
By: Daiman Teer for The Simpleton Star
Why does the Modern Liberal Prefer a Fairy Tale Villain to a Productive Life?
The “No Kings” protest is not a political movement. It is a mass psychological infirmity, a collective breakdown of the American left that reveals a profound and terrifying vacuum of the soul. These are people who have abandoned the traditional anchors of family, faith, and productive labor, only to replace them with a shrill and childish pantomime of revolution.
They have taken a perfectly glorious, God-given day and curdled it with a manufactured grievance that has no basis in constitutional reality. They cry “King” not because they see a crown, but because they have lost the ability to process leadership, strength, and the basic functions of a duly elected executive.
The transition from the word “dictator” to “King” is a cynical linguistic retreat. Having failed to convince the American public that their President is a tyrant through the standard buzzwords of the twentieth century, they have reached back into the medieval lexicon to find a new label for their delusions. It is a euphemism born of desperation.
They know, in the quiet parts of their stunted minds, that the President is operating within the clear mandates of Article II. He is not a monarch, he is a man doing the job the forgotten men and women of this country hired him to perform. Because they cannot argue against the results, and because they cannot tolerate the strength of his personality, they have invented a royal phantom to haunt their protests.

UNHAPPY MISFITS – LIFELEESS
Let us be brutally honest about the source of this stupidity: an empty life is the primary prerequisite for a professional protester. If you had a business to run, a field to till, or a family that actually respected you, you would not have the luxury of standing on a street corner screaming at the clouds.
This is the behavior of the discarded and the dull, the people who have failed at every meaningful pursuit and now seek to validate their existence through a shared, hysterical negativity. They lack the discipline to build a shed, let alone a civilization, so they satisfy their frustrated egos by trying to tear down a man who represents everything they are not. They are the human equivalent of static on a television screen, a flickering, noisy distraction that accomplishes nothing and serves no one, fueled by the bitter realization that their own lives are entirely devoid of substance or merit.
Psychologically, this is the behavior of the “eternal child.” It is the temper tantrum of a demographic that has been told for decades that their feelings are the ultimate arbiter of truth. When the world does not conform to their specific, liberal sensibilities, they do not seek a healthy pursuit or a new hobby. They do not plant a garden or serve their neighbor. Instead, they retreat into a “resistance” culture that functions as a surrogate for actual community. This is a “negative community,” a gathering of the mentally weak who are bonded only by what they despise. There is no spirit of building here, there is only the frantic, clawing need to dismantle that which they do not understand.
Psychologists who study this level of obsessive political fixation often find a direct correlation between this “resistance” lifestyle and a total lack of personal agency. If you have no control over your own life, if you have no skills to offer the world, and if you have no internal peace, you must find a monster to blame for your misery.
The “No Kings” protesters are not fighting for democracy, they are fighting to avoid looking in the mirror. They are unintelligent in their approach because they have traded logic for a state of “chronic vigilance,” a permanent flight-or-fight response against a shadow. They are sick people who have mistaken their own anxiety for activism. They represent a liberal class that is so intellectually fragile that the mere sight of a strong leader causes a total systemic collapse of their reason. While the rest of the country moves forward, building businesses and raising families, these millions of lost souls remain trapped in a self-made purgatory of negativity and empty slogans.

The Word:
“Let every soul be subject unto the higher powers. For there is no power but of God: the powers that be are ordained of God.” — Romans 13:1
The Reason:
This verse serves as a necessary rebuke to those who believe that their personal petulance outweighs the established order of the nation. It reminds us that leadership is not an accident and that the authority of a leader is part of a greater, providential structure that demands respect rather than infantile rebellion.
The Prayer:
Almighty God, we thank You for the clarity of this day and for the strength You provide to those who lead with conviction. We ask that You reach into the hearts of the lost and the bitter, those who spend their hours in the darkness of protest and the pursuit of shadows. Grant them a spirit of peace so that they might abandon their negativity and find a healthy purpose in Your creation. Protect this nation from the folly of the weak-minded and keep us steadfast in our commitment to the truth. Amen.
