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Rotten to the core

Andrew Tate Said One Intelligent Thing. It Doesn't Make Him a Good Person

Andrew Tate said one intelligent thing. Big deal. It doesn't make him a good person, it just highlights how low the bar is for someone so profoundly rotten. Let's remove his influence before it buries more lives.

Andrew Tate
Andrew Tate

In a sea of toxic rants and predatory bluster, Andrew Tate, the self-proclaimed alpha male guru who's built an empire on misogyny and manipulation, managed to utter one halfway intelligent sentence. He claimed that if disaffected men could just secure a girlfriend and a house, they'd stop scapegoating Jews for their woes.

It's a rare glimmer of insight from a man whose worldview is otherwise a dumpster fire of hate and entitlement. But let's be crystal clear: One semi-coherent observation doesn't erase the mountain of vile garbage he's spewed, nor does it make him anything close to redeemable. Tate isn't a misunderstood philosopher; he's a dangerous charlatan peddling poison to vulnerable young men, and it's high time we stop giving him oxygen.

First, credit where it's due and it's minimal. Tate's quip touches on a real societal ill: the way economic insecurity and personal isolation fuel conspiracy theories and bigotry. Antisemitism thrives in echo chambers of resentment, where lonely, frustrated individuals latch onto easy villains like "the Jews" to explain their failures. If more people had stable homes and healthy relationships, perhaps fewer would spiral into hate-fueled delusions. It's a basic truth rooted in psychology and sociology, one that experts have echoed for years.

But coming from Tate? It's like a broken clock being right twice a day, accidental, unearned, and utterly overshadowed by the rot surrounding it.

Now, the fierce takedown this fraud deserves. Tate's "empire" is built on degrading women, treating them as conquests to be manipulated, controlled, and discarded. He's bragged about running webcam schemes that exploited vulnerable women, advocated for physical and emotional abuse under the guise of "masculinity," and dismissed rape allegations against him as mere inconveniences.

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His "Hustler's University" isn't education; it's indoctrination into a cult of toxicity, where he teaches impressionable boys that real men dominate through coercion and deceit. Horrific? That's an understatement. Tate's rhetoric has inspired real-world harm, incels radicalized by his bile, relationships shattered by his "advice," and a generation of young men poisoned against equality and empathy.

And let's not forget his other "concerning statements." Tate's Islamophobic tirades, his flirtations with far-right extremism, and his shameless grifting reveal a man devoid of principles, chasing clout and cash at any cost. He's been banned from platforms for hate speech, arrested on human trafficking charges (which he denies, of course), and yet he postures as a victim of "the matrix."

Spare us. This isn't free speech (although he wants you to think it is); it's predatory propaganda that preys on insecurity to line his pockets. One anti-antisemitic aside doesn't wash away the blood on his hands from promoting violence against women or fanning flames of division elsewhere.

Society doesn't need Tate's half-baked wisdom. We need to dismantle the systems that breed the resentment he exploits, affordable housing, mental health support, and education that counters hate. But glorifying a monster like him, even for a single "good" quote, risks normalizing his filth. He's not a role model; he's a warning.

Young men: Skip the Tate playbook. Build real relationships based on respect, not domination. Fight antisemitism through facts and solidarity, not accidental soundbites from a misogynist thug.

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