AITA for thinking people should stop posting self-congratulatory circle j**ks here?
In a world where moral grey areas fuel fiery debates, the narrator longs for true conflict—raw, complex dilemmas that challenge the very core of human ethics.
Yet, what floods the forums are tired, black-and-white tales of obvious right and wrong, leaving no room for introspection or the thrill of judgment.
Frustrated by the predictable and the mundane, the narrator’s voice rises against the flood of virtue-signaling stories, craving the messy, uncomfortable stories that force us to question ourselves.
This is not just a critique; it’s a yearning for deeper human drama, where heroes and villains blur and real judgment is demanded.

















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Internet Users Didn’t Hold Back:
The community had thoughts — lots of them. From tough love to thoughtful advice, the comment section didn’t disappoint.























The original poster expresses significant frustration with the perceived simplicity and lack of genuine moral complexity in many common "Am I The Asshole" (AITA) posts, viewing them as obvious situations where the poster is clearly not in the wrong.
The central conflict lies between the poster's desire for challenging, ambiguous ethical dilemmas and the reality of a subreddit often filled with clear-cut cases involving minor personal grievances or obvious legal/moral violations.
Is the desire for genuinely difficult moral quandaries a valid expectation for a public forum, or does the current trend of posting simple conflicts reflect a broader need for validation regarding basic social norms and personal boundaries?