Last week, while talking with a 31-year-old, we spoke about the state of humanity. I mentioned that if AI ever gained control over us, it might decide to eliminate humanity. Without hesitation, he replied: “I hope it happens soon.”
His words struck me. I don’t blame him. So many young people today want to escape this chaotic world. I used to feel the same. But the tragedy is that instead of finding the courage to face and heal their inner wounds, many wait passively for some outside force—a machine, a god, or a divine rapture—to swoop in and save them. This explains why so many have recently fallen into delusions, selling their possessions and quitting their jobs, convinced that the end of the world is imminent.
Alice Miller captured this psychological trap with piercing clarity. In The Truth Will Set You Free, she wrote:
“Emotional blindness can be well studied by examining the careers of sect members. Jehovah’s Witnesses, for example, are in favor of corporal punishment and constantly warn that the end of the world is near. They are not aware that they bear within themselves the abused children they once were, and that they already experienced the end of the world when their loving parents beat them. What could be worse than that? But the Jehovah’s Witnesses learned very early not to recall their pain and to tell their children that hitting doesn’t hurt. The reality of the end of the world is constantly on their minds, but they do not know why.” (p.141)
The so-called end of the world already happened for these children—when the people who were supposed to love them became their persecutors.
The Three Choices Humanity Faces
Human beings really have only three paths:
Find the courage to resolve childhood repression and break free from the emotional prison.
End their own lives to silence the pain.
Or do as most do—become cowards, stumbling through life unconsciously, compulsively searching for scapegoats to punish in place of the adults who once hurt them.
In her article The Essential Role of an Enlightened Witness in Society, Alice Miller explained why violence repeats:
“Information about abuse inflicted during childhood is recorded in our body cells as a sort of memory, linked to repressed anxiety. If lacking the aid of an enlightened witness, these memories fail to break through to consciousness; they often compel the person to violent acts that reproduce the abuse suffered in childhood, which was repressed in order to survive. The aim is to avoid the fear of powerlessness before a cruel adult. This fear can be eluded momentarily by creating situations in which one plays the active role, the role of the powerful, towards a powerless person.”
This dynamic is everywhere—in families, in politics, in religious cults, in the military, and even in agencies like ICE, where officers repeat the same sadism they once endured. It mirrors what American troops did in Iraq’s prisons, channeling their own childhood humiliation into cruelty against powerless captives.
The Origins of Torture
In her essay The Origins of Torture in Endured Child Abuse, Miller dissected the reality behind the abuse committed by American soldiers:
“Where does this suppressed rage come from, this need to torment, humiliate, mock, and abuse helpless human beings (prisoners and children as well)? What are these outwardly tough soldiers avenging themselves for? And where have they learned such behavior? First as little children taught obedience by means of physical ‘correction,’ then in school, where they served as the defenseless objects of the sadism of some of their teachers, and finally in their time as recruits, treated like dirt by their superiors so that they could finally acquire the highly dubious ability to take anything meted out to them and qualify as ‘tough.’”
The thirst for vengeance is not a mystery. It is planted in infancy when children are forced to suffer in silence, told that cruelty is for their own good. What is learned as “discipline” becomes the template for later acts of destruction.
Why Power Fears Truth
Every day, I see proof that Alice Miller was the only thinker who truly ventured into the darkest corners of the human mind. I could see and feel these truths in my own life, but she gave me the words. And yet, her books remain absent from the mainstream.
Why? Because it is not in the interest of those addicted to power. If the masses were to resolve their childhood repression, the power structures of politics, religion, and wealth would crumble like a house of cards. I wrote in A Dance to Freedom:
“As I mentioned, sex and drugs were just two of the ways I saw the people around me repress their true feelings to avoid the pain of being unloved, neglected children. Religion was another biggie, especially in a country like Portugal. If people could only resolve their childhood repression, the power of religion over us all would crumble like a house of cards. Sadly, I keep witnessing people who, instead of having to face, see, and feel the deep-seated traumas that have been passed down for generations, become obsessed with politics, religion, or both. My family is a perfect example of this. They were very susceptible to cults and the repression they offered.” (p.74)
This is also why social media platforms suppress my posts. Those who profit from chaos and confusion cannot afford for humanity to awaken.
Conclusion: The Courage to See
We are standing at a threshold. AI, wars, religious delusions, political scapegoating—they are all symptoms of the same wound: unresolved childhood trauma.
The question is: will we have the courage to face it? Or will we keep hoping for an external savior, while remaining trapped in the same destructive cycles?
As Miller warned, the rage of abused children does not disappear. It resurfaces—in families, in nations, and on the world stage. Until humanity finds the courage to face its wounds, the house of cards will continue to collapse, again and again.