https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=41ACqHS2KGA

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c5Qe1_i1BWk

To publicly address Farron and Mark,

I write to you not as a partisan but as a concerned centrist tired of the rancour pouring from your broadcasts and writings. Your post-2024 election commentary has been punctuated by a tone of smug superiority and collective scorn, as if ordinary Americans must share blame for broad political problems. You seem to relish name-calling and sensationalism, treating every headline as an opportunity to beat people down instead of lifting citizens up. The country is weary of this approach, and many of us wonder when empathy or insight will begin to replace the vitriol.

#Collective Blame and Voter Shaming

You often treat the entire American electorate like one big guilty party. Millions of voters cast ballots for thousands of different reasons, yet you paint them all with one broad stroke. In your world, anyone who voted for the “wrong” candidate or chose not to vote at all somehow deserves scorn or blame. Millions of people who sat out or chose differently may be disillusioned, busy, or disenfranchised - not traitors. But you lump them together as if they are one giant problem. This collective punishment is simplistic and cruel. These tactics only divide us further and discourage any real understanding.

But the problem runs deeper. You talk as if non-voters and wavering Americans are fully to blame for everything, as if they all share your views or principles. Anyone who might disagree is instantly tainted. That kind of broad-brush condemnation is not only unfair; it’s lazy journalism. By writing off millions of our neighbours with one swipe, you avoid engaging with real reasons people have for their choices. You drive potential allies into silence instead of explaining your position. In a democracy, such scolding only increases suspicion and wounds trust. America’s diversity of thought cannot be eradicated with collective insults - only embraced with discussion.

#Sensationalism and Clickbait

I see the cliched clickbait in your headlines a mile away. Mark, your Romano Report coverage often reads like it’s written by a paranoid blogger, not a seasoned professional offering legal insight. Farron, your videos frequently begin with a shriek of horror and deliver only a thin veneer of facts underneath. Together, you trade in dramatic overstatement - words like “outrage,” “collapse,” “exposed,” and “destroyed” fly off your tongues like carnival rhetoric - all to snag views and clicks.

Viewers tune in for insight, not theatrics. Instead, they feel manipulated rather than informed. This style insults their intelligence and erodes trust. Instead of calmly analysing events, you hand out panic by the spoonful. People come looking for understanding, and your sensationalism only confirms their fear that media now cares more about likes than facts. It’s no wonder your credibility suffers: when every topic is a crisis, nothing feels real.

#Hypocrisy and Closed Ears

You present yourselves as progressive truth-sayers, the moral high ground from which all others must be judged. Yet when anyone respectfully disagrees or points out a flaw in your narrative, you dismiss them as trolls or stooges. You ignore reasonable feedback and answer tough questions with contempt and condescension. If someone offers counter-evidence or simply a different perspective, you treat it as a personal insult instead of engaging in dialogue. You preach transparency and honesty, but you apply none of it to yourselves. Demanding accountability from others while giving none in your own commentary is the height of hypocrisy.

Those on the left who hoped you would build bridges see the gap widening instead. You act entitled to ratchet up outrage, yet you won’t tolerate a moment of push-back. A genuine discussion requires listening, but you seem deaf to anything that doesn’t echo your own echo chamber. By refusing to acknowledge any nuance or admit any mistake, you lose the respect of everyone who expected a serious conversation. It’s jarring to see you scold others for what you do yourselves - using outrage instead of evidence, punishing questions instead of answering them. That is not the noble praxis of journalism; it’s the tantrum of petulant analysts.

#Ignoring the Vulnerable and Disenfranchised

Consider your non-voting, disabled, and marginalised compatriots. Many Americans face real obstacles to voting - disabilities, chronic illness, poverty, long work hours, or even legal disqualification - and some simply feel disenfranchised by the system. Yet you have the gall to write these people off as irresponsible or complicit in the outcome. It is jarring and insensitive.

