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Cancel culture didn’t start on one side — it’s everywhere now. The extreme left uses it to control what you can say, and the extreme right uses it to punish who you talk to. Both sides claim to be fighting for truth, but what they’re really doing is shutting people up.
When feminists first started warning about gender ideology — long before it hit cable news — Democrats rolled their eyes and called us bigots. Republicans told their people not to talk to us at all. We were out there raising alarms, getting doxed, losing jobs, and being erased. Then, years later, those same conservatives started saying, “Where are the feminists now?” We never left. You just weren’t listening.
The real change happened when women started listening to each other — not as “Democrat” or “Republican,” not as “feminist” or “conservative,” but as women who were done being told to shut up.
That’s why what happened with Tish, a lesbian from the Bronx, hit so hard. She called out Gold’s Gym in Los Angeles for letting a man with a domestic-violence history harass her in the women’s section. At first, she came in fighting — her whole world had taught her that white feminists were the enemy. But then she went on TERF Radio and realized something different: we were never her enemies. We were her sisters. The moment women stop fighting each other and start fighting for each other, everything changes.
Even people like Buck Angel — one of the first transsexuals to speak openly about the reality of transition — got erased for not fitting into a tribe. I don’t agree with her on everything, but I’ll never ignore what she taught: that being dismissed by doctors, being told your pain doesn’t matter, is the same cruelty women have faced forever. That’s something all women understand — no matter what side they vote on.
Cancel culture killed curiosity. It killed compassion. It made people afraid to sit in the gray areas where truth actually lives. But women are breaking that spell. We’re finding our way back to something older than politics — sisterhood.
You don’t have to agree with someone 100% to stand beside them. You just have to care about truth more than your tribe. The real revolution won’t come from the extremes screaming on TV. It’s already happening in quiet conversations — in gyms, break rooms, and backyards — where women are finally saying, “We were here the whole time. You just stopped hearing us.”






