Elon Musk said civilization's survival depends on reading this book.
So I did some digging...
And what I found explains exactly why the West is struggling right now.
Here are the 7 most important lessons inside:
1. Empathy is an evolutionary tool... and it can misfire.
Most people treat empathy as a virtue you can never have too much of.
Gad Saad is a Canadian evolutionary psychologist. He disagrees.
His argument: empathy evolved to help societies survive. But like any tool, it breaks down when you use it on the wrong target.
When that happens, it doesn't protect anyone. It just feels like it does.
2. "A society dies when it cares more about appearing kind than surviving."
That's Saad's central claim.
He's not against empathy. He's against what happens when empathy replaces judgment entirely:
• Prioritizing tolerance over survival
• Rewarding victimhood instead of accountability
• Caring more about looking compassionate than actually being effective
At some point, the kindness starts costing more than it's worth.
3. The blank slate fallacy.
Chapter 4 is called "Blank Slate Felons."
Here's the idea:
Through suicidal empathy, criminals get reframed. Not as people who made choices. But as passive victims of:
• Society
• Poverty
• Trauma
• Circumstance
Strip away moral agency & you strip away accountability too.
Without accountability, things fall apart. Pretty much every time.
4. Moral licensing.
Here's where it gets subtle...
When people feel virtuous for showing empathy, they give themselves permission to ignore results.
Outcomes stop mattering. Intentions do.
Saad calls this moral licensing.
It's pretty much why bad policies survive for decades. The people behind them feel too good about themselves to question whether any of it's working.
5. Empathy and justice can't coexist.
Real justice requires impartiality. Empathy by definition takes sides.
So when empathy drives policy, someone always loses:
• Criminals over victims
• Squatters over homeowners
• Accused over accusers
Whoever you extend empathy toward determines who gets hurt.
That's just how it works.
6. Judge policies by outcomes. Not intentions.
A policy isn't good because it came from a place of kindness.
A policy is good if it produces safe neighborhoods, functional communities & accountable people.
Bad outcomes = bad policy. Doesn't matter how well-meaning it was.
Most people won't say that out loud. Saad does.
7. Infinite tolerance is a paradox.
A society that won't defend itself, in the name of tolerance, eventually gets consumed by what it refused to hold accountable.
Saad's conclusion isn't that we should be cruel.
It's that survival requires the ability to say no.
And right now, that instinct is being trained out of us.
Here's the thing:
Books that go viral always name something people already felt but couldn't articulate.
Saad did that.
Musk endorsed it.
Bill Ackman & Marc Andreessen echoed it.
Now it's everywhere.
That's the self-publishing opportunity most people overlook.
You don't need a publisher's approval to enter a conversation that's already happening. You just have to get there first.
What do you think, has empathy gone too far? Let me know below.
& if you enjoyed this thread...
Follow me @NickDiFabio1 for more content like this.
I grew my self-publishing side hustle from $0 to $1,000,000+.
& I started with a 9-5 job.
Want to do the same?
DM me "Publish" and I'll show you how.
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