Outrage is letting someone else set the frame
The article traces how media mogul William Randolph Hearst weaponized outrage in the 1890s, publishing deliberately inflammatory stories to drive sales and manipulate public sentiment.
The article traces how media mogul William Randolph Hearst weaponized outrage in the 1890s, publishing deliberately inflammatory stories to drive sales and manipulate public sentiment.
The article argues that outrage culture allows others to control your emotional and intellectual frame, reducing complex issues to simplistic, reactive positions. It encourages stepping back from performative anger to reclaim agency and think independently.