Mind

When did we lose our voice?

“When did we lose our voice? More importantly, when are we going to get it back?”

There was a time when people stood up. Not because it was easy. Not because it was popular. Not because there was a guarantee of success. They stood up because something mattered.

Today, I find myself wondering: when did we lose our voice? When did protest become performance? When did outrage become a social media post? When did conviction become something, we quietly negotiate away in exchange for comfort, convenience, or the possibility of a promotion? Somewhere along the way, we became experts at looking the other way.

We see injustice and tell ourselves someone else will deal with it. We watch social inequality widen and convince ourselves it has nothing to do with us. We hear stories of people struggling, being marginalized, or falling through the cracks, and our response is often little more than a shrug. “Not my problem.”

Those three words may be the defining motto of our time. “Not my problem.” It is not that people do not know what is happening. Information has never been more available. Stories of corruption, discrimination, poverty, and institutional failure are delivered directly into our hands every day. We know. We simply choose not to act.

We have become afraid. Afraid of losing a job. Afraid of being labelled difficult. Afraid of being excluded. Afraid that speaking up will cost us something, and so, we stay silent.

At work, we watch decisions being made that violate our principles. We disagree privately but nod publicly. We tell ourselves we are being pragmatic. We call it professionalism. Sometimes it is simply surrender.

How many people have bitten their tongue to protect a career path? How many have remained silent to secure the next promotion? How many have convinced themselves that principles are luxuries they can no longer afford?

Our values increasingly are for rent. The price varies. A raise. A title. Access to the right circles. A seat at the table. The transaction is often subtle. No dramatic betrayal. No grand declaration. Just small compromises repeated over time until we no longer recognize the person we once intended to be.

The troubling part is that we rarely acknowledge it. We celebrate compliance and call it maturity. We reward conformity and call it teamwork. We dismiss those who challenge the status quo as troublemakers, while quietly benefiting from the very freedoms won by people who refused to stay silent. History has never been changed by the comfortable.

Progress has never been driven by those who said, “This doesn’t affect me.” Every right we enjoy today exists because someone was willing to be unpopular. Someone was willing to protest. Someone was willing to risk their reputation, their security, and sometimes their safety to say, “No. This is wrong.”

Yet today, many of us consume injustice the same way we consume entertainment. We scroll past it. We react to it. Then we move on.

Even our justice system appears to stumble under the weight of delay, inconsistency, and public distrust. Stories that should provoke outrage barely register. We have become so accustomed to disappointment that dysfunction no longer shocks us.

That should concern all of us.

A healthy society requires more than laws and institutions. It requires citizens who care enough to demand better. It requires people willing to challenge authority, question decisions, and refuse to accept that unfairness is simply the way things are.

Democracy is not sustained by silence. Justice is not protected by indifference. Rights are not preserved by people who remain comfortably uninvolved. The question is not whether problems exist. They always have. The question is whether we still possess the courage to confront them, because the greatest threat to any society is not disagreement. It is apathy.

It is the slow erosion of conviction. It is the moment people decide that standing up is no longer worth the effort. That is why the question matters. When did we lose our voice? More importantly, when are we going to get it back?

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