Real fear isn’t uploaded: Why social media screams are fake



When I woke up on Nov. 6, I knew I would see a lot of disappointed and angry people posting online. Still, the sheer volume of unhinged and hysterical videos surprised even me. Coming, as I do, from the Bosnia of the 1990s — an actual war-torn country where people, in fact, had reason to fear political outcomes — it is difficult to understand these posts as the activity of serious people. It is impossible to avoid secondhand embarrassment for those engaging in it.

Did you know that when people are actually scared, they don’t post videos of themselves screaming and threatening “the other side” for public consumption?

These contrived pieces of performance art are not products of fear. They are vile propaganda.

I was 17 during the first multiparty election in Bosnia. The media was already spreading fear prior to the election, and it became evident early on that the three nationalist ethnic parties were the favorites. I wasn’t eligible to vote at the time, but even if I had been, none of the three ethnic parties would have had a home for me, the child of a mixed marriage.

I don’t remember who won, but I do remember that when I woke up, there was neither a celebration nor an angry mob. Instead, there was a sudden shift. No one from the outside would have noticed it. People went to work. They went grocery shopping. The kids went to school. But there was an unbearable quiet. When fear settles over a town, it becomes quiet.

People don’t talk about fear. The conversations become shorter; the jokes are fewer. People become emotionally disengaged.

I remember there was no talk of anyone leaving because of the omnipresence of fear. They might mention in passing about going on a “short trip” to visit family, but most simply left, and most simply knew what was going on when this was mentioned. This is when I yielded to fear.

The weirdest thing I learned about fear is that it makes you act normal, maybe too normal. This kind of fear is not what people feel when their lives are in imminent danger and the threat is easy to recognize. Our bodies and our instincts are designed to deal with that kind of fear. But in the situation I describe, the very system designed to protect you from threats becomes a threat. Instinctively I knew I had to signal to the system that I was not a threat to those operating it. Opinions became too expensive and insults to myself or those I loved nonexistent.

In short, I became invisible, but that was easy. The harder part was that I couldn’t show my fear. Acting fearful is a threat in itself. I learned to measure my speech and my gestures. My answers were short and vague, and I was the smallest person in every room. Every interaction was exhausting.

The social media performance actresses need to learn something important: Anger is not fear. Disappointment is not fear. Openly threatening people is not what people do when they are in the grip of fear. In other words, they are not coping with fear. They are coping with the reality that they did not get their way. There’s a world of difference.

Disappointment is easy to understand, too, and people who have been indulged by a system that permits them to believe reality is something they can escape — that a man can be a woman; that we can live peacefully in a world without borders; that other people will work so that you can eat; that silence is the same thing as violence — these people are going to lack fully developed skills of communication and self-awareness. When confronted, as they always are, with reality, they will act out their frustration in ways that are not constructive.

Unmet emotional needs will also cause some people to seek validation from those who are screaming the loudest. But if you are setting up a camera to record yourself screaming and crying and then taking the time to edit and upload it, then you are not afraid. You are ignorant and self-indulgent.

Memes like those I am seeing on the bluest parts of my social media feeds include numbers for suicide prevention hotlines, women shaving their heads and vowing celibacy, and people pretending to seek escape routes from the country to which frightened people have been escaping to defy tyranny for centuries. These contrived pieces of performance art are not products of fear. They are ridiculous tantrums designed to provoke strong emotions and galvanize people for political purposes. They are vile propaganda.

Real fear, as I have experienced, is isolating and anonymous. In this digital age and in this largely (thank God) still free country, almost nothing is hidden or anonymous.

I am not impressed with the attempts to gaslight me into believing I am facing danger again.

Editor’s note: This article appeared originally at Chronicles: A Magazine of Culture.

Belgian man faked his own death, then showed up at his funeral in helicopter to teach family a 'life lesson'



A TikTok content creator played a prank on his family by faking his own death and showing up to his funeral. The Belgian prankster claimed that he intentionally deceived his family in order to teach them a "life lesson."

