In the story of Chicken Little, the title character gets bonked on the head by an acorn and makes it his life's goal to inform everyone that the sky is falling. Sure enough, he convinces the other farm birds around him that the end is nigh, and in their shared delusion, they wind up being convinced to take shelter in a foxhole with a sly fox, where the poultry become dinner.
The lesson is clear. Don't embrace the delusion of the hysterical. In a way, the good guy of the story is the fox for letting nature take its course and weeding out the stupid of the species. But if anyone is the villain, it's not Chicken Little; it's the grown adults who fed the delusion despite all evidence to the contrary. They didn't question the chick or try to discern reality for themselves; they just immediately embraced the panic because one of their own was doing it.
Why do I bring this up?
Ladies and gentlemen, allow me to introduce you to Ducky Daddles.
"Socialist Dad" shocked to learn that normal people are still eating in restaurants and not rioting like lunatics. pic.twitter.com/qNIFgkcJlK
— Cassandra MacDonald (@CassandraRules) January 26, 2026
Daddles here is shocked because, clearly, the sky is falling, and yet no one seems to be panicking like he is. No one is mindlessly going out into the streets to express their outrage that the apocalypse is upon them. He can only conclude that they're willfully ignoring their own destruction, just like the French did when the Nazis were at their doorstep.
He even goes so far as to suggest that he is more awake and conscious than everyone else, willing to embrace the reality that everyone else is actively trying to deny. People are just eating at restaurants, having a good time, eating their meals, and wholly uncaring about the undeniable slaughter happening just down the street.
It's honestly kind of funny. This man thinks he sees around everyone and is one of the few who truly understands the severity of what's going on, but in truth, he and his Karl Marx beard are only exposing how he's hooked his trailer to the collective hysterics of the left. He's not actually stopping to think about what's happening; he's just adopting the narrative he was fed and then standing on a soapbox to preach his moral superiority, not to us, but to his own side.
To be clear — and I don't think I need to tell you this — the crisis he thinks he sees that few others do is one that his side is creating. It's his side that is pushing the escalation that he himself seems to be shocked by. It's the left going out and starting fights with ICE, showing up wherever they are with the intent to harass and sometimes even assault.
Then they're beside themselves when someone is shot and killed by law enforcement. So much so that, in their delusion, they proclaim that the death was a result of Trump's dictatorial nature growing out of control, and they use that to fuel the delusion of the apocalypse further and react more intensely.
Then they act as smug as they can about their moral superiority.
Read: We're Dealing With People Who Think Morality Is Subjective
The hilarious thing about the left is their belief that they're both more virtuous and intelligent than everyone around them, but as this guy demonstrates, he's really just proud of his own delusion.
I think that can sum up the left quite a bit. A bunch of people who are so comfortable living in the world that was provided to them by better men, that they have to create problems for themselves, get mad at you for not going along with it, then feel morally superior for doubling down on the problems and making them worse while you try to fix what they broke.
If there weren't so many of these people in America, they'd be a funny group to watch, but sadly, there are so many Ducky Daddles, Turkey Lurkeys, and Henny Pennys that they have more of an effect on our nation than they should.
I wouldn't be surprised to hear that a few more of these leftists wound up in the fox's den before this is all said and done, but I won't shed a tear. They deluded themselves into it.