You claim to champion the underdog, but you conveniently ignore or belittle those who could not participate in the very process you claim to care about. To lump them into a pile of “you get what you deserve” is simply cruel. There are veterans, people with chronic health conditions, caretakers and teachers who have enough on their plates without being scolded for politics. If you truly cared about justice, you would acknowledge these struggles instead of sneering at them. Turning a blind eye to the systemic barriers some citizens face - while lecturing the rest on what to do - is not just hypocritical; it is unkind. I will also go on record, that the democrat party is also to blame, because they pander to divisive ideological aspects that poison societal norms; from pushing identity politics, pandering and favouring

Wokism, add fuel to culture wars, and are obsessive with microaggressions. What I can’t stand is that people like you, being cogs in the machine of the democrat party, are never critical of the party you go for unlike the Republicans, and even if you do, you very seldom do it. You people need to get out of your bubble and look at the vital aspects of both parties in full with objectivity, and to not overlook crucial nuances within society and governmental aspects.

The world is not as black and white as you think it is Romano and Farron. The democrats, during the 2024 election campaign, at the time when no party has ever won yet, they threw parties and acted as if they had taken the victory, when that has not happened yet. America is not a stupid country, but if you really want to label a party a stupid party in terms of the people in charge, the democrat party are not just hypocritical and arrogant, but they are also downright idiotic, and doesn’t have any ounce of sensibility at all. While I can say the same for the MAGA GOP but to a worse extent, the democrat party in terms of its leadership, is no better either.

The problem is NOT “the people” as you proclaim, it is the system, the media, the educational system (because the end result with civics as a field being left in the rear-view mirror, that caused so many societal problems as a result), the MAGA supporters specifically, as well as the foundation of democracy. Democracy is a failure, so what I am going to share to you, may be triggering and upsetting, but it is the truth, and that democracy, is a very bad idea in accordance to the famous Greek philosopher named Plato, and the ship analogy he makes is inarguable. Imagine a vessel at sea. The owner is strong, but hard of hearing and short-sighted - that’s most of the public. The sailors - that’s the politicians - all fight for control of the helm. None of them have actually studied navigation, but they shout the loudest, promise the most, and manipulate the owner into letting them steer.

Meanwhile, the real navigator - the philosopher, the one trained to read the stars and currents - is ignored, mocked, or thrown overboard. Plato’s point was simple: democracy, far too often than not, puts the wheel in the hands of the most persuasive, not the most competent.

The crowd chooses charm over skill, and then that’s how disaster strikes with the boat (being the democracy), crashes and sinks. That’s why it needs to be replaced with a better system other than either autocracy or democracy, whether that would be a Technocratic Constitutional Democracy, or a Civic-Republican Meritocracy, though what they are and how they can be implemented, will be for another time here.

#Squandered Potential and Failed Leadership

I admit, some of your comments brush up against valid frustration - the sense that democracy is under threat, the anger at corruption and lies. These feelings are understandable. But you squander them by morphing that frustration into constant scorn. Instead of helping Americans solve problems, you drive many away with nonstop finger-wagging and pointing. That is not being a leader, that is being a mini-tyrant and a bully.

Imagine if you took a different approach: sparking dialogue rather than slamming your gavel of judgement on every dissenting voice. A responsible commentator would unite thoughtful people from different backgrounds with constructive criticism, rather than push them into an echo chamber. You miss the chance to lead thoughtful change by focusing on attacks. Instead of expanding your influence, you have ended up preaching to a narrower choir. Your potential as sharp-minded voices is wasted when your style pushes people into defensive corners.

#The Real Role of Journalism

Good journalism should do something powerful: inform and guide citizens, not merely incite or demoralise them. A responsible journalist should:

Explain complex issues clearly, rather than oversimplify or sensationalise every detail.

Engage respectfully with different opinions, rather than shutting down critics with insults.

Highlight context and nuance, acknowledging that problems rarely have a single cause or solution.

Show empathy for all communities, including those who struggle to vote, rather than dismiss them.

Encourage constructive dialogue, rather than fanning the flames of anger for clicks.

Citizens deserve honest analysis and compassion. We should walk away feeling more informed and motivated to participate - not demeaned or hopeless.

#A Call to Reason and Dialogue

So I implore you: curb the sloganeering and stop treating voters like scapegoats. Think of the listeners and readers tuning in seeking truth, clarity, maybe even a dose of hope. Start speaking like actual journalists again, publicly apologise to all those you wrongly crowded over, and stop being so-called champions of your own outrage. Listen more, assume less. Because in the end, your preachy, mean-spirited style only fuels the polarisation you claim to despise. It pushes moderate Americans further to the sidelines.

We deserve analysis and empathy, not knee-jerk insults and lectures. It may not be sensational or viral, but it’s time for true dialogue.