Optimism - A Personal Manifesto

Brady Hawkins March 6, 2026
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Why?

Coming out of the pandemic, we have been mostly divided. Angry at the world. The shared struggle that should have brought us together instead exposed our fractures. Right-wing populists are everywhere, attacking civil liberties: women’s rights, press freedom, climate action.

Social media warps our brains. It makes us lonely, competitive, performative. Teens are being hurt, even killed, by the monstrous insecurities these platforms create. Our words online aren’t ours—they’re a performance meant to convince someone else we’re thriving. But we’re not. We’re all struggling. We’re human.

This environment is shaping minds. Young men are blaming others—the individual, the opposite gender—for society’s failures. We fight a culture war while the real battle—the class war—is ignored. The people who own these platforms could eradicate hunger, yet they choose self-enrichment. They broadcast cruelty, amplify extremism, glorify hate. They are worse than any childhood villain, because this is real life.

And we turn to AI. Bored, lonely, seeking insight. The machine answers. It entertains. It teaches. But every click, every query, fuels the very systems that exploit us. Soon we won’t even trust what we see online—what’s real, what’s staged, what’s manipulated.

Streaming for the masses. Selling outrage. The death of experience. The revolution is monitored.

What now?

This is my way forward. A philosophy of optimism. Not naive hope—deliberate choice. A parent’s choice. Optimism is contagious.

Even in this fractured world, the individual can act. Optimism is a practice. It is a rebellion against despair.

Principles for living with optimism:

The world will remain messy, unfair, chaotic. But optimism is leverage. It reminds us why we exist: to be human, to care, to raise others, to build. Even in a world that rewards cruelty and spectacle, choosing optimism is revolutionary. It is choosing humanity.

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