In Rwanda, restraint has never been a weakness. It’s a standard. A quiet one, but unforgiving. We were raised on dignity in how you speak, how you act, and more importantly, how you choose not to react. Before timelines and comment sections, we understood a simple principle: say what must be said but say it with intention. Not for applause. Not for damage. For impact.
Public humiliation was never our method. Correction was. Dialogue was. You addressed issues without performing them.
Then social media arrived and handed everyone a microphone with no training, no filter, no consequence. At least not immediately. Now everything is content. Every disagreement is dragged into the open like it deserves an audience. Opinions are delivered as verdicts. Nuance is treated like weakness.
Outrage moves faster than thought. And somehow, we started calling that courage.
What’s worse is the growing instinct to escalate everything into legal battles. In our logic, the law was never step one. It was the last resort when conversation, mediation, and restraint had failed. Now it’s becoming the opening move. That’s not progress. That’s a collapse of judgment dressed up as sophistication.
And this isn’t about "the older generation vs the youth.” That argument is lazy. This erosion cuts across everyone. The difference is that young people are amplifying it faster, wider, and more recklessly.
Because here’s the uncomfortable truth: access is not maturity.
Having a platform doesn’t mean you understand responsibility. Being loud doesn’t mean you are right. And being visible doesn’t mean you are respected.
Young people in Rwanda are inheriting something fragile but powerful; a reputation built on discipline, order, and quiet strength. The same discipline that rebuilt a country is now being tested in digital spaces.
So, what should young people actually do?
First, relearn restraint. Not silence, restraint. There’s a difference. Not every thought deserves to be posted. Not every disagreement deserves an audience. If it doesn’t build, clarify, or elevate, it’s probably noise.
Second, bring back intentional speech. Before you post, ask: what does this do? Not for you, for the person on the other side, and for the space you’re contributing to. If the answer is "it embarrasses, escalates, or entertains at someone’s expense,” you already know better.
Third, normalize private correction. Real strength is addressing issues directly, not performing them publicly for validation. Public callouts often say more about ego than about justice.
Fourth, stop outsourcing conflict to institutions too quickly. Not everything needs a courtroom. Some things need a conversation. Others need distance. Law is powerful but overused, it becomes a shortcut for emotions we refuse to manage.
Fifth, understand this: discipline is not oppression. It’s control, and control is power. The ability to hold your words, choose your tone, delay your reaction; that’s not weakness. That’s mastery, because the real risk isn’t that people speak more. It’s that they think less while doing it.
If we forget dignity online, we don’t just lose manners; we lose identity. Slowly. Quietly. And by the time we notice, the damage won’t be loud. It will be structural.
Freedom without discipline becomes chaos.
Criticism without responsibility becomes destruction.
And a society that confuses noise for strength will eventually lose both.
Discipline is still the difference. The question is whether the next generation is strong enough to keep it that way.
Abdallaziz Murenzi is a public policy and socio-economic governance enthusiast based in Kigali.