Understanding and updating beliefs on deeply engrained topics can take enormous efforts, but sometimes it can be so hard that the listener cannot even in principle accept the new reality. The listener is simply not ready, he lacks a vast background of reasoning leading to the new understanding.
What fact that you know is true but most people aren't ready to accept it?
By "you know is true" I really mean "you are very confident to be true".
Feel free to use a dummy account.
There is intense censorship of some facts of human traits, and biology. Of the variance in intelligence and economic productivity, the percent attributable to genetic factors is >0%. But almost nobody prestigious, semi-prestigious -- nor anything close -- can ever speak of those facts, without social shaming. You'd probably be shamed before you even got to the question of phenotypic causation -- speaking as if the g factor exists would often suffice. (Even though g factor is an unusually solid empirically finding, in fact I can hardly think of any more reliable one from the social sciences.)
But with all the high-functioning and prestigious people filtered out, the topic is then heavily influenced by people who have something wrong with them. Such as having an axe to grind with a racial group. Or people who like acting juvenile. Or a third group that's a bit too autistic, to easily relate with the socially-accepted narratives. I'll give you a hint: the first 2 groups rarely know enough to format the question in a meaningful way, such as "variance attributable to genes", and instead often ask "if it's genetic", which is a meaningless format.
The situation is like an epistemic drug prohibition, where the empirical insights aren't going anywhere, but nobody high-functioning or good can be the vendor. The remaining vendors have a disproportionate number of really awful people.
I should've first learned about the Wilson effect on IQ from a liberal professor. Instead I first heard it mentioned from some guy with an axe to grind with other groups. I should've been conditioned with prosocial memes that don't pretend humans are exempt from the same forces that shape dogs and guppies. Instead it's memes predicting any gaps would trend toward 0 given better controls for environment (which hasn't been the trend for many years, the recent magnitude is similar despite improving sophistication, and many interventions that didn't replicate). The epistemics of this whole situation are egregiously dysfunctional.
I haven't read her book, but I know Kathryn Paige Harden is making an attempt. So hats off to her.
I'm not sure abstracting away the path there is correct. Getting a fast-forward ASI-assisted uplifting instead of walking the path personally in some proper way might be losing a lot of value. In that case being less capable than an ASI is childhood, not illness. But an aligned ASI would inform you if this is the case, so it's not a practical concern.