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A worker defends policies that exhaust her. A student justifies a school that failed them. A person explains why a one-sided relationship is actually fine. From the outside, it looks like denial. But it's not confusion—it's adaptation. This episode examines why people become the most vocal defenders of systems that harm them, how that defense functions as a survival strategy, and what it actually takes for someone to stop justifying what they can't yet escape. Context shapes behavior more than personality does.
By Frank HarrisonA worker defends policies that exhaust her. A student justifies a school that failed them. A person explains why a one-sided relationship is actually fine. From the outside, it looks like denial. But it's not confusion—it's adaptation. This episode examines why people become the most vocal defenders of systems that harm them, how that defense functions as a survival strategy, and what it actually takes for someone to stop justifying what they can't yet escape. Context shapes behavior more than personality does.