Writing is nonlinear. The premises or propositions of your thesis remain the same; you just have to rewrite them.
You may think your draft is perfect, but your mind edits your thoughts faster than you can articulate them in writing; this manifests writer's block.
The difficulty lay in accepting the loss of your original draft. Just write whatever comes to mind with no conscious or subconscious edit; deconstruct this habit as you write simultaneously.
Recall the points of your thesis, write them down on separate pieces of paper, and expound upon them with no revision whatsoever.
Edit your notes into body paragraphs comprising of 1) claim, 2) warrant, 3) evidence, 4) conclusion.
Each body paragraph mirrors the basic academic format of 1) introduction/thesis, 2) body formatted as aforementioned, 3) conclusion/reiteration of thesis.
Organize your sheets of hand written notes into a cogent order corroborating your thesis; this step constitutes your true first draft.
The final or best draft and revision occurs when you start typing.
Let the events of our time motivate you since you have the acumen of them already.
The generation listening to Charlie Kirk seek the knowledge you desire to share.
The lack of truth confuses people to the point cognitive paralysis.
The American people demand the truth so they can move forward with purpose in life.
If you have something conducive to the revelation of the truth, speak now or forever hold your peace. I hope my reply inspires you in some way.