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Dave Ramsey Says Political Tribalism Has Broken People's Brains: 'You Can't Think Anymore'

MarketDash Editorial Team
5 hours ago
Personal finance guru Dave Ramsey argues that political polarization has gotten so extreme that people have lost the ability to think critically, with both sides stuck in partisan echo chambers that prevent rational analysis of economic and social issues.

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Personal finance expert Dave Ramsey has a theory about what's broken in American discourse, and it's not pretty. According to Ramsey, political tribalism has gotten so intense that many people have essentially lost their ability to think clearly about anything.

During a recent episode of "The Ramsey Show," Ramsey didn't mince words while discussing government intervention and how people talk about it. Both sides of the political spectrum have become less tolerant, he argued, and people now reflexively defend their preferred candidate's positions without actually thinking them through. It's like everyone's stuck on autopilot.

When Smart People Stop Thinking

Ramsey suspects the culprit might be news channels that constantly pump out divisive content designed to boost ratings by making everyone angry. It's working, apparently.

"I know people who, I respect their intellect, who have slipped a gear, man," Ramsey said. "They have lost their ability to think through things, all through the paradigm of Republican or Democrat, conservative or liberal. It generally means, though, that you got your head stuck so far up your politics you can't think anymore."

That's quite an image, but Ramsey's point is clear: political identity has become so consuming that it's replaced actual analysis. Everything gets filtered through partisan lenses before people even consider the substance of an argument.

Ramsey invoked Martin Van Buren, the eighth U.S. president, who believed that the less government interferes with private pursuits, the better for society's prosperity. Ramsey agrees with this view and identifies as "probably" a libertarian when it comes to economics.

"We get so caught up in pigeonholing ourselves, like you know, if I'm for conservative values, I automatically have to worship Donald Trump, and I got to tell you, I don't," Ramsey said.

His broader point is about intellectual independence. Just because you lean one direction politically doesn't mean you need to accept every policy position or personality that comes with that team's jersey.

Taxation Isn't Charity

Ramsey also took aim at the idea that higher taxes equal compassion for the poor. In his view, excessive taxation is simply the government taking people's money, and poor people would be better served by social institutions like communities, churches, and private charitable giving rather than government programs.

"Somehow we've gotten a group of people who have equated increased taxation as a charitable act for the poor, and it's not," he said.

It's a familiar libertarian argument: voluntary charity is fundamentally different from mandatory taxation, even if both theoretically help people in need. The distinction matters to Ramsey, who sees government redistribution as qualitatively different from community support.

Of course, rising taxes and inflation have made retirement planning more challenging for average Americans trying to stretch their dollars. The economic squeeze is real, regardless of your political philosophy.

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The New Standard Oil

Ramsey found some irony in modern political movements. He noted that left-leaning advocates who focus on wealth inequality regularly use and work with massive tech companies like Alphabet Inc.'s (GOOG) Google, Amazon.com Inc. (AMZN), Meta Platforms Inc.'s (META) Facebook, and Apple Inc. (AAPL), all of which dominate their respective industries with near-monopolistic power.

"They're pretty much the standard oil of our day," Ramsey said. "If they all want to move against something in an industry that they're in, it pretty much wipes the slate clean. I mean, it's like a glacier coming through it scrapes everything off."

The Standard Oil comparison is pointed. Just as John D. Rockefeller's oil empire once controlled American energy markets so thoroughly that it was eventually broken up, today's tech giants wield enormous market power. Yet people who champion economic equality often seem unbothered by this concentration of corporate power, at least when it comes to the platforms they use daily.

Ramsey's overall message is about intellectual consistency and the willingness to think independently rather than defaulting to tribal positions. Whether you agree with his libertarian economics or not, his diagnosis of political polarization rotting people's critical thinking skills is worth considering. When team loyalty replaces actual analysis, everyone loses the plot.

