Talking About Trans Suicide Got Me Locked Out of X | WISESUPREMACY

11 days ago
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Talking About Trans SuIcide Got Me Locked Out of X | WISESUPREMACY

Recently, X (Twitter) decided to lock my account after I responded to another user with a post addressing trans suicide, mental health, and the urgent need for honest conversation.

I didn’t insult anyone.
I didn’t encourage harm.
I did the opposite — I spoke out against suicide and highlighted why ignoring these issues helps no one, how being insane is a direct correlation to the suicide rates seen in the trans community.

But the moment I referenced widely documented statistics — including research showing that transgender individuals report extremely high rates of suicide attempts — my post was reported, flagged, and my account was locked.

Why?

Because we now live in a digital world where even discussing data is treated as dangerous if it challenges a preferred narrative.

My point was simple:

When a community shows a suicide attempt rate dramatically higher than the general population, mental-health struggles must be part of the conversation.

Correlation is not an insult — it’s a warning sign.
And silencing people for acknowledging it does nothing to prevent suffering.

In this episode of WISESUPREMACY, we break down how censorship policies on major platforms make it nearly impossible to talk openly about suicide prevention, mental-health correlations, or the realities behind these alarming statistics; TRANS PEOPLE are INSANE.

This is not about attacking anyone.
It’s about saving lives through truth, transparency, and real discussion and highlighting that the Trans agenda promotes insane self-destruction.

In this episode, I cover:
• What I actually posted — and why X locked my account
• Why suicide-related data sparks censorship online
• The importance of acknowledging mental-health factors without hate or hostility
• How platforms suppress conversations about prevention
• Why open dialogue is necessary for reducing suicide risk
• The broader trend of punishing people for citing objective information
• How protecting feelings can sometimes prevent protecting lives
This is not a political rant.
It’s a conversation about free speech, mental health, and the cost of shutting down difficult truths.

Welcome to Wise Supremacy.
Welcome to the WISECAST.**
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