The World’s Richest Men Are Killing the World’s Poorest Children
They have it all, and still want what’s in your lunchbox.
What do you do when you already have everything? Apparently, if you're Donald Trump, you accept a $400 million private jet from Qatar, an unnecessary luxury sourced from a foreign country whose loyalties shift with the wind of money. His greed is so vast that he eagerly accepts gifts from foreign entities with questionable ties, even if it means alienating his most steadfast allies. In the words of Fox News, “If you've lost Loomer, you've lost the plot.”
But let’s be honest about what we’re watching. This isn’t strategy— it’s sickness. Accepting this absurd PJ isn’t a show of dominance, it’s a cry for relevance. It’s what happens when your identity is so brittle, your ego so hungry, that you light the world on fire just to watch your own reflection in the flames. Imagine being so empty that destruction is the only way you can feel alive. That’s not power. That’s pathology.
I propose we name this phenomenon—the obsession with more, the spiraling greed—as the era of the Black Hole Bro, a disordered mental state dressed in designer suits. These men are not driven by ambition; they are trapped in delusion. Infinite wealth becomes a prison, a bottomless pit where they gnaw on suffering to feel full. Their public meltdowns are mistaken for leadership. Their emotional stunting is rewarded with more power.
They aren’t failing to thrive, they’re flailing to survive. What we are witnessing isn’t strength, but the psychic collapse of men who were never taught to feel, only to take. This is not masculinity, it’s a cry for help in a private jet. The Black Hole Bro is a man consumed by his own emptiness, a bottomless pit but covering up with a rolex. He is a man who has convinced himself that his hunger is the world's problem – that he is not diseased, but deserving, that he must take from others to justify his own existence. To the rest of us, it looks like madness. To him, it’s just normal. It’s the kind of hunger that swallows everything in its path without ever feeling full, a hunger that persists even when it has everything. Why would a man with infinite wealth still need to take from those who have nothing? What kind of mind hoards billions like canned beans in a basement bunker? If this were a man hoarding newspapers or broken toasters, we’d call it what it is: a mental health crisis. But because it’s money, we call it ambition.
Spiritually starved and emotionally inert, these figures resemble tantruming toddlers in titanium watches. They are failing not to thrive but to survive in a fragile, compulsive performance. Their legacy is not empire-building but a monument to their own emptiness. It is an act of hoarding, paranoia, and spiritual rot.
The numbers reveal a harrowing mental decay. Since taking office, Trump has used his office to get really rich. He boldly increased his net worth by about three billion dollars, roughly one billion every month. Meanwhile, he’s accepting Qatar’s jets—lavish symbols of wealth—yet he’s disappearing the very programs that keep millions of America’s most vulnerable kids alive. He’s trying to cut Head Start’s funding entirely, while billions are being pulled from CHIP and Medicaid. These cuts threaten the lives of 37 million children, many of whom will face starvation and, tragically, likely death because of it.
And while children go hungry and sick under his watch, the president who is supposed to care for them is busy running a crypto scheme. This scheme facilitates bribery, foreign influence, and self-enrichment. He’s deporting children with brain cancer while ordering extra gold leaf for the sundaes on his private jet. It’s not just cruelty; it’s delusion. Nothing sums up “great again” like licking a $1,200 dessert while cutting off a child’s last round of chemo.
We have to stop calling this just cruel — it’s not just cruelty, it’s sickness. The obscene wealth hoarded alongside devastating cuts to basic human needs doesn’t just signal greed, it reveals a profound psychological dysfunction. This isn’t a political ideology. It’s a pathology.
We’re watching someone operate without the moral compass or emotional wiring that usually governs human behavior. If a woman was displaying this level of psychopathic behavior, we’d be quick to call it a mental illness rather than a leadership style.
Trump’s actions aren’t greedy because they are a self-destructive, even to himself. It’s profoundly irrational to tear down one’s own country and planet. You’re going to trash the place you live? How does that even make sense? That’s not the behavior of a mentally well person. Destroying global health systems, environmental integrity, and social stability does not create prosperity. It’s a reckless cycle that backfires because the health of the planet and its people are intertwined. The chaos Trump and his other mentally ill rich guys are unleashing will inevitably circle back. It will destabilize economies, ecosystems, and societies—those very systems they depend on. This isn’t strategy; it’s a deep-rooted pathology—suicidal self-sabotage cloaked in the illusion of power.
And it’s not just Trump. Amid this chaos, Bill Gates recently spoke out about the fact that Elon Musk’s disbanding of foreign aid programs is actively killing the world’s poorest children. Gates, who plans to give away 99% of his wealth, recognizes that unchecked greed is not ambition; it’s a disorder. His warning underscores that this crisis is as much psychological as it is economic.
And while this is scary, our most radical act of resistance is to stop treating these Black Hole Bros as inevitable. Instead, we can expose what they’re really doing it for… power, prestige, and the desperate need to hide how insecure and small they truly are. Their destructive behavior isn’t just about accumulating wealth; it’s a guise to cover up their fundamental fragility.
If we point at their insecurity and feel genuine pity, it’s the most humiliating thing we could do, because pity is an emotion they cannot tolerate. When they see us recognizing their weakness for what it is, it undermines the illusion of invincibility they cling to.
As I’ve written about before, history has shown us that authoritarian and narcissistic regimes crumble under ridicule. Nazi parades faked goose-steps to jazz, and cartoons turned Hitler into a punchline. Resistance through humor and mockery remains one of the most powerful tools because it exposes the ridiculousness at the core of these men’s embarrassing psychopathy.
While they continue to wreak havoc, these Black Hole Bros are desperately clawing at the illusion of control, revealing their own mental rot to anyone willing to look. They are not strong; they are broken. They are not commanding; they are needy. They are not fearless; they are hysterical. Driven by an insatiable void that no amount of money can fill. It’s not cruel, it’s pathetic. No matter how much chaos they unleash, the truth remains: they cannot outrun their own profound insecurity. Their self-destructive fire will eventually turn everything into ashes—including themselves.
Before you go I wanted to tell you that I’ll be going live with one of my favorite fearless voices Qasim Rashid!! Join us THIS Friday afternoon as you wind down your week as we chat with you and answer questions at 3PT-6ET! I can’t wait to see you.
x Liz
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billionaires are unwell
Wild that Musk focused on the "refugees" from South Africa, aka, White Afrikaaners. Lovely that children will starve because he is still put out that Apartheid went away. He's such a piece of shit.