Meta Acknowledges Biological Sex: Saying “Trans Women Aren’t Female” No Longer Deemed Hate Speech

# Meta Admits the Obvious: Truth Is Not Hate Speech

There’s a quiet cultural earthquake buried beneath the recent news that Meta (the parent company of Facebook and Instagram) has decided comments stating that “trans women” are not biological women do not qualify as “hate speech.” For anyone not fully numbed by the inertia of modernity, this is a “dog bites man” headline—common sense finally peeking its head above the digital molasses of ideological insanity. And yet, it’s more significant than it seems.

Because when one of the most powerful gatekeepers of public discourse flickers in the direction of biological truth, it signals more than just a corporate policy change. It reveals a fracture in the totalizing narrative that’s been imposed on society: a narrative that dictates, with Orwellian fervor, that to see what is plainly true is to commit a thoughtcrime.

Let’s not waste this moment. Let’s take the scaffolding of this development and build something truer upon it.

## Biology Is Not Bigotry

In the cultural imagination of the new secular priesthood, to state biological facts is to be cruel. “Male and female He created them” (Genesis 1:27) is seen as hate speech. But the issue is not simply about chromosomes or what bathroom someone uses. It’s about whether we will be allowed—socially, digitally, legally—to speak the truth.

Christians do not get brownie points for repeating culturally palatable lies. There are only two sexes, and no amount of hormones, surgeries, or TikTok followers can erase the reality that a man cannot become a woman. Saying so is not an act of violence—it is an act of mercy, clarity, and love to declare the truth in a generation addicted to self-worship.

Meta’s shift does not signal repentance or a return to truth out of principle. It is likely a tactical move, a response to shifting legal, societal, or even monetary pressures. But still, truth has a stubborn way of resurfacing, even in the most ideologically captured institutions. And when it does, we should be ready to remind the world why truth matters.

## Speaking the Obvious Is Becoming Revolutionary

The fact that this is newsworthy at all—that stating “trans women are not real women” is no longer considered ban-worthy—should be sobering. When truth becomes controversial, lies become sacred, and dissent becomes heroic.

In that sense, we are entering a kind of post-liberal purgatory: a world where the old liberal values of open debate and empirical reasoning have given way to emotivist taboos enforced by algorithmic priests. If you trigger someone’s feelings, you’re guilty—facts notwithstanding.

But Christ didn’t concern Himself with the temporary approval of crowds. He said things that got Him killed. That should shape our witness. We are not trying to keep our accounts unflagged; we are trying to keep our souls unsoiled.

## The Connection to Abortion: Why Truth Denial Is Lethal

There’s a strange symmetry between the denial of biological sex and the mass denial of the humanity of the unborn. Both require a willful retreat from observable reality. Both require the majority to accept contradictions. Both are driven by a religious impulse to enthrone the self above any created order.

And both end in the devaluation—and destruction—of human life.

If we can delude ourselves into thinking that men can become women, then it’s no surprise we’ve deluded ourselves into thinking that terminating a baby is a healthcare decision. Once truth becomes negotiable, human dignity becomes disposable.

Abortion is not health care. It is the premeditated killing of an innocent child—a modern genocide sanitized by legal language and cultural numbness. And many of the same institutions that promote gender confusion also promote the sacrament of modern secularism: abortion.

Where truth is trampled in one place, it does not stay on its feet in others. We need to see this spiritual battlefield for what it is.

## Christians Must Speak With Precision, Not Permission

Our battle is not against flesh and blood, and it’s certainly not against those trapped in identity confusion. It is against the powers and principalities that have deceived entire societies. But part of fighting that battle is refusing to outsource our moral vocabulary to Silicon Valley moderators or to fear the disapproval of mobs.

We are not called to be nice; we are called to be faithful. The gospel is not permitted speech—it is dangerous speech. It tears down ideologies built on sand and re-establishes them on the rock of God’s Word.

If Meta now permits basic biology to be spoken again, that’s good. But don’t take it as a permission slip. Speak the truth whether they allow it or not.

## Time to Exit the Algorithmic Plantation

This development also underscores a larger point: digital platforms are not neutral spaces for debate. They are battlegrounds where speech is carefully curated, overlorded, manipulated. Christians must stop treating these platforms as pagan temples that we’re hoping will eventually be converted. They are regimes with their own high priests, and they tolerate dissent only when it’s safe—for them.

We need parallel economies, parallel platforms, parallel voices. Not out of echo-chamber nostalgia, but because truth requires oxygen. If we don’t do this, the truth dies—not loudly, but quietly, in millions of silenced posts and shadow-banned feeds and censored video streams.

Culture is not merely downstream from politics—it is downstream from worship. And our cultural war is a war of worship: who defines reality, and who has the right to name things? We cannot serve both Caesar and Christ—especially not when Caesar insists we call him “she.”

## Conclusion: Now Is the Time for Clarity

Meta’s new stance may feel like a breath of air in a room that had long been vacuum-sealed. But it’s still inside the same maze. The enemy isn’t just social media censorship—it’s the deeper cowardice of a church and a citizenry that fears man more than God.

“So have I become your enemy by telling you the truth?” (Galatians 4:16). If that’s our fate, then so be it. Better to be exiled from society than estranged from Scripture.

Truth is not hate speech. It is the only hope we have.

Let the world scream. But let the church speak.

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