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“Admittedly I didn’t know who Kylie Perkins was before ya’ll tried to cancel her,” posted women’s sports activist Riley Gaines. “But now I do and I follow her.” Gaines’ video reached 3.6 million viewers.

Within 72 hours, Perkins had gained over a million new followers. Two weeks later, she’s up to 2.3 million.

The attempt to silence her did the exact opposite: It amplified her voice.

Now, Perkins is becoming an icon for creators sick of hiding their political beliefs for fear of being canceled.

“No one is going to Kylie Perkins me,” one declared. “I’m just going to let you know now — I voted for Trump!”

For years, conservative content creators on social media have carefully curated themselves online, knowing that even a hint of right-leaning views could bring backlash.

I know. I used to be one of them.

But it turns out Woke TikTok has unintentionally created a coalition of Americans who are tired of the fear, tired of hiding their politics away.

At last we know there’s a massive audience of people who feel exactly the same way.

Maybe it stands to reason. After all, when a majority of the country votes red, it’s about time we stop fearing “cancel culture.”

Yet bullying online leftists have made creators afraid to be themselves — worried that even a casual comment might trigger the mob.

I know what it feels like; the mob came for me too.

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