Let’s tell the truth:Most major social media platforms are not safe spaces for truth-tellers.Especially when that truth involves naming abuse, calling
Let’s tell the truth:
Most major social media platforms are not safe spaces for truth-tellers.
Especially when that truth involves naming abuse, calling out violence, or standing with Survivors who have been hurt by powerful people or systems.
They say they support “safety.”
They say they believe in “free speech.”
But what they really mean is:
“Keep it soft. Keep it vague. Don’t make people uncomfortable.”
🔕 Platforms Punish You for Saying Too Much of the Truth
If you say:
“This person groomed me.”
“This system covered up my abuse.”
“This celebrity is violent.”
You risk:
Getting your post flagged
Being shadowbanned or restricted
Losing your reach, followers, or income
Having your account deleted altogether
Meanwhile, influencers who mock, minimize, or excuse abuse thrive—and are often boosted by the very same platforms.
🚨 This Is Not a Glitch. It’s a Feature.
These platforms were not built to protect truth-tellers.
They were built to protect engagement. To protect power. To protect profits.
And if a Survivor’s story interrupts those things,
they’ll call it “bullying,” “hate speech,” or “controversial”—
even if it’s just someone finally telling the truth after years of silence.
🤬 They’ll Say:
“That’s too graphic.”
“That’s a personal attack.”
“This violates our guidelines.”
“You’re spreading misinformation.”
When what you’re really doing is naming harm so others can be safe.
💥 But Here’s the Thing:
Naming harm is not violence.
Silencing Survivors is.
We do not name harm to destroy.
We name harm to warn, protect, remember, and heal.
Because silence is where predators thrive.
Because the truth is how we break cycles.
🕯️ So we speak. Even when it’s not trending.
We speak. Even when it costs us.
We speak. Because someone needs to know they’re not alone.
And if social media won’t let us speak,
we build our own platforms.
We write our own stories.
We protect our own.
We survive out loud.
—WeSurviveAbuse.com
For every Survivor silenced by a platform that said, “Too much.”
Your truth is not too much. It’s too real for the wrong crowd.
đź§ Reflection Questions:
Have you ever been censored, flagged, or silenced for naming a truth that mattered to you?
What truths are you carrying that deserve a space to be spoken or written?
Where can you build community outside of platforms that punish truth-telling?
What would it mean to stop waiting for permission and speak anyway?