Social media has become the magnifying glass on every social upheaval. The choice is whether it fuels democracy or destruction. And whether we let it, or not.
We hear a lot about internet “algorithms” pushing people into echo chambers rather th7an toward truth, logic, or reality. And I keep asking myself: why is this so hard to fix? Couldn’t Congress simply pass a law requiring platforms to guide people toward reality instead of reinforcing their biases?
Then I look at what they have done, and what they haven’t.
The Take It Down Act: Proof Congress Can Move
In May 2025, Congress passed and President Trump signed the Take It Down Act. The law was bipartisan and straightforward: it criminalizes the distribution of non-consensual intimate images, including deepfakes, and forces platforms to remove them within 48 hours of notice.
That’s meaningful. It’s real protection for victims of online exploitation. And it shows Congress can move quickly when there’s broad agreement about harm.
What It Doesn’t Do
Here’s the catch: the law’s scope is very narrow. It addresses one type of online abuse… “revenge porn” and deepfake sexual images. It does not touch the algorithms that drive conspiracy theories, political radicalization, or misinformation.
Why? Because the second you move from “intimate images” to “misinformation,” everything explodes into partisan fights and First Amendment debates. Who decides what’s real? What about political speech? What about corporate profit motives?
Algorithms Are the Real Problem
Social media platforms aren’t neutral bulletin boards. Their recommendation engines amplify outrage and division because outrage makes money. If you click on one partisan video, the algorithm serves you more, tightening the loop. Engagement equals profit.
The result is echo chambers that corrode democracy, where people live inside a 30 percent slice of facts surrounded by 70 percent spin.
Why Congress Won’t Fix It
Profit: Big Tech thrives on division. Regulation would hurt their bottom line.
Power: Movements like MaGA rely on these echo chambers. Leaders who benefit from them have no incentive to change the rules.
Politics: Regulating “truth” online runs straight into free speech fights, even when the speech is demonstrably false or manipulated. Donald Trump’s so-called ‘Truth Social’ and the ‘Truths’ he posts there are nothing more than an offensive front for ever more cruelty and lies, an affront to this nation and humanity at large in continuing his manufactured delusions as “reality” and “truth”.
So instead of confronting the deeper issue, Congress picks easier, narrower targets like intimate image abuse, where consensus is easier to find.
The Bigger Picture
The Take It Down Act proves one thing: Congress can legislate online behavior when it wants to. But it also proves how limited their appetite is for tackling the real forces warping our democracy.
Until we demand more, algorithms will keep steering millions away from truth and into self-designed echo boxes, while the people profiting off that distortion smile all the way to the bank.
Shame, Power, and Toxic Capitalism
Donald Trump’s MaGA-style autocratic personality cult has been engineered to mirror his own numbness to shame and his own psychological defects. Corporations are not built that way.
They fear lost profits, lost credibility, and lost talent. The task is to turn toxic capitalism against itself, forcing it to lean into its defects until it becomes more pro-social, more pro-people. Demand transparency, pressure advertisers, insist on accountability, and change will follow.
Change and Violence
We also have to recognize that big social changes often fuel violence. When those changes are illiberal or outright autocratic, the harm is not accidental…it is built into the change itself. Social media doesn’t just witness these upheavals, it amplifies them, concentrating their energy like a lens. That is why these companies cannot pretend neutrality. They are active participants in shaping whether change drives us toward democracy and connection, or toward chaos and destruction.
Social media companies, which now own the channels of that change, must understand they are the magnifying glass on an already blinding light, focusing its energy directly onto all of us. Simply deplatforming people doesn’t solve the deeper problem.
It treats the internet itself as the enemy, as if nothing more can be done. In reality, these platforms already have the tools to turn the volume up or down. The choice is whether they use that power only to enrich their own pockets, or to enrich all of us in our relationships with one another, with those companies, and with our democracy.
The Real Fight
The Take It Down Act was deliberately small, a tiny step, but an important crack in the wall of toxicity. The fight ahead is bigger: forcing social media to serve democracy, not just its own addiction.
Either we make these companies, and our government, feel the pain of their choices, until they realize that leaning toward us, not away, is good for them and for us, or we let them all keep profiting from our destruction.
In the end, that choice is ours.
Cheers! Sláinte! Na zdravie!
Compiled with aid of ChatGPT

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