The Manipulation Behind a Cruel and Convenient Lie There is a quiet cruelty in accusing poor and marginalized people of being “capitalists.” It soun
The Manipulation Behind a Cruel and Convenient Lie
There is a quiet cruelty in accusing poor and marginalized people of being “capitalists.”
It sounds intellectual.
It sounds political.
It sounds bold.
But underneath, it is an old violence wearing new language.
Here are the manipulation tactics hiding inside it.
1. It erases material reality
It ignores:
empty refrigerators
unpaid bills
unsafe housing
bodies worn down by labor
nervous systems shaped by scarcity
And replaces all of that with a fantasy:
“You’re powerful.”
This is not analysis.
It is class erasure.
2. It turns survival into a moral crime
If a poor person:
wants stability
wants safety
wants ownership of their own time
wants rest
wants dignity
they are told this makes them greedy or corrupt.
Survival is reframed as sin.
That is not justice.
That is punishing people for wanting to live.
3. It relocates blame away from systems
Instead of examining:
corporations
policy
predatory housing
medical debt
wage theft
generational theft
the spotlight is aimed downward.
At the person already bent under weight.
This is moral displacement:
moving guilt from institutions to individuals.
4. It uses political language to do emotional harm
The vocabulary sounds sophisticated.
But the impact is simple:
Shame.
Confusion.
Silencing.
It makes people ask:
“Am I bad for wanting more than suffering?”
“Am I selfish for not wanting to die tired?”
This is ideological gaslighting.
5. It fractures solidarity on purpose
People who should be standing shoulder to shoulder are pushed to turn on each other.
Poor against poor.
Struggling against struggling.
While those with real power remain untouched.
Division is not an accident here.
It is the design.
6. It disguises contempt as “education”
The tone is often:
patronizing
scolding
superior
As if hunger needs a lecture.
As if exhaustion needs theory.
As if trauma needs correction.
That is not teaching.
That is contempt with a vocabulary list.
7. It trains people to accept less than human treatment
Once someone accepts:
“I am the problem,”
they will accept:
smaller rooms
smaller dreams
smaller safety
smaller lives
This is how people are made manageable.
Quiet.
Grateful for crumbs.
8. It is especially violent toward Black and historically targeted communities
For Black Americans, this accusation carries another layer:
A people who survived:
forced labor
stolen land
stolen wages
redlining
broken promises
are told they are “too capitalist” for wanting stability.
That is historical amnesia weaponized.
And it is cruel.
9. It confuses ownership with domination
Wanting:
a home
a savings account
a future for your children
protection from constant crisis
is not the same as exploiting others.
Conflating the two protects real exploiters.
10. It teaches people to mistrust their own hunger for dignity
This may be the deepest harm.
People begin to distrust their own instincts:
to rest
to build
to protect
to want safety
They learn to apologize for being human.
A grounded truth
Struggling people are not capitalists.
They are human beings navigating a system that was never designed to be gentle with them.
Wanting a life that does not hurt is not greed.
It is wisdom in the body.
It is memory.
It is the soul refusing to accept a cage just because it was painted with political words.

