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The Price of Saying What Was True

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An Excerpt from The Price of Saying What Was True on Townhall.com

I knew she was right. I knew I was right. And I never had any doubt.

Of course, the people who were dead wrong are moving the goalposts. It’s the only way to save face. That’s why J.K. Rowling’s recent observation struck such a nerve.

Watching public opinion continue to shift, Rowling wrote, As the vibe shifts… the obvious place to start is, Its not that I couldnt see your point, but did you have to say it that way?’”

That caught my attention because I think she’s exactly right.

As more voices begin distancing themselves from ideas they once defended with unwavering confidence, the conversation has quietly changed. It isn’t, “Were we wrong?” It’s, “Did you really have to say it that way?”

That’s an extraordinary shift. That caught my attention. The debate itself seemed to have shifted.

Because it suggests the argument is no longer about whether uncomfortable facts should be faced. It’s about whether the people who spoke those facts aloud were polite enough while doing it.

For years, Americans watched an intense cultural battle unfold over questions that reached far beyond politics. Parents questioned whether children should receive irreversible medical interventions for gender dysphoria. Female athletes objected to competing against biological males. Women raised concerns about privacy and safety in sex-separated spaces. Physicians, researchers, teachers, and ordinary citizens asked whether dissent from prevailing orthodoxy would still be tolerated.

Too often, the response wasn’t a debate. It was punishment.

Ask uncomfortable questions and you risked losing your reputation. Parents were branded extremists for asking what schools were teaching their own children. Medical professionals who questioned prevailing practices found themselves under enormous professional pressure. Researchers, journalists, and ordinary citizens learned there was a price for refusing to repeat ideas they believed were false.

See the FULL ARTICLE on Townhall.com


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