Where Citizens Get Their Rage: A Restorationist Examination of Priming, Fear, and the Trigger of Interpretation
Americans do not wake up in the morning yearning to defend murderers or rapists. They do not instinctively seek confrontation with federal agents. They do not naturally gravitate toward violence, destruction, or the kind of chaos that leaves two citizens dead and a federal officer maimed.
Rage is not born in them. Rage is put in them.
Not by a single speech. Not by a single headline. But by a long chain of emotional conditioning that begins with the institutions they trust most.
I. The Public Does Not Create Its Own Fear
Fear is inherited.
Citizens learn what to fear from:
- the media they consume
- the leaders they trust
- the narratives they hear repeated
- the emotional cues embedded in political rhetoric
When a governor, mayor, or media outlet frames federal agents as:
- dangerous
- unlawful
- destabilizing
- acting outside their authority
The public does not parse constitutional nuance. They absorb the emotional frame.
And emotional frames are powerful. They bypass logic. They bypass restraint. They bypass the civic habits that keep a society stable.
Fear becomes the operating system.
II. Priming: How Citizens Become “Pre‑Loaded”
Once fear is established, the public becomes primed.
Priming is not brainwashing. It is repetition.
When the same emotional message is delivered again and again:
- “They are a threat.”
- “They are acting illegally.”
- “They are invading our community.”
the public becomes pre‑loaded with a sense of danger.
This is not intentional violence. This is psychological preparation.
A primed population is like a magazine full of rounds:
- the fear is the powder
- the rhetoric is the casing
- the repetition is the crimp
- the emotional memory of past unrest is the primer
All that remains is the trigger.
III. The Trigger: Interpretation, Not Instruction
Leaders rarely say:
- “Go be violent.”
- “Attack federal agents.”
- “Destroy property.”
They don’t have to.
Crowds do not act on explicit commands. Crowds act on interpretation.
When leaders speak in charged, moralistic, or apocalyptic terms, the public hears:
- “We are under attack.”
- “We must defend ourselves.”
- “This is 2020 all over again.”
And once the crowd believes it is morally justified, escalation becomes predictable.
The trigger is not the speech. The trigger is the meaning the public assigns to the speech.
IV. Once the Round Is Fired, It Cannot Be Recalled
This is the tragedy you’re naming.
Once a citizen acts on fear:
- a punch thrown
- a rock hurled
- a weapon drawn
- a confrontation escalated
there is no calling it back.
Two citizens are dead. A federal agent has lost a finger. Families are shattered. Communities are traumatized. Trust is eroded.
And the leaders who shaped the emotional climate often say:
- “We didn’t tell them to do that.”
- “We can’t control how people react.”
But the damage is done.
The round has left the barrel.
V. Rage Is Not a Spontaneous Force — It Is a System Output
Citizens do not generate rage on their own. They respond to:
- the fear they’ve been taught
- the narratives they’ve inherited
- the emotional cues they’ve absorbed
- the precedents they’ve seen rewarded
2020 taught Minneapolis a template. 2025 reinforced it. 2026 activated it again.
This is not ideology. This is cause and effect.
A system that repeatedly uses fear as a political tool will eventually produce a public that acts on fear.
A system that normalizes confrontation will eventually produce confrontation.
A system that rewards escalation will eventually produce escalation.
VI. The Restorationist Conclusion
Rage is not a mystery. It is not a moral failing of the public. It is not a desire to harbor criminals.
Rage is the predictable outcome of:
- fear without context
- rhetoric without restraint
- leadership without responsibility
- media without accountability
- institutions without shared legitimacy
Citizens are not the architects of this chaos. They are the payload.
And once launched, they cannot be recalled.