The Red Pill Was Hijacked

from the you're-not-anti-establishment-if-you're-pro-authoritarian dept

“Wake up, Neo. The Matrix has you.”

These words marked a cultural moment—one that captured our collective anxiety about reality itself. The Matrix wasn’t just a movie about robots and kung fu. It was a story about questioning the systems of power and control that shape our understanding of the world. The red pill became a powerful metaphor for choosing difficult truth over comfortable illusion.

At the time of its release, The Matrix resonated across ideological lines. It spoke to anti-authoritarians of all stripes—liberals, libertarians, radicals, even some conservatives. The film’s message was simple but profound: question everything, think for yourself, and reject systems of control that demand your obedience.

But twenty-five years later, that message has been hijacked. When reactionaries talk about “taking the red pill” today, they’re not inviting you to challenge power—they’re recruiting you into their own authoritarian system. In a masterful act of political gaslighting, they have inverted The Matrix’s central message, twisting the language of liberation into a tool for submission.

What makes this inversion so effective is how it exploits our natural skepticism of power while weaponizing it exclusively against democratic institutions. The reactionary red pill tells you to question everything—except their own narrative. It promises to reveal how deep the rabbit hole goes, but only if you first accept their fundamental premise: that democracy itself is a lie and that strongmen and self-anointed elites are the only path to order.

The supreme irony is that what reactionaries call “taking the red pill” looks a lot more like swallowing the blue pill in The Matrix—choosing to accept a prefabricated narrative rather than engaging with the complex, often difficult realities of democratic governance and human freedom.

The irony of modern red pill ideology runs more profound than most of its adherents realize. While they see themselves as free-thinking rebels questioning the establishment, the intellectual architecture of their worldview was largely constructed by Curtis Yarvin (writing as Mencius Moldbug)—a dark philosopher bankrolled by Peter Thiel, who openly advocates for dismantling democracy.

Yarvin didn’t just critique democracy—he rebranded submission as rebellion. He understood that direct arguments for authoritarianism wouldn’t persuade most Americans, so he framed democracy itself as the “blue pill” illusion. His trick was simple: make obedience to elites feel like an act of radical defiance.

This is why so many self-described “anti-establishment” figures end up serving the interests of Silicon Valley oligarchs and aspiring autocrats. The red pill Yarvin helped construct doesn’t lead to real questioning of power—it leads straight to a carefully engineered conclusion: that democracy is inefficient, that governance should be outsourced to “competent” elites, and that political equality itself is a naive fantasy.

This rhetorical trick—casting authoritarianism as an escape from illusion—isn’t unique to politics. It’s also the core mechanism of the “manosphere”.

The broader networks that exploit the red pill metaphor have been extensively documented by organizations like the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC). Their research reveals how these ideas spread through overlapping online communities known as the “manosphere”—groups united by their hostility to feminism and their belief that men are society’s true victims. These spaces don’t just radicalize men against feminism—they prime them for reactionary politics. When young men’s legitimate frustrations are redirected into an all-consuming grievance against “the system,” democracy itself becomes the enemy. This is the real function of the manosphere: not just to spread misogyny but to create a pipeline from personal resentment to authoritarian politics.

However, precision matters. While the SPLC documents real extremist movements, missteps such as labeling figures like Sam Harris as “white supremacists” weaken the broader fight. When the distinction between actual white supremacy and controversial—but legitimate—intellectual debate is blurred, it plays into reactionary hands. This same discipline is essential when analyzing the red pill phenomenon. The goal isn’t to attack skepticism itself—it’s to expose how reactionaries hijack it for their own ends.

The Sam Harris example is particularly instructive. Harris has been critical of fundamentalist Islam, but his arguments have focused on ideas and beliefs rather than promoting hatred of people or groups. Labeling such critique as “white supremacy” not only mischaracterizes Harris’s positions but actually weakens our ability to identify and confront genuine white supremacist movements. When we blur these distinctions, we make it harder to maintain credibility when calling out actual extremism.

