We’re seeing a growing number of young people who are highly intelligent, introverted, anxious, and deeply immersed in virtual environments […]
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An empty, unguarded mind becomes fertile ground for whatever is planted.
If truth isn’t being sown, something else will be.
In these spaces, there’s often a constant encouragement to question everything — especially your identity. Who you are. What you are. Why you feel out of place. These questions, asked in isolation and echoed in groupthink environments, can spiral into deep confusion — especially for youth who are already struggling socially or emotionally.
And when someone who’s feeling unseen finally finds a community that says, “We see you. You belong here. Your feelings define your truth,” — that’s incredibly powerful. But it can also be deeply misleading.
What many forget is this: affirmation doesn’t always equal truth. And confusion is not clarity just because it’s widely echoed.
The transgender ideology, when introduced through these platforms without critical context or balanced perspectives, can become more than a personal journey — it becomes a trend, a tribal badge, or worse, a misdiagnosed solution to deeper issues like anxiety, trauma, loneliness, or a craving for belonging.
Sometimes I think about it this way: today, a young person may say they’re trans — not because it was an unshakable truth from within, but because that’s what their environment, their online culture, and their peer group consistently reflect and affirm.
But place that same young person on a quiet farm, surrounded by cowboys and cattle dogs, and they might just be wearing boots and a hat — never once questioning their identity.
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Are we giving our kids the tools they need to navigate a world that’s trying to redefine them every day?
Because if we don’t sow truth early — something else will take root.