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Weird Logic's avatar

As someone well-versed in rocking the boat simply by being radically true, not serving the collective has a cost. Most people are transactional in nature, seeking validation above all.

I write satire in the pursuit of higher truth. My readers follow me for a time and then make a dramatic exit. They want the smug satisfaction that their perspective is the higher truth to possess it and wear it like a badge. But when I don’t pander to them, it makes them lash out. Even people who say they are open-minded are usually not.

I say this not to be a deterrent, but so often we hear “be true to yourself” or “practice self-love” sounds nice in theory but the reality is crucifixion by those who have a vested interest in staying small.

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Marie Drouvin's avatar

I think this self-censorship is also a disservice to your audience — and to society as a whole. If all the discourse that’s “allowed” ends up sounding like a slightly altered version of the same thing, the range of perspectives shrinks. People then have to become language critics, parsing micro-nuances just to decide what they think. Most won’t bother — it’s exhausting — and the debate shifts from ideas to clever turns of phrase. The beauty of bold ideas is that they’re easy to grasp. You know exactly what they mean, and you can decide where you stand without playing detective

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