This relates directly to how we analyze the red pill phenomenon. While there’s clear evidence connecting this metaphor to organized anti-democratic movements, we should be careful not to suggest that everyone who expresses skepticism about current institutions is automatically part of these movements. The challenge is to show how legitimate critiques of institutional problems can be co-opted and redirected toward anti-democratic ends—without erasing space for good-faith criticism and reform efforts.

This distinction is critical because Yarvin’s rhetorical strategy works precisely by exploiting the conflation of legitimate skepticism with reactionary narratives. If every critique of democracy’s failures is reflexively labeled as anti-democratic, then reactionaries can more easily convince skeptics that they’re the only ones telling the truth. The goal should be to separate real critiques from ideological manipulation—to strengthen democratic institutions through reform rather than abandon them to cynicism.

The real red pill isn’t rejecting democracy—it’s rebuilding it. It’s not about submitting to “competent” elites but proving that ordinary people can govern themselves better than the strongmen and oligarchs who demand obedience.

Taking the real red pill means understanding that democracy isn’t an illusion—it’s a fight. A fight that reactionaries want us to lose by convincing us it was never worth saving in the first place. But they’re wrong. And deep down, they know it. That’s why they’ve spent so much time trying to rewire what the red pill even means.

So the question isn’t whether you’ll take the red pill. The real question is: will you let them define it for you? Or will you fight for reality—and for democracy—before they erase both?

Mike Brock is a former tech exec who was on the leadership team at Block. Originally published at his Notes From the Circus.

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Comments on “The Red Pill Was Hijacked”

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Heart of Dawn (profile) says:

Re:

Estrogen used to be a red pill. So it was very much about choosing either live under a system of repression and try to be something you are not, or wake up, break free, and live as your true self- a woman.

The character Switch was meant to change genders between the real world and the Matrix, but studio execs thought it would be to confusing.

David says:

You are overselling democracy

The real red pill isn’t rejecting democracy—it’s rebuilding it. It’s not about submitting to “competent” elites but proving that ordinary people can govern themselves better than the strongmen and oligarchs who demand obedience.

But people can’t. It will always be more effective to implement a single purpose than multiple conflicting ones. The point of democracy isn’t that it is a good form of government. If it were, we wouldn’t need representative democracy forms. The point of democracy is that it tries to dilute power to a degree where corruption does not have sufficient concentration of power to work with.

It is too expensive to bribe everyone, or even to bribe a majority. The Achilles heel of Democracy, however, is that it is perfectly affordable to bullshit a majority. And one of the cheapest and most effective ways to do so is to present a solid bout of scapegoats to hate on.

Noddy says:

Re:

It will always be more effective to implement a single purpose than multiple conflicting ones.

It sounds like you forgot that kings (or whatever equivalent) are also people, with all of the fallibilities that come with that.
As such, a king can steer his country– very efficiently and effectively!– right into a ditch. Or a bog. Whichever metaphor suits.

It is too expensive to bribe everyone […] it is perfectly affordable to bullshit a majority

I feel you’ve forgotten in there that different people are different. What bribes one doesn’t bribe everyone; same for lies and scapegoats. What inspires one may well repulse another.
Democracy is inefficient, but powerful, because it makes different interests and ideas a voice, and makes them compete. Votes counter votes.

I think democracy has struggled to serve and satisfy the US because its political marketplace has been so non-competitive for so long. That’s not an issue inherent to democracy itself.

David says:

Re: Re:

I feel you’ve forgotten in there that different people are different. What bribes one doesn’t bribe everyone; same for lies and scapegoats. What inspires one may well repulse another.

You don’t need everyone. You just need an effective majority. Convince women that it would be a betrayal to their womanhood to vote, or better to vote different than their husband, and you can perfectly well gain a majority while only catering to a minority.

