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Keith Lee Johnson examines the objective nature of truth and the cultural impulse to reshape it around personal feelings, emphasizing confession as the bridge between reality and admission. He explores how desire, fantasy, and hypocrisy distort moral standards, and how truth‑tellers often face resistance in a society that prefers comforting illusions. Johnson also reflects on Candace Owens’ investigation into a tragic event, noting how grief, silence, and family dynamics shape public narratives, and stresses the need for accountability, compassion, and honest self‑assessment in both faith and relationships.
By KEITH LEE JOHNSONKeith Lee Johnson examines the objective nature of truth and the cultural impulse to reshape it around personal feelings, emphasizing confession as the bridge between reality and admission. He explores how desire, fantasy, and hypocrisy distort moral standards, and how truth‑tellers often face resistance in a society that prefers comforting illusions. Johnson also reflects on Candace Owens’ investigation into a tragic event, noting how grief, silence, and family dynamics shape public narratives, and stresses the need for accountability, compassion, and honest self‑assessment in both faith and relationships.