TikToker David Baerten, known as Ragnar le Fou on social media, pulled off the controversial stunt with the help of his wife and children. His immediate family notified people on social media that Baerten died.

According to The Times U.K., one of his daughters said on TikTok, "Rest in peace Daddy. I will never stop thinking about you. Why is life so unfair? Why you? You were going to be a grandfather, and you still had your whole life ahead of you. I love you! We love you! We will never forget you."

Last weekend, the family held a funeral near the city of Liege, Belgium. Dozens of friends and family attended the funeral dressed in all black. Suddenly, a helicopter swooped in and landed as people waited for the funeral to start.

The supposed "dead man" and a camera crew exited the helicopter.

"Cheers to you all, welcome to my funeral," Baerten told the mourners.

Baerten told the funeral attendees, "I did this to start my life again with you."

A man is seen on the viral video crying and hugging Baerten.

The 45-year-old social media influencer said he faked his own death because he felt his extended family neglected him.

"What I see in my family often hurts me," Baerten said. "I never get invited to anything. Nobody sees me. We all grew apart. I felt unappreciated. That’s why I wanted to give them a life lesson and show them that you shouldn’t wait until someone is dead to meet up with them."

Baerten noted that some friends and family didn't show up to his funeral, saying, "Only half of my family came to the funeral."

“That proves who really cares about me,” he said. “Those who didn’t come, did contact me to meet up. So in a way I did win.”

He added, "It's when we're alive that we need to hear these things."

Belgian TikToker rocks up to his own funeral in helicopter after faking death www.youtube.com

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Long Island waitress goes viral for throwing out older man trying to pick up 'underage girls'



A Long Island waitress with some serious moxie made headlines after throwing out a male patron for attempting to prey on "underage girls," she said, according to a report from the New York Post.

What are the details?

A waitress at a Long Island, New York, diner went viral after berating an older man who was reportedly trying to pick up "underage girls" by trying to give them his telephone number and repeatedly staring at them.

Louis Cozzolino, who shot the now-viral cellphone video footage, said that the waitress — identified as Sondra Albert — confronted the customer after witnesses said that he was making inappropriate remarks and repeatedly referred to his server as a "bitch."

Even after he was moved away from the young girls, Albert reportedly told the lone patron — who remains unnamed at the time of this reporting — to leave the premises because no other staff wanted to wait on him.

"He was being repeatedly rude, calling her a bitch," Cozzolino recalled. "Sondra is the nicest person ever and for her to get like that, I knew the guy was a prick."

In one of the videos, Albert can be heard telling the customer, "Honestly, nobody wants to wait on you, we're asking very nicely so please just leave. ... You're not going to call me a bitch, you're not going to sit near my boss' wife, you're not going to call people a lesbian — you sure as hell ain't going to look at underage girls."

The customer responded, "I don't want to look at underage girls."

“You’re a pedophile and freak and you deserve to be locked up in Bellevue," the waitress continued. "And that’s all I gotta say and I’m asking you nicely.”

According to the Post, Albert soon changed her tune and stopped asking nicely.

“I’ll kick your ass ... you don’t frighten me for one minute," she said. "The way you speak about people who are lesbians and young children. ... Oh, you’re so frigging full of s**t! Tell it to somebody who cares, you’re not wanted here."

The outlet reported that the customer left only after police were called — the customer then reportedly left of his own accord before the local department could arrive at the scene.

One witness — and regular patron — told the Post that he'd never seen anyone kicked out of the restaurant before.

“I often go to the Massapequa Diner and I’ve never seen anybody get shouted at or thrown out,” one man told the outlet. “I was just there the Saturday after Thanksgiving for a late-night meal and they couldn’t have been more friendly, even to all the inebriated customers who came in after a long night out.”

