This article explores how professional status becomes a tool of social control in Newfoundland, where teachers, administrators, and other credentialed actors quietly enforce what can and cannot be said. Rather than overt censorship, it’s posture, tone, and strategic silence that keep dissent contained—until, when that fails, the courtroom is used. The piece also examines the 2025 Education Accord scandal, where fake citations in a government-endorsed roadmap exposed the fragility of credentialed trust. By tracing how truth is filtered through class optics and respectability politics, it reveals the quiet mechanics of soft-authority systems.
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