A strange kind of poll keeps appearing on social media these days.
You’ve probably seen them — posts that ask “Who’s the real enemy of America?” and list options like “The Left,” “Islam,” “Russia,” or “China.”
They look like casual opinion games. They’re not.
These polls are part of a much larger pattern — the gamification of hate.
The Hidden Purpose
They’re not meant to measure public opinion.
They’re designed to shape it.
Every such poll forces people into a moral corner: either you’re “with us,” or you’re “against us.”
That binary framing isn’t about truth; it’s about loyalty.
And loyalty sells — to algorithms, to influencers, and to political machines that feed off division.
Accounts that post such content — like the “Ivanka Trump News” fan page that recently asked followers to pick America’s “most dangerous enemy” — know exactly what they’re doing. They trade outrage for reach.
Every comment, angry or supportive, boosts their visibility.
It’s emotional clickbait disguised as patriotism.
Manufactured Consensus
When thousands of people click an option that says “Democrats are America’s greatest threat” or “Islam is the problem,” it creates the illusion that such opinions are normal — even popular.
This is called manufacturing consensus.
The same trick has been used for decades in propaganda campaigns: repeat a false idea often enough, and it starts to feel like fact.
What It Destroys
The cost of this manipulation isn’t abstract.
It’s human.
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National Unity Erodes – When citizens start seeing other citizens as enemies, society loses its cohesion.
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Prejudice Becomes Normal – Religion and race become political fault lines again. Hate crimes follow words.
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Ignorance Becomes Power – Complex issues are replaced with slogans. Thoughtful disagreement gives way to blind rage.
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Algorithms Radicalize – Once you engage with one such poll, social media starts feeding you more of the same — harder, angrier, narrower.
The Real Enemy
It’s not Democrats.
Not Muslims.
Not even foreign rivals.
The real enemy is the mindset that profits from dividing people and calling it patriotism.
Every time we “vote” on such polls, we feed that system — one click at a time.
Maybe the smarter question isn’t “Who’s America’s biggest enemy?” but “Who benefits when we stop listening to each other?”
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