Vote disenfranchisement is a working strategy. A person’s senate vote in Wyoming carries 70 times the weight of a person’s senate vote in California, and their vote for president is more than 3 times as important as the vote of a Californian. And that’s before gerrymandering and letting armed white man parade before voting locations and forcing working population in urban areas to spend hours in waiting lines before being allowed to cast a vote by reducing voting opportunities to ridiculous levels and introducing artificial hurdles to have “only legal votes” count instead of letting all legitimate voters cast their vote.

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BernardoVerda (profile) says:

Re: Re:

They said the same about Stalin. Lenin was the inspiring saint that people came on pilgrimage to view his remains, Stalin was the one who quietly arranged and grasped the levers of real power, the operated them ruthlessly.

Trump is mostly a figurehead, a showy, colorful image at the front of the vessel, appearing to lead the way — he thinks he’s the captain, but the people actually directing the ship’s course are navigating the ship from the bridge and chart room, and have appointed their own loyal followers as officers of the watch.

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Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

Vance will ascend to the Oval Office via presidential succession in Y4 and then have the benefit of incumbency.

Deмocrats squandered all of their advantages, including a state-directed tech censorship regime that the sїte оwner continues to deny existed, yet they lost to Trump a second time. Lоsers!!!!

Anonymous Coward says:

I don’t know about SPLC labelling Harris a white supremacist, but years ago many people in Harris’ own communities realized Harris has some issues and he is not always presenting “legitimate questions”, including in re Islam. (More specifically, actual living human beings who may happen to be Muslim, or just too close to, or of similar appearance to those who are.)

Outside my quibble here,i find this to be a very illustrative angle from which to describe the phenomenon.

Anonymous Coward says:

These words marked a cultural moment—one that captured our collective anxiety about reality itself. The Matrix wasn’t just a movie about robots and kung fu. It was a story about questioning the systems of power and control that shape our understanding of the world.

The Matrix was part of that “moment”, but didn’t start or end it. See also Dark City (1998), The Thirteenth Floor (1999), Existenz (1999). These ideas were “in the air”, as disaster films had been right up till then.

Unfortunately, it seems nobody ever learns the lessons of these films. The systems of power and control (including the centralization of the internet) continued to build up with little resistance. We had some pretty monumental fuckups with respect to disaster response, too.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

Nothing from Hollywood or major media can ever make anyone question anything significant. Hollywood regularly takes struggle and packages it into feel-good entertainment.

The reason capitalism is so pervasive is because of how easily it commodifies and absorbs anything opposed to it.

https://www.thecommoner.org.uk/the-commodification-and-commercialization-of-revolutionary-ideology/

You won’t defeat the system using the system. It will only absorb you.

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Him says:

We are undoing the tyranny NOW.

You who agree with all major corporations, movies, books, dominant culture, “cancel culture” are not the resistance. The main edifices of power have been on your side for decades.

You who supported a government who suppressed free speech by pretending to crack down on “misinformation” (still free speech, “hate speech” too), who used lawfare to “protect democracy” (by denying democracy), ignored the SCOTUS multiple times, and forced vaccinations (and lied about its effectiveness to do it) are not the good guys.

You were the tyrannical authoritarians, right until yesterday, and what you are seeing is the cure. Of course you will shriek like a staked vampire the whole time.

But at least spare me the petulant whining.

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Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re:

You who agree with all major corporations, movies, books, dominant culture, “cancel culture” are not the resistance.

Thank you for once again proving my point that a lot of conservatives want to be the culture and the counterculture, the authority and the resistance, the victimizer and the victim. You want it all, you can’t have it all, and that makes you pissed as hell⁠—and that’s on top of having to defend increasingly indefensible bullshit from your “team”. No wonder you’re so angry about your “team” winning.

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Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re: Re:

To wit: For all the claims of “the left is trying to change the way you talk” shit he and his ilk whine about because of some minor “hey, maybe try to use this language” thing in some obscure PDF in an equally obscure government agency, Trump’s order to get rid of DEI in government has resulted in numerous government agencies purging communications both external (e.g., public-facing websites) and internal that contain certain words related to the principles of DEI regardless of their context and effectively forbidding employees of those agencies from using those words on the job ever again.

