Fb.txt May 2026

This performance breeds a quiet exhaustion. We scroll through others’ highlight reels while comparing them to our own behind-the-scenes footage. Depression and loneliness rise in direct proportion to time spent comparing. The platform promised connection but delivered comparison. Perhaps most dangerously, Facebook dismantled the gatekeepers of truth. In the age of newspapers and TV news, there were editors—flawed, yes—but at least bound by professional standards. Facebook replaced them with engagement metrics. A conspiracy theory that gets shares is algorithmically promoted over a fact-checked article that doesn’t.

We now live in personalized reality bubbles. Your Facebook feed looks different from your neighbor’s, not just in ads but in fundamental facts. The platform doesn’t intend to deceive—it simply doesn’t care. Truth is not a variable in its optimization equation. Many have tried to leave. Some succeed. But Facebook’s network effects are stronger than any individual will. Your events are there. Your local buy-nothing group. The aunt who only shares photos there. The business page you rely on. Leaving means losing access to parts of your social world. FB.txt

The deepest blog post about Facebook isn’t about features or scandals. It’s about us. About what we lose when we outsource our social lives to a surveillance-driven advertising company. About whether we have the courage to log off long enough to build something real again. If you share the actual content of FB.txt , I’ll tailor the post exactly to that. This performance breeds a quiet exhaustion