Sunday, January 11, 2026

You're Wrong

Stop Tolerating the Delusional: The Death of Truth is Not an Opinion

​There comes a point where we have to stop coddling ignorance under the guise of "respecting an opinion" and start calling things exactly what they are: flat-out, objectively wrong. We live in a world where people think their half-baked feelings carry the same weight as demonstrable, measurable reality, and it is exhausting. If you want to claim the Earth is flat when we have sailed around it, measured it, photographed it from the vacuum of space, and confirmed its rotation with laser gyroscopes, you aren't "brave" and you aren't a "free thinker." You are just plain wrong. It isn't a mistake, it isn't a misunderstanding, and it isn't a valid "alternative perspective." It is a rejection of reality that borders on the pathological, and we owe no respect to a lie just because someone holds it sincerely.

​This same spineless subjectivity has infected how we talk about morality and the nature of God. We’ve allowed people to weaponize faith to claim that "God hates this person" or "God hates that group," turning a Creator defined by love into a puppet for their own petty, human bigotry. God doesn’t hate people; God hates sin—the actual harm we do to one another—and to suggest otherwise is a theological perversion. When someone tells you that a destructive path is "fine" or that "it won't hurt you" to engage in something you know is poisonous, they aren't offering a lifestyle choice; they are lying to your face. There is no middle ground when it comes to the truth.

​We have to stop saying "well, that’s just your truth" and start standing up for the truth. Whether it is the shape of the planet we walk on or the fundamental moral laws that govern our souls, some things are simply not up for debate. Telling someone they are wrong isn't an act of hate—it’s an act of sanity. If we continue to treat every baseless rant and every "infantile" conspiracy as a valid contribution to the conversation, we are complicit in the collapse of common sense. It is time to grow up, look the delusional in the eye, and stop pretending that every opinion deserves a seat at the table.

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