The Silence of Democracy: Why I’m Forced to Write Open Letters

In a true democracy, leaders, businesses, and institutions should be open to dialogue with the public. Yet, as I navigate my political campaign with the Emergence Party, I am met with silence—from companies, from social platforms, and even from the people who stand to benefit most from the issues I raise.

This has left me with only one option: writing open letters, pleading for engagement because direct communication isn’t possible. But the fact that I have to do this is deeply sad—it speaks to a broken system where leaders and institutions ignore voices that don’t already have power or influence.


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Why Do I Have to Write Open Letters?

I don’t want to write letters into the void, hoping that someone important might eventually acknowledge them. I want real conversations, real engagement, and a chance to actually communicate with the people who hold power over these issues.

But here’s what keeps happening:

🚫 Social media companies won’t respond. Instead of engaging with concerns about political visibility, they use automated systems that leave candidates like me unheard.

🚫 Mainstream media won’t cover new political movements. Unless you’re part of an established party or have corporate backing, your voice is ignored.

🚫 The public doesn’t see independent candidates. The systems in place prevent people from discovering new perspectives, making it difficult to build engagement even when the issues I discuss affect every single Australian.

🚫 Corporations refuse to acknowledge criticism. Companies that control the digital public square shut out discussions that challenge their influence, creating a controlled environment where only certain voices are heard.


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The Tragedy of a One-Way Conversation

What’s most frustrating is that these aren’t small personal grievances—these are pressing public issues.

📢 Voting laws affect every Australian.
📢 Social media censorship shapes public discourse.
📢 Independent candidates deserve a fair chance to be heard.

Yet, when I try to engage in conversation about these topics, I’m left talking to myself. Writing open letters is not true engagement—it’s a desperate attempt to be heard when all other avenues are blocked.


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What Needs to Change?

If we truly care about democracy, free speech, and open discussion, we need to:

🔹 Hold companies accountable for their role in shaping political engagement.
🔹 Encourage independent voices to be heard—not just corporate-backed candidates.
🔹 Create more direct channels for public discussion, where real conversations can happen.
🔹 Challenge the systems that prevent meaningful engagement from taking place.

The Emergence Party is about creating a political environment where people are actually heard—not just by screaming into the void of social media algorithms but by directly engaging with those in power.


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A Call for Engagement

I don’t want to write another open letter. I want to talk to people, hear their concerns, and have meaningful discussions that actually lead to change.

But until the system allows independent voices to be part of the conversation, I’ll keep writing.

Because silence is not an option—even when no one wants to listen.

🔗 Join the conversation at wendellsdiary.com

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