If You Think Chris Pratt Is Right, You Are a Fucking Idiot
- john raymond
- 1 minute ago
- 3 min read

Chris Pratt’s recent comments praising RFK Jr. and urging Americans not to be “mired in hatred” toward President Trump are not some harmless appeal to civility. They are narrative camouflage.
To suggest that we should wish success for this administration because of a minor initiative on food safety is to betray fundamental moral clarity. If you think Pratt is right, you are a fucking idiot—because you have failed to distinguish trivial gestures from systemic evil.
The Bait: Scraps of Good
Pratt pointed to RFK Jr.’s supposed efforts to keep “toxins” out of children’s food as proof that the Trump administration deserves some measure of goodwill. This is the bait. The administration offers crumbs—symbolic, low-cost “bipartisan” wins—while daily carrying out authoritarian assaults on democracy. To seize upon those crumbs as evidence of legitimacy is to be complicit in your own manipulation.
The Switch: Hatred as a Frame
Pratt’s warning against being “mired in hatred” reframes principled opposition as emotional weakness. This is a classic inversion tactic: to equate resistance to authoritarianism with irrational spite. What Pratt calls “hatred” is actually moral clarity—an unflinching recognition that Trump governs not for the people but for his own survival, his Kremlin master’s interests, and the enrichment of his inner circle.
The Larger Pattern: Narrative Laundering
Pratt’s rhetoric serves a strategic purpose whether he knows it or not. Authoritarian regimes rely on moronic figures like him to launder their narratives through culture. By calling for “hope” in the administration, he softens the ground for normalization. The audience is conditioned to tolerate the intolerable, persuaded that there is always some redeeming value in the barrel—even when the barrel is filled with shit.
Strategic Analysis
Pillar One (Regime Security): The so-called positive reforms are not designed for the people; they are designed to project functionality, strengthen regime security, and disguise collapse elsewhere.
Pillar Two (Asymmetric Warfare): Pratt’s framing disarms opposition by shifting the battlefield from policy to civility. Resistance becomes “hate”; acquiescence becomes “reason.”
Pillar Three (Byzantine Traitor-General): RFK Jr. operates as a useful pawn: an insider with a legacy name, deployed to add legitimacy to a Kremlin-aligned administration. Pratt now functions as amplifier and useful idiot, not analyst.
Minimax Corollary: When an enemy offers you something that looks like good, the question is not “What do they say?” but “What harm does this enable?” Here Pratt’s framing enables moral inversion and weakens resistance.
Implications
For Citizens: If you adopt Pratt’s view, you train yourself to celebrate scraps while ignoring systemic rot. You become an idiot not because you lack intelligence, but because you choose willful blindness.
For Culture: This is how regimes entrench themselves—by persuading the public to confuse kindness with complicity. Hollywood here becomes another arm of asymmetric warfare.
For Strategy: Opposition must not waste energy fighting for scraps. It must hammer on the whole: Trump is a traitor-general, aligned with Putin, governing for regime survival. Everything else is theater.
Pratt Is a Fucking Prat
Pratt is not offering wisdom. He is offering cover. His words amount to a plea that Americans abandon moral clarity in exchange for the illusion of bipartisan goodwill.
If you fall for this, you are not discerning—you are a fucking idiot.
The only proper stance toward Trump’s administration is reject it in total: reject the inversion, reject the bait, and reject the cultural laundering that Pratt now represents.