Eternal hatred: a luxury no one should pay for

Published on June 29, 2026 | Translated from Spanish

The news is clear: hatred endures over time, almost like a virus without a vaccine. For citizens, this translates into grudges that poison personal relationships, divide communities, and break families apart. The worst part is that it offers no practical benefit; it does not improve coexistence or the local economy. The only sensible way out is to foster dialogue and empathy to prevent this problem from becoming chronic.

Cinematic scene of two silhouetted figures facing each other across a cracked digital display, a glowing virus-like symbol of hatred spreading between them as red particles infect a circuit board below, hands reaching toward a broken keyboard and tangled ethernet cables, technical illustration style, photorealistic render, dramatic shadow play, cold blue and toxic red lighting, ultra-detailed electronic components, cracked glass screen reflecting fractured faces, motion blur on particles during transmission, demonstrating the process of digital hate spreading without any practical benefit, engineering visualization with precise hardware details

How technology can break the cycle of resentment 🛠️

In the field of development, digital platforms offer tools for managing conflicts. Discussion forums, mediation apps, and artificial intelligence systems can analyze toxic communication patterns and suggest pauses before responding. Recommendation algorithms, if designed ethically, could prioritize content that promotes understanding rather than confrontation. The key is to use technology as a bridge, not a wall.

Eternal hatred: the only feeling that doesn't need WiFi 📡

Because yes, while your router goes down and you lose signal, hatred remains as firm as a rock. It doesn't need updates, it doesn't consume battery, and it never asks to restart. It is the only digital legacy that doesn't depend on the cloud. If at least it worked like an antivirus and eliminated others' grudges, it would be a star product. But no: it only takes up space in your head, without offering even a free subscription to peace of mind.