When Social Glue Outweighs Truth

We live in a time when news travels at the speed of a click. A story breaks, opinions explode, and before the dust settles, millions of people have already picked a side. It would be encouraging if those positions were built on verified facts, but often they’re not. Instead, they’re shaped by something more powerful than truth itself: the social glue of belonging.

A Story That Stopped Me Cold

Recently, I read a breaking news report that angered me. The media shared details immediately—without taking time to verify the facts—because ratings and clicks mattered more than accuracy. The half-baked story took off, fueling activists who staked clear positions on the issue before anyone truly knew what had happened.

This morning, I bumped into someone who brought up the story. Since I had access to the actual facts from industry insiders, I began to explain what had really transpired. BLAM! Before I could finish, the person yelled at me. I tried to clarify, but I wasn’t allowed.

Why? Because their opinion wasn’t anchored in truth—it was cemented by their social circle. Their friends had already taken a stand. To question the narrative meant risking social rejection, and belonging outweighed accuracy.

The ripple effects were staggering. Activists were boycotting, social media arguments flared, and tempers ran hot—all based on false information. An industry insider confided that they had no idea how to slow the emotional rampage or get people back on the same page. Instead, they were forced into triage mode, just hoping to capture a shred of reality.

It got worse. One of the three companies involved had to build an entirely new publicity campaign that treated the falsehood as if it were true—because that’s where the public conversation had already landed. It sounds absurd, but there’s wisdom hidden there: sometimes the only way to lead people back to reality is to start where they are and slowly walk them across the bridge you build into truth.

Why Truth Often Loses

That experience hammered home a difficult reality: truth doesn’t always carry as much weight as community. People may claim they value facts, but when those facts threaten the acceptance of their social group, most will hold tighter to the group than to reality.

This is confirmation bias on steroids. We don’t just look for information that validates our perspective—we look for information that validates our tribe. And once we’ve socially reinforced a belief, even airtight evidence can feel like a threat.

Familiarity Feels Like Truth

Another reason false stories gain traction is repetition. The more often something is said—especially by trusted friends or favorite voices—the more “true” it feels. Familiarity breeds credibility, even if the information is wrong. That’s why fact-checks and corrections rarely travel as far or as fast as the initial story. Once a narrative is familiar and socially reinforced, it feels like common sense.

Why Facts Alone Don’t Change Minds

We’ve all tried it—dropping statistics or news articles into a heated debate, only to be dismissed or attacked. The problem isn’t always the strength of the evidence; it’s the lack of trust between the messenger and the audience. Facts are abstract. Relationships are personal. And when truth threatens to fracture relationships, it often loses.

This is why shouting louder doesn’t work. Correcting someone in front of their peers can backfire, because it doesn’t just challenge their opinion—it threatens their standing in the group.

The Path Back to Truth

So, what do we do when social glue outweighs truth? We start by recognizing that people are relational beings first and rational beings second. If we want truth to stick, it has to travel through trust.

Here are a few practical approaches:

  1. Lead With Respect. People listen when they feel respected, even in disagreement.
  2. Build Trust Before Sharing Facts. A trusted voice can carry hard truths where a stranger’s voice can’t.
  3. Find Shared Values. Frame truth in ways that connect with what the other person already values—safety, freedom, fairness, or community.
  4. Plant Seeds, Don’t Throw Stones. Change rarely happens in the heat of debate. It happens later, when a planted idea starts to grow.
  5. Start Where People Are. As frustrating as it sounds, sometimes the only way forward is to meet people inside their existing narrative and carefully build a bridge toward reality.

People Believe What Helps Them Belong

The story I experienced reminded me that truth, on its own, isn’t always enough. Social belonging can be stronger than facts, louder than reason, and more persuasive than evidence. People don’t just believe what they think is true—they believe what helps them belong.

If we want to see truth prevail, we can’t only correct lies. We must cultivate relationships, build trust, and patiently guide people across the bridge from where they are to what’s real. Because in the end, truth matters—but only if we can carry it together.

Copyright © 2025 by CJ Powers

Facebook — A Modern Day Memoir

MemoirsI was emotionally stirred this morning, as I read seven accounts of writers experiencing the effects of having written their memoirs. The authors bared their soul to the world and received a form of validation in the process. The artful pleasures that illuminated their past were tastefully raw and revealed the human condition in a universal manner that all readers easily understood.

The one comment or point of revelation shared by all seven was that of making choices. In reducing ones life to the page, a selection of entries were decided upon. The chosen stories were filtered for entertainment value and truth. A morsel of revelation was also present. A modern day “ahha” moment, if you will.

I contemplated if I were capable of sharing the intimate parts of my private life publicly. Would I be condemned or praised for sharing my reaction from a conversation with Mrs. Van Husen, a gold medal Olympian from Germany who became a publicist for Adolph Hitler? Or, in our politically correct society would I have the courage to share the internal thoughts I debated in my childhood, while holding a woman’s swimsuit in my hands after talking with a gay neighbor?

Having grown up in the world of theatre and motion pictures, I’ve had more experiences within our liberal world than most would see in a lifetime. The stories would certainly shock the weak minded and amaze the intelligent with insights into the human condition. But, few would expect to learn, that with all the freedoms and generous offers afforded me, I chose to live a conservative life.

It’s all about choice. Not tendencies or leanings, but decisions.

We are free to Facebook what we want others to know about us. Some write too much, giving us no room to contemplate the depths of their soul. Others write little for fear they won’t be accepted. Then there are those who write only the positive, trying to make us think they are perfect, removing themselves from any form of humanity.

Facebook is like memoirs. Every entry is a choice to reveal something about ourselves. We can chose to entertain or bore our readers. We also chose how vulnerable we’re willing to be — Demonstrating our true self or creating a false image to hide behind.

The seven authors were courageous and opened my eyes to the power of revelation through vulnerable sharing. It made me wonder how many followers a person might have on Facebook if they honestly shared their thoughts and feelings. Would their numbers rise incrementally or drop rapidly into the basement? Would the person be praised for their comments this year and be haunted by it twenty years from now?

I have learned that the more tolerance community requires, the more judgmental those around us become. When the Ten Commandments guided our nation, camaraderie was present because we all had fallen short. Listening to each other’s experiences and stories gave us insights into life that helped us fight the good fight. But, today we hesitate to hear those who may disagree with our position or beliefs, for fear we may not be able to defend our perspective with persuasion and dignity.

The risk of revealing our true self is greater today than forty years ago. Yet society needs truth more than ever. Unfortunately there are few willing to risk their future in order to share elements from their dysfunctional life for the sake of humanity. Instead we are entertained by extremists who seek only attention, rather than the common good that benefits us all.

Today, the greater the spectacle the more followers. But our hearts need the truth. We need some imperfect person to remind us of our humanity, while instilling hope into our lives. We need real people to live as an open book. Then we will have the courage to decide what revelation from our life is worth sharing in our modern memoir published on Facebook.

Copyright © 2016 by CJ Powers