.

But what the hell are we but a nation of immigrants. I’m an immigrant. Born in Vienna, naturalized as an American citizen when I was 7.

People in fear make bad decisions.

Another politician in Europe promoted fear of “others” in his rise to power in the 1930s. This creep blamed a lot of “they’s” and “them’s” too. “They” to him were behind all the troubles that beset his country—completely ignoring his country’s history of attempted conquests and colonial criminality.

The people he blamed were Jews. We know the result of that hate campaign. So why give any credence to a single current political speaker who parallels this insanity?

The true fact of the matter is that there is only one race. It is called human. Skin color, country of origin, language, religion and a host of other differences matter not at all. These are artificial distinctions promoted to generate fear and the hope of fanning that fear into anger and actions benefiting the promoter.

People in fear make bad decisions. Those decisions may amount to buying something you don’t need. Or voting for someone who is backed by a corporation who wants to sell you something you don’t want or need—like a war, more oil or more drugged children. Or tearing down nearly 250 years of Democracy in favor of a fascism that seeks to benefit only one person.

Think about this when you hear the messages that are designed to make you afraid or angry as the Primaries and the Midterms approach us. 

The thing that fear mongers don’t realize is that we don’t have to be afraid. We don’t have to be angry. We have to be something very different: resolute. We can simply recognize the attempts as failed manipulations.

Another reality check is that those who push fear as a method of handling and managing others are more afraid than anyone. What scares the crap out of them is when their messages fall on deaf ears and unflinching responses or scathing contempt.

Trump is calling for Republicans to take over elections at a national level. That’s not going to happen for a variety of reasons including the minor detail that it directly violates the Constitution he and every member of the government swore an oath to uphold. But his effort in this direction telegraphs his fear—justified—of the electorate.

You all know what to do when this year’s election cycles arrive. We stand up, resolute, unflinching and vote down every one of these traitors.

Marty Kassowitz

Marty Kassowitz

Marty Kassowitz is co-founder of Factkeepers. As founder of Interest Factory and View360, he brings more than 30 years experience in effective online communications, social media management, and platform development to the site. He is a writer, designer, editor and long time observer of the ill-logic demonstrated by too many members of the species known as Mankind. After a long history of somewhat private commentary on a subject he totally hates: politics, Marty was encouraged to build this site and put up his own analyses as well as curate relevant content from other sources.

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