[The European Conservative] When a Culture War Becomes a Truth War

Facts are being spun — and non-arguments are being lazily assembled — to score partisan points.

Jorge González-Gallarza
1 min readMay 13, 2024

“I have a Polish gay friend who is a second-class citizen”. Uttered lightly between 2015 and 2023, the statement may go down west of the Oder-Neisse line, Poland’s Western frontier, as no worse than an anodyne boutade. If deployed around the country’s last legislative race back in October to score outrage points against the social conservatism of the defeated Law and Justice (PiS) government, the argument attains the persuasive power of a five-year-old’s temper tantrum. If indeed homosexuality is a category PiS has discriminated against by law in its eight years in office, then that “second-class citizenship” should correlate with the entire demographic being targeted. If true, this would turn any individual testimony, on either side, into a statistical irrelevance — one that hinders, not aids, the rhetorical frame into which that statistic is slotted.

Continue reading the entire piece at The European Conservative here.

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Jorge González-Gallarza
Jorge González-Gallarza

Written by Jorge González-Gallarza

Writing from Paris, Jorge's work has featured in The Wall Street Journal, National Review, The American Conservative, The National Interest and elsewhere.

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