Why We Are Losing Friends and Family
Tribal instincts in the modern world
By Jim Reynolds | www.reynolds.com
From ancient survival wiring to today’s echo chambers, the tribal urge explains family fractures, social media mobs, and why figures like Charlie Kirk had to be silenced.
The Ancient Code
Before there were nations, parties, or even cities, there were tribes. Belonging wasn’t optional — it was survival. You went with the flow, or you lost your place. To lose your place was to be cast into danger: predators, starvation, exposure. Your tribe was your shield, your protection, your family.
That ancient wiring still hums beneath our skin today. We cheer Yankees vs. Dodgers not just because of baseball, but because the tribal rush feels good. We crave the “rah-rah” of belonging. It is in our DNA.
When Thinking Is Treason
Here’s the problem: tribal loyalty is stronger than logic. If listening to an opposing argument risks loosening your grip on the tribe, you won’t hear it. In fact, you’ll fight to silence it. Free speech becomes dangerous because it invites you to confront facts that might threaten your place in the group.
This is why the Left clings to absurdities — men can have babies, crime goes down when you cut police, taxing the air will save the planet. To “thinking” Americans these positions look insane. But to the tribe, shouting them together is a bonding ritual. Dissonance is too painful. The echo chamber is safer.
The Echo Chamber Family
Millions of families across America have experienced painful ruptures over sharp political differences. In countless cases, the break wasn’t caused by crime, betrayal, or abuse — but by a shift in loyalty. A family member no longer defined identity by kinship, but by a new “tribe” that offered a stronger sense of belonging.
For many, that tribe is not the family around the table but the digital community in their pocket. Social media supplies intimacy, constant contact, and affirmation on demand. It creates the illusion of thousands of “friends” who think alike, share slogans, and reinforce the same worldview. The digital chorus becomes more persuasive than flesh-and-blood relatives.
This is the revelation of our time: online networks have replaced blood ties for millions. Platforms like Facebook and Instagram provide the building blocks of a new clan — instant communication, shared rituals, and the comfort of belonging. The ancient tribal instinct, once reserved for family and community, has been hijacked by the algorithm.
Why the Tribe Fears Free Speech
This explains why the Left treats open dialogue as a mortal threat. Their power depends on conformity, on strong boundaries of tribal thought. Free speech punctures the membrane. Let a Charlie Kirk into the conversation — armed with logic, facts, and moral clarity — and the illusion of consensus shatters.
Tribal leaders know this. That’s why colleges shout down speakers. That’s why social media platforms build echo chambers. That’s why narrative enforcers smear dissenters. They’re not defending ideas. They’re defending the walls of the tribe.
Mob Instinct and the Sacrifice
This brings us to Charlie Kirk. He wasn’t just a political figure; he was a tribal threat. His words made sense. His following grew. He was too effective. For the Left’s narrative machine, that was intolerable.
So they did what tribes have always done when confronted with a dangerous outsider: they made a sacrifice. His death wasn’t about one man and one bullet. It was about protecting the group, the mob instinct that says better to kill than to let him erode our power base.
And even after the murder, the ritual continued. Lies, smears, mockery — all aimed at tearing down Charlie’s image before it could ignite into a firestorm that burned their story to ash.
Tribalism, Then and Now
What we are witnessing isn’t new. It is ancient. Confirmation bias is the glue that holds the modern tribe together. Cognitive dissonance is the fear that keeps them from listening. Social media provides the new campfire, where slogans are repeated and enemies are cursed. And family ties? They’re expendable if they get in the way of the tribe.
This is why friendships end. This is why relatives cut each other off. This is why free speech is shut down. It isn’t logic. It isn’t politics. It is anthropology. Tribalism has struck again.
The Cost of Belonging
And so the pattern repeats: the mob defends its echo chamber, the tribe closes ranks, and anyone who threatens the narrative is cast out — or worse. Charlie Kirk wasn’t just a casualty of violence. He was the ultimate threat to their very existence, and that made him a target.
The lesson is clear: if you want to understand modern politics, don’t just study polling data or legislative battles. Study tribes. Study survival instincts. The echo chamber is only the latest mask of an ancient force.
And if you’re a conservative wondering why friends or relatives have exiled you, don’t overthink it. Check their social media. Chances are, they’ve found a new tribe — one that demands loyalty above truth, belonging above logic.
Grook: Why We Are Losing Friends and Family
The hearth goes cold, the table bare,
When tribe outvotes the love once there.
A screen replaces flesh and bone,
A chorus sings, but leaves you lone.
The slogans bind, the silence burns,
A sister lost, a brother spurns.
The cost of tribe is plain to see:
It breaks the bonds of you and me.