Politics
Why People Can't Handle Disagreement Anymore, with Thomas Hübl
When Disagreement Feels Unbearable: Understanding Our Polarized Moment Something has shifted in how we argue. Debates that once ended with a handshake now fracture friendships. Political differences splinter families. Online comment sections erupt into fury over positions that, a generation ago, might have prompted nothing more than a shrug. In a wide-ranging conversation on the ManTalks Podcast , therapist and teacher Thomas Hübl offers a compelling explanation for why this is happening — and it goes much deeper than bad manners or social media algorithms. Hübl's central argument is both unsettling and clarifying: we are not just reacting to the present. We are carrying wounds we didn't personally receive. The Weight We Inherit Hübl is one of the leading voices in the study of collective trauma — the idea that unresolved pain from wars, genocides, economic collapses, and cultural ruptures doesn't simply disappear when the generation that lived through it dies. Instead, it gets passed down, encoded in family dynamics, emotional reflexes, and even physiology. This isn't a fringe idea. Research into epigenetics and intergenerational trauma has shown that the children and grandchildren of trauma survivors can carry measurable stress responses linked to their ancestors' experiences — even without direct exposure to the original event. What this means practically is that when someone reacts with disproportionate rage to a political comment, or shuts down completely during a difficult conversation, they may not simply be "oversensitive." They may be running on inherited emotional software — survival code written for a world that no longer exists. Why Men Carry This Differently Hübl pays particular attention to how men navigate — or fail to navigate — this inherited pain. Fathers who returned from wars emotionally absent. Grandfathers who equated stoicism with strength. The message passed down through generations of male experience has often been the same: don't feel, don't speak, don't need. The result, Hübl argues, is a quiet epidemic of male loneliness. Men who feel profoundly alone but lack the relational vocabulary to name it, let alone address it. This emotional numbness doesn't stay private — it shapes how men lead, how they parent, and how they respond when the world feels threatening or chaotic. Social Media and the Collapse of Disagreement The speed of modern life compounds everything. Hübl points to the way social media has restructured our relational world, pulling us into echo chambers that confirm what we already believe and treat opposing views as existential threats rather than different perspectives. This is the mechanics of relational fragility : when we lack the internal resources to tolerate discomfort, disagreement stops feeling like a conversation and starts feeling like an attack. The nervous system, already running hot from unprocessed stress and ancestral anxiety, treats a political argument the same way it might treat physical danger. The result is a society where nuance collapses. Where the gray zones — the places where honest people might reasonably disagree — get flattened into clean tribal binaries. You're either with us or against us. And the cost, Hübl suggests, is enormous: not just to public discourse, but to our capacity for genuine human connection. Extremism as a Symptom Hübl frames the rise of extremism not as a cause of our social fracturing, but as a symptom of it. When people feel disoriented, overwhelmed, and unmoored — as many do in a period of rapid technological, political, and economic change — they reach for certainty. Rigid ideologies, charismatic strongmen, and simple explanations for complex problems all become attractive precisely because they offer relief from the unbearable weight of uncertainty. Understanding this doesn't mean excusing dangerous movements. But it does suggest that confronting extremism only at the political level, without addressing the underlying emotional and psychological soil in which it grows, is unlikely to produce lasting change. Healing as a Political Act Perhaps the most provocative thread running through Hübl's thinking is the idea that personal healing is not self-indulgent — it is, in fact, a form of social responsibility. When individuals do the difficult work of processing their own trauma — of learning to sit with discomfort, to regulate their nervous systems, to distinguish the present moment from the ghosts of the past — they become less reactive. Less susceptible to manipulation. More capable of genuine empathy and productive disagreement. This is what Hübl means by "releasing inherited burdens." It's not about forgetting history or bypassing pain. It's about developing the interior capacity to carry what needs to be carried — and to set down what was never yours to begin with. Learning to Stay Grounded Practically, this looks less like a dramatic breakthrough and more like a daily practice: Noticing when a reaction feels larger than the situation warrants Pausing before responding in ways driven by fear or inherited pain Building tolerance for ambiguity and complexity Seeking connection across difference rather than retreating into comfort Leadership, Hübl argues, now demands exactly this quality: the ability to remain grounded in uncertainty, to resist the pull toward false clarity, and to model the kind of emotional presence that others can orient around. A More Whole Society The conversation between Thomas Hübl and the ManTalks Podcast ultimately lands somewhere hopeful, if demanding. The fractures visible in our politics, our relationships, and our public life are real — but they are not inevitable. They are the visible expression of deep, largely unexamined wounds. The path forward isn't louder arguments or better debate tactics. It's the quieter, harder work of becoming more whole — individually and collectively. Of learning, as Hübl puts it, to handle the unknown without collapsing into fear or division. In a world that often rewards reactivity, that may be the most radical thing a person can do.