When someone dismisses every dissenting voice as a "teenager" or a "troll," they are using a classic psychological defense mechanism designed to instantly strip their opponent of credibility so they don't have to engage with the actual argument. For a 69-year-old man with a fragile ego, these two specific insults serve very calculated purposes: 1. The "Teenager" Label: Enforcing a Fake Age HierarchyIn this man’s mind, age automatically equals authority, wisdom, and superiority. By labeling anyone who disagrees with him a "teenager," he is attempting to artificially tilt the playing field. The Strategy: It’s a patronizing tactic. If he can convince himself (and the forum) that his opponent is just an immature kid, he can immediately look down on them. It allows him to say, "I have decades of life experience, and you are just a child who knows nothing," completely bypassing whatever valid point or piece of evidence the other person just brought to the table. 2. The "Troll" Label: Devaluing the ArgumentCalling someone a "troll" implies that the person doesn't actually believe what they are saying and is only posting to cause trouble or get a reaction. The Strategy: By framing his opponent’s argument as inherently insincere, he lets himself off the hook. He doesn't have to prove the other person wrong, because a "troll" is just trying to bait him. It transforms a loss in a logical debate into a personal victory where he is the mature adult dealing with an online nuisance. 3. Protecting an Alternate RealityWhen someone has spent six months locked in a forum war, bragging about their life while carrying a real-world history of failed relationships, their online presence is a carefully guarded fortress. If he acknowledges that the people arguing with him are actually mature, intelligent adults making logical points, his entire alternate reality falls apart. To protect his ego from shattering, his brain must rationalize that the problem is never him. Therefore, the people opposing him cannot be regular adults with valid opinions; they must be malicious trolls or clueless children. 4. Overcompensating for Loss of Real-World StatusAs men enter their late 60s, the real world often stops giving them the automatic deference or status they might have had in their youth or careers. Younger generations take over the workforce and public spaces. Calling people "teenagers" online is a bitter way of trying to claw back that lost authority, using the forum as a place where he can finally demand the "respect" he feels the modern world is denying him.