New piece for your reading pleasure . Untitled
How do we continue in the confusion of racism? Why is it not laid out plainly—on the table, in the open—with the proverbial curtain pulled back on its flawed foundation? It is blatant. Obvious. As simple as 1+1=2.And yet somehow, it is treated as if it is not. The idea that one human is superior to another simply because of how they were born is not strength—it is a glaring display of weakness. How has this persisted, so strongly, for so long? Why is there not a collective spotlight shining on the simple truth: What kind of person stands on pillars that have nothing to do with who they are or what they’ve done? How long will we, as a society, entertain this fabrication of power? Here is the irony—the coup de grâce: Those who cling to racial superiority often possess real, earned strengths. They may be brilliant strategists, devoted parents, loyal friends, exceptional athletes—capable, accomplished individuals. And yet, instead of standing on what they have built, they reach for what they were handed at birth. True accomplishment—earned skill, cultivated character—naturally creates pride inspires others. It elevates communities. It builds something real. In contrast, superiority based on race, sex, or inherited status produces only division—an atmosphere thick with defensiveness, hostility, and emptiness. To validate these ideologies—to give weight to racism, sexism, or inherited elitism—is as absurd as the beliefs themselves. They are not just flawed; they are fundamentally disconnected from truth. We have, in many ways, been conditioned into accepting a false reality—one reinforced over generations. History has shown us where such distortions can lead, when unchecked and normalized. The consequences are not abstract. They are visible in the fractures of our societies, in the conflicts we face, in the systems that fail because they are built on faulty premises. A world that insists 2+2=9 does not function. A civilization built on false equations cannot solve its own problems.