The Nature Boy is fed up with the internet

Ric Flair just dropped a bomb on the wrestling world, and for once, it wasn't about a retirement match. He went on a blistering rant, claiming he has more money than time and specifically calling out the keyboard warriors who occupy his mentions. This marks a new peak in the bizarre late-career trajectory of the two-time Hall of Famer, who seems more interested in digital warfare than any actual in-ring action.

We are watching a man who lived through the NWA territorial days try to grapple with a generation that lives on X, formerly Twitter. Flair is not known for his subtlety, and this recent outburst perfectly highlights the disconnect between old-school legends and the modern social media cycle. You can read the original report over at WrestlingNews.co if you want the full context on his current beef with random internet users.

The divide among the fans

The reception has been predictably feral. On one side, you have the guys who grew up watching him bleed buckets in St. Louis and Charlotte. They treat his legacy as untouchable, viewing any critic as a heretic. These fans think Flair is simply being the same arrogant, limousine-riding heel he played for fifty years. They see it as vintage Naitch, refusing to apologize to anyone.

Then you have the younger guard. They scroll through their feeds and see a legend who refuses to log off and just enjoy his pension. These fans argue that he is actively hurting his own mystique by getting into flame wars with teenagers. It is a clash of generations, and neither side is giving an inch. The reality? Flair is doing exactly what he has always done: working the crowd until they are purple in the face.

The skeptics are sharpening their knives

Not everyone is buying the persona anymore. Many fans on forums are pointing out that Flair’s obsession with his financial status sounds less like a high-rolling legend and more like a guy who knows people are laughing at him. There is a strong sentiment that if he truly had all the money in the world, he would be on a private island instead of checking his notifications every ten minutes. It is a sad look for someone who should be enjoying a quiet victory lap.

One frequent commenter on the subreddit pointed out that Ric is basically just shouting into the void at this point. They noted that every time he engages with a troll, he is just validating the very people he claims to despise. It creates a feedback loop of misery that makes every post move closer to self-parody. The irony of calling people trolls while you are the one instigating the argument is apparently lost on the Nature Boy.

My take on the mess

Here is where I land: Flair is the ultimate worker, but he is working himself into a shoot. We are looking at a guy who cannot accept that the world has moved on from the era of the peacocking champion. It is hard to watch a man who took a belly-to-back suplex from Sting a thousand times crumble because someone in his mentions made a snide remark about his recent appearances. The argument that he is just being 'on brand' is getting thinner by the day.

The stronger argument clearly belongs to the side asking for some dignity. There is a difference between playing a character and losing your cool in public. When you are bragging about your bank account in 2026, you have already lost the exchange. It is not about his wrestling skill or his past accolades anymore. It is about his inability to just walk away from the spotlight, even when the spotlight has become a flickering, dying light bulb in a dark room. He is currently at a 0 percent chance of winning this battle, because the internet never forgets and it never, ever gets tired of poking the bear.

If the 77-year-old icon wants to preserve his status as the greatest talker in history, he needs to throw his phone into the Atlantic. Wrestling history is built on guys leaving the building and letting the fans wonder what is next. By sticking around to fight the trolls, Flair is stripping away the mystery. We are essentially watching a slow-motion car crash, and unfortunately, it is happening on our timelines for the foreseeable future. The smart money is on ignoring the bait, but Ric Flair has never been one to take the smart money.