SCAPEGOAT: Why America Made Trans People The Villain

Scapegoat: Why America Made Trans People The Villain is a powerful examination of how transgender and non-binary people became the centerpiece of a manufactured culture war- used not as neighbors or citizens, but as symbols. As government-placed distractions and leverage to manipulate and trick the public.

This book argues that the so-called "trans debate" is not truly about gender or the protection of children, as politics often claims. It is about power and greed.

With urgency, Scapegoat traces the mechanics of moral panic in American politics-how fear is engineered, amplified, and repeated until it feels more like common sense, making it more difficult to tell the difference between reality and make-believe. Drawing from history, media narratives, and campaign strategy, S. Elias W Sharp reveals how scapegoating works, why it works, and who benefits from it.

When wages stagnate, healthcare costs soar, schools struggle, and communities fail, it is easier to point at a vulnerable minority than to confront systemic failures. Manufactured outrage keeps voters emotional and distracted. Meanwhile, the real crises-economic instability, corporate influence, eroding democratic norms-persist.

But this is not only about manipulation. It is also about humanity.

At a moment when elections are shaped by identity politics and emotional manipulation, Scapegoat invites readers to pause, step back, and recognize the pattern. Because once you see the mechanism of scapegoating, you cannot unsee it. And once you understand how villains are manufactured, you can begin to dismantle the machinery that created them.

Scapegoat is not just about transgender Americans. It is about the health of democracy itself.