Dave Ramsey Says Political Tribalism Has Broken People's Brains: 'You Can't Think Anymore'

MarketDash Editorial Team
5 hours ago
Personal finance guru Dave Ramsey argues that political polarization has gotten so extreme that people have lost the ability to think critically, with both sides stuck in partisan echo chambers that prevent rational analysis of economic and social issues.

Get Apple Alerts

Weekly insights + SMS alerts

Personal finance expert Dave Ramsey has a theory about what's broken in American discourse, and it's not pretty. According to Ramsey, political tribalism has gotten so intense that many people have essentially lost their ability to think clearly about anything.

During a recent episode of "The Ramsey Show," Ramsey didn't mince words while discussing government intervention and how people talk about it. Both sides of the political spectrum have become less tolerant, he argued, and people now reflexively defend their preferred candidate's positions without actually thinking them through. It's like everyone's stuck on autopilot.

When Smart People Stop Thinking

Ramsey suspects the culprit might be news channels that constantly pump out divisive content designed to boost ratings by making everyone angry. It's working, apparently.

"I know people who, I respect their intellect, who have slipped a gear, man," Ramsey said. "They have lost their ability to think through things, all through the paradigm of Republican or Democrat, conservative or liberal. It generally means, though, that you got your head stuck so far up your politics you can't think anymore."

That's quite an image, but Ramsey's point is clear: political identity has become so consuming that it's replaced actual analysis. Everything gets filtered through partisan lenses before people even consider the substance of an argument.

Ramsey invoked Martin Van Buren, the eighth U.S. president, who believed that the less government interferes with private pursuits, the better for society's prosperity. Ramsey agrees with this view and identifies as "probably" a libertarian when it comes to economics.

"We get so caught up in pigeonholing ourselves, like you know, if I'm for conservative values, I automatically have to worship Donald Trump, and I got to tell you, I don't," Ramsey said.

His broader point is about intellectual independence. Just because you lean one direction politically doesn't mean you need to accept every policy position or personality that comes with that team's jersey.

Taxation Isn't Charity

Ramsey also took aim at the idea that higher taxes equal compassion for the poor. In his view, excessive taxation is simply the government taking people's money, and poor people would be better served by social institutions like communities, churches, and private charitable giving rather than government programs.

"Somehow we've gotten a group of people who have equated increased taxation as a charitable act for the poor, and it's not," he said.

It's a familiar libertarian argument: voluntary charity is fundamentally different from mandatory taxation, even if both theoretically help people in need. The distinction matters to Ramsey, who sees government redistribution as qualitatively different from community support.

Of course, rising taxes and inflation have made retirement planning more challenging for average Americans trying to stretch their dollars. The economic squeeze is real, regardless of your political philosophy.

Get Apple Alerts

Weekly insights + SMS (optional)

The New Standard Oil

Ramsey found some irony in modern political movements. He noted that left-leaning advocates who focus on wealth inequality regularly use and work with massive tech companies like Alphabet Inc.'s (GOOG) Google, Amazon.com Inc. (AMZN), Meta Platforms Inc.'s (META) Facebook, and Apple Inc. (AAPL), all of which dominate their respective industries with near-monopolistic power.

"They're pretty much the standard oil of our day," Ramsey said. "If they all want to move against something in an industry that they're in, it pretty much wipes the slate clean. I mean, it's like a glacier coming through it scrapes everything off."

The Standard Oil comparison is pointed. Just as John D. Rockefeller's oil empire once controlled American energy markets so thoroughly that it was eventually broken up, today's tech giants wield enormous market power. Yet people who champion economic equality often seem unbothered by this concentration of corporate power, at least when it comes to the platforms they use daily.

Ramsey's overall message is about intellectual consistency and the willingness to think independently rather than defaulting to tribal positions. Whether you agree with his libertarian economics or not, his diagnosis of political polarization rotting people's critical thinking skills is worth considering. When team loyalty replaces actual analysis, everyone loses the plot.