Gutsy NY diner waitress boots patron for creeping on ‘underaged girls | New York Postwww.youtube.com

Christian couple's 'rules' for a healthy marriage go viral on the internet, spark major backlash



A Christian couple is facing massive backlash after going viral for their restrictive rules for marital conduct, according to the New York Post.

What are the details?

Christian social media user Bailey McPherson made headlines Saturday after sharing a video on TikTok titled "Rules my husband and I have for our marriage that make people ANGRY."

Bailey, who is married to her husband Zac McPherson, revealed that there is a zero-tolerance policy for pornography and that neither she nor her husband are permitted to be alone with members of the opposite sex.

Other rules, according to the outlet, include "No friends with the opposite sex," "No texting the opposite sex without the other knowing," "No lusting after others (following scandalous pages)," and "Always put each other first (even over parents)."

At the time of this reporting, Bailey's video has been viewed more than 2.5 million times, and commenters flocked to her page in droves to leave nasty comments.

The comments were reportedly so fierce that Bailey was forced to disable comments beneath the video.

According to the report, commenters flooded Bailey's page with comments like, "Tell me you don't trust your partner without telling me you don't trust your partner" and branded the couple as "insecure" and "insane."

Another commenter thundered, "LMAO, the fact you think these rules will keep a person faithful shows how delusional you are. A person will do what they want to do."

@bmcpher

Part 1? 🤣🤷‍♀️ #marriage #marriagerules #husbandandwife #christianmarriage #momsoftiktok

What else?

In a later video, Bailey defended the couple on their stance on not having any friends of the opposite sex, saying, "I personally feel like as a married woman, I have no need for companionship with another man that I cannot get with my husband. My husband also has no need for a companionship with another woman that he cannot get from his wife."

Bailey also attacked pornography and said that the absence of the unhealthy outlet would create a "stronger intimacy in partnerships," as well as improved body image and emotional health.

Her second post — which also has disabled comments — has been viewed more than 969,000 times at the time of this reporting.

@bmcpher

Reply to @jmh.816 ask and you shall receive🤭 #marriage #marriagerules #husbandandwife #christianmarriage

Teacher goes viral for overly dramatic retelling of how she 'messed up’ and used the wrong pronouns for a student



A teacher made headlines after announcing how she dealt with inadvertently "mis-pronouning" a student who changed from she/her pronouns to them/they pronouns.

What are the details?

The Twitter account "Libs of TikTok" shared the video, captioning it, "This is what teachers are most concerned with[.]"

In the video, the unnamed teacher begins the story with an exaggerated groan.

"Guys. I messed up. I messed up," she groaned. "So, I had a kid on Monday they said their pronouns were she/her. Then on Wednesday, yesterday, they came to me and said, 'You know what? My pronouns are they/them. I want you and the class to use they/them.' OK, cool. Great. They come to class today. There's names on desks in groups for assigned seats. They can't find theirs because I guess my first class knocked it off. So I go to the class, 'Hey, is she in anyone's group? Does anyone see her name?'"

"It took me five minutes to realize what I did," she admitted. "So, someone asked a question yesterday, 'What do you do when you mess up?' Well, we all mess up. So what I did when they were sitting by themselves, I approached them and said 'I screwed up, didn't I?' And they said 'Yep!' And I said, 'I am so sorry. That is completely 100% my fault. I apologize. I will not get it wrong moving forward. Please know I heard you when you told me me your pronouns and I will get it right. That was totally my bad. I apologize.' So that's what you do: You own it; you apologize. They were happy that I came over to them, they were disappointed in me. I just saw the look of disappointment, and I was like so disappointed in myself."

"But we just get better," she concluded. "We learn, we grow, we get better, I will not F it up again."

At the time of this reporting, the video has been viewed more than 659,000 times.

This is what teachers are most concerned with https://t.co/YiErvgZCxn

— Libs of Tik Tok (@libsoftiktok) 1628188703.0