I’ve been looking into who actually controls our modern dating landscape, and the rabbit hole goes deep. Match Group owns almost every major dating app (Tinder, Hinge, Match, Plenty of Fish). They essentially control how young people meet, love, and reproduce. But if you look at their largest institutional shareholders, a massive name pops up: BlackRock.
BlackRock isn't just a regular investment firm. They are heavily invested in the military-industrial complex and weapons manufacturing. Why does a massive military investor care so much about controlling dating apps? Here is my theory on how the US government and elite investors are using Match Group as a psychological weapon.

1. The Weaponization of Sexual Frustration
Dating app algorithms are notorious for keeping people swiping without ever finding a real connection. This isn't just to make money; it’s by design to create an isolated, lonely, and sexually frustrated population.
Why would the US government and military investors want this?
Easier Indoctrination: Psychologically, isolated and frustrated individuals are much more susceptible to radicalization and control. When people lack love and community, they seek identity elsewhere. They become perfect targets for political tribalism, military recruitment, and hyper-consumerism.
Distraction: A lonely population spends more time consuming media, buying things to fill the void, and fighting culture wars online, rather than looking up and questioning the elite.

2. Quiet Corporate Eugenics
If you control the digital gateway to reproduction, you control the future demographics of the country. By quietly tweaking the algorithms behind Tinder and Hinge, these platforms can carry out a form of modern eugenics without anyone noticing.
Suppressed Birth Rates: By making successful matchmaking incredibly difficult for the average person, they can artificially lower birth rates among specific demographics.
Controlled Matching: The algorithm decides who sees whom. By prioritizing or hiding certain profiles based on data profiles (income, education, race, political views), the platform can shadowban entire groups from finding partners, effectively deciding who gets to pass on their genes.
Dating apps aren't broken; they are working exactly as intended. We are being socially engineered to be lonely, compliant, and divided.

Posted by Babs_Achtung

2 Comments

  1. tinder, hinge, etc have a business model of you subscribing. if you find the love of your life, you’re not subscribing. of course they don’t want happy couples.

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