Gold Diggers in a Broke Economy? Red Pill Delusions in Kenya
No Gold, Just Gaslighting—When Misogyny Meets Poverty.
While I was browsing Facebook earlier this evening, I almost choked on a Dorito when I saw the most ridiculous meme fly up my newsfeed.
The meme was originally posted on the Facebook page of a Kenyan man in Nairobi with almost 50,000 followers, most of whom appeared to be Kenyan.
Tragically, he was pushing the Red Pill talking point about women being innate gold diggers and men needing to protect their assets from women.
Now, I knew that the carcinogenic influence of Red Pill ideology has been spreading around the world like formaldehyde gas, but seeing this demonic cult make its way into Kenya had me floored.
Mind you, in Kenya, the median income is approximately $874 per year (as of 2023).
In 2021, approximately 36.1% of Kenyans lived below the international poverty line of $2.15 per day.
Only .7% of the Kenyan population (360,000 individuals out of 52 million) are considered upper-class and have "gold" to dig.
And before someone claims that middle-class Kenyan men have gold to dig, what's considered "middle-class" in Kenya is NOT the same thing as "middle-class" in the U.S.—not by any stretch of the imagination.
Not only is the false narrative that "women are gold diggers" preposterous in light of the data on the United States (and especially Black Americans), it reaches an indescribable magnitude of absurdity in the context of Kenyan socioeconomics.
But this is the influence of the demonic spirit of Red Pill on men from impoverished (or "middle-class" poor) cultures—be they in Nairobi, Kenya, or East Point, Georgia.
This particular spirit latches onto the pre-existing sexist attitudes, contempt for females, desires to control, emotional pain, frustrations, anger, loneliness, insecurities, fears, inadequacies, sexual lusts, trauma and unhealed brokenness of men…and intravenously injects them with misogynistic propaganda that further poisons them against the women in their cultures.
In this case, men are taught that the women in their cultures are innate gold diggers—an overtly false accusation that the data does not support for the overwhelming majority of women in the United States, Canada, Europe, or any part of Africa.
Never mind that Kenyan women, by and large, have no problem dating, marrying, and birthing children for Kenyan men who live in abject poverty or are one pay check away from homelessness...all it takes is a Red Pill video, meme, or podcast to convince a man that the exact opposite is true and to ignore his cultural reality.
In a country (like Kenya) where 40% of the people are living in poverty, there isn’t even a millimeter of wiggle room for anyone to be entertaining the talking point that women are gold diggers.
The mere suggestion should not even be up for debate…and yet…this is what is being passed around social media by Kenyan men and Black American men who think they’re entitled to lead a woman and a woman should submit to them.
Instead of trying to gaslight their audiences with demented memes that women are going to steal wealth that most of their population doesn’t have, they should be focused on the real problems in their country, communities, and their own hearts.
If there’s anything these men need to protect, it’s not their assets—it’s their minds, their souls, and their communities from the psychological warfare of Red Pill indoctrination.
This isn’t enlightenment. It’s not empowerment. It’s a demonic invasion and digital colonization of the male psyche, infecting men in struggling economies with delusions of grandeur and imagined victimhood.
Instead of building character, purpose, and vision, they’re reposting memes that mock the very women who’ve stood beside them through poverty, instability, and hardship.
If that’s leadership, then the bar is in an unknown realm lower than hell and submitting to men who harbor such beliefs will surely lead to destruction.
Kenyan women and girls are already living under enough violence, abuse, and oppression. The last thing they need is Western men on podcasts arming Kenyan men with cult propaganda to justify punching down on them even harder.
The real scam isn’t marriage or taking a woman out on a date. The real scam is Red Pill propaganda in poor populations—be it in the Motherland, or right here in the United States.
The Manosphere is failing men, with the worst impact on Black men.
Blaming women and trying to frame them as “gold diggers” while almost half of your population is starving, living in shanty towns, and struggling to keep a roof over their head is a sign of failed leadership and a refusal to take accountability.
But I guess when you have no gold and no integrity, all you can do is gaslight.
It’s time to face the truth.
In Kenya…
…poverty is real—the gold digger myth isn’t.