In fairness, this is the effective way to spin this tiny problem that he and his friends seem to have with admitting to and bragging about willfully assisting minors in chemically destroying themselves.
It's not bad as a piece of rhetoric in that it is effective by being very aware of the audience, and I do really like how he uses "moral panic" as a smokescreen, just italian perfection kissy hand gestures all the way. It is also dishonest, but not in a way that can be pointed out without a lot of words. It's also not original, but I'm bored so I'll go over the crux for posterity.
It stems from the widely held belief (at least in blue areas I grew up in) that a moral panic is always unfounded and irrational, and from there we get the "false by implication" point Keffals is trying to make, that there is no problem and trannies aren't trying to groom children into medical malpractice statistics.
Now...that belief and the implication it spawns are not strictly true; a moral panic is often is unfounded or irrational, but the actual fear and panic are the defining characteristics, not the potential lack of foundation or logical basis. I don't know if he knows this, but it really doesn't matter, all he needs to know is all the words he doesn't have to say if he can just say "moral panic" to the correct audience.
Which is why I called it a smokescreen in the first place, the statement does not deny anything with a sober reading even before you get to irony overload that is the comment about misinformation on social media, all it does is blow up a pink and blue smoke grenade for the crowd who will buy into the implication (who are also the only people that can hold him accountable), while Keffals and Bobposting continue to tell us exactly what they are doing: putting kids on the fast track to fleshy puzzle box wounds and health problems we won't know the full extent of for at least 15 years.