MrWilson (profile) says:

Re:

We are undoing the tyranny NOW.

“We accused you of tyranny for calling us out for being bigoted and racist and authoritarian and greedy and corrupt, so therefore we will impose our own tyranny, but we’ll call it ‘freedom’ and ‘efficiency.'”

You who agree with all major corporations, movies, books, dominant culture, “cancel culture” are not the resistance.

Who the fuck are you talk to? I imagine you think you’re talking to leftists and liberals, but they don’t agree with “all major corporations.” Corporations are greedy capitalists, even when they sometimes have DEI programs and donate to good causes. If you haven’t noticed the news recently, Target, who was criticized for how “woke” it was, has backtracked. A corporation run by actually progressive people wouldn’t backtrack. That you think people agree with major corporations just because some corporations found it profitable to pander to progressive concepts just shows how fucking ignorant you are.

You who supported a government

We settled for Biden because the DNC is closer to Republicans than leftists.

who suppressed free speech by pretending to crack down on “misinformation” (still free speech, “hate speech” too),

“Misinformation” when it comes in the form of voter fraud or threats of violence or harassment or false advertising aren’t actually free speech.

who used lawfare to “protect democracy” (by denying democracy),

They did a shit job of it if that’s what they were doing, but your narrative can’t be trusted.

ignored the SCOTUS multiple times,

[citation needed], but also the SCOTUS is demonstrably corrupt and the GOP cheated to stack SCOTUS, so you don’t get to complain in favor of an illegitimate, corrupt court.

and forced vaccinations (and lied about its effectiveness to do it) are not the good guys.

Ah, yes, I remember it well – the roving bands of needlers who stabbed anyone and everyone they encountered while escorted by federal troops! Or you’re just complaining that people who wanted the freedom to infect others with a deadly virus weren’t allowed to be sociopathic assholes. Your freedom to assault people via biological agents ends where the rights of others begin. Also, I’m vaccinated and have been exposed to covid multiple times and I’ve never gotten it. Effectiveness for the win!

You were the tyrannical authoritarians, right until yesterday,

You experienced the most milquetoast of presidencies under which Biden did fuck all and you saw it as tyranny. You’re a fucking soccer playing grasping at his shin when another player pats you on the shoulder. Drama queen.

and what you are seeing is the cure. Of course you will shriek like a staked vampire the whole time.

You’re such a sportsball fan cheering the team as if he’s a member. Your team can do no wrong. The other team sucks because it’s not your team. You’ll carry water for the worst atrocities as long as it’s one of your team. Did you ever have integrity or did you shank it in the back the first time you encountered it?

But at least spare me the petulant whining.

Again, again, you don’t have to come here. You don’t have to read anything. You don’t have to comment. Spare you things you’re voluntarily subjecting yourself to?

:: It hurt itself in confusion! ::

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Kinetic Gothic says:

I never thought too much about the red pill,, it was always the next line that stuck me..

“I show you how deep this Rabbit Hole goes”

Here’s the thing though…

Af the end of Alice’s adventures, ALICE WAKES UP under a tree in the park, All the fantastic and terrifying things she found down the hole were never real, they were a fantasy.

People need to get out of rabbit holes.

The only things down there are dirt and worms.

.

Bobby says:

Wow

I had no idea that the people who made the Matrix are Transgendered.

Why, this just changes everything. I’m going to quit being a heterosexual Republican now.
I’m going to sell all my guns and pickup truck and invest the money in drag queen clothing. Gonna throw out that Bible and replace it with gay porn and feminist literature.

Definitely voting for Kamala next time. If only I had known sooner. How observant of you to notice that the entirety of my politics rests on my interest in an overrated 90’s sci-fi flick and its creators.

You really do understand the Red Pill. Bravo.

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