Tag: racism

  • The Root of the Rot

    The Root of the Rot

    It started with a short exchange on BlueSky — barely a handful of lines. Someone pushed back on a comment I made about how the same behaviour that fuels slavery also keeps disabled people in poverty. The reply stung, but it also made me stop. They were focused on the topic; I was trying to talk about the root.

    That’s been the friction point for years: I’m not dismissing history, I’m dissecting the mechanism. These aren’t separate battles. They’re expressions of the same sickness — a belief that domination is order, that controlling someone else is a form of safety, that power somehow equals worth. History just keeps re-skinning the same rotten code.

    It’s funny — or maybe horrifying — how language quietly reveals what culture refuses to say out loud. Take the French word disponible. It just means “available.” But look at what happens when it drifts through English: dispensable. Disposable.

    That’s the whole moral decay of domination in one family of words. First, you’re available — to serve, to comply, to endure. Then, you’re dispensable — tolerated only while useful. And finally, disposable — erased when your presence becomes inconvenient. It’s linguistic evidence of how easily empathy gets rebranded as excess.

    That’s the sickness I’ve been trying to name — the behavioural virus that mutates across generations. It doesn’t care what label it wears: slavery, ableism, patriarchy, capitalism, colonialism. It only needs one thing to thrive — people who’ve mistaken comfort for morality.

    I’ve been treated as if I belong to a dozen different cultures — Indigenous, Latin, Mediterranean — depending on who’s doing the assuming. Sometimes it’s hostility, sometimes it’s a moment of trust, a quiet nod, or an insider comment that assumes shared history. Genetically, I’m white, but those moments have made me aware of how identity is often assigned before it’s understood. Years ago, I stood on the sands of Nicholls Island in Bimbia Cameroon, where Danish ships once traded human lives. I remember the heat, the weight of the air, and the local chief who spoke of memory as duty. It felt like I was being reminded that heritage isn’t something you inherit — it’s something you witness and decide how to carry.

    My family has never matched in colour, shape, or surname. It’s a mix of adopted and born, claimed and found. So when I talk about the “root,” it’s not from guilt or abstraction. It’s from knowing how easily systems teach us to rank one another — and how much harder it is to unlearn that reflex.

    If we keep arguing over whose branch hurts more, the root wins. The root doesn’t care what you look like or where you fall on the tree — it only needs us divided, defensive, distracted. The real work isn’t pruning; it’s extraction. Pulling the belief that some lives are more available than others out of every institution, every assumption, every quiet reflex that says “not my problem.”

    Only then do we stand a chance at growing something different — not equality by subtraction, but dignity by design.

  • You Called It Freedom. We Called It Abuse

    You Called It Freedom. We Called It Abuse

    The chants were never subtle. Go back to where you came from. This is America—speak English.

    They were declarations, not conversations. Ultimatums masquerading as patriotism. And now, you’re living in the world you demanded.

    The rest of us heard you. We believed you. And we acted accordingly. We went back, we stayed back, and we chose not to return—not out of spite, but out of self-preservation. Because what you’ve built is not safe.

    We watch from a distance as you turn inward, hunting your own citizens, targeting them as prey, and justifying it with the same hollow rhetoric you once sold abroad as “freedom.” The weapon has come home, and you wield it against yourselves with the same zeal once reserved for foreign soil.

    This is not a matter of politics; it is a matter of pathology. The rest of the world has broken up with you—not in a fit of rage, but with the weary resolve reserved for an abusive family member. The one who shows up drunk, lobs racist jokes across the table, spews misogyny between mouthfuls, and turns every gathering into a hostile takeover of the room. We’ve stopped inviting you, not because we don’t care, but because you don’t.

    No more staged reconciliations. No more “maybe they’ve changed.” The couches you once sprawled across with your super-sized comforts are empty now, and so are the streets of the cities you once believed were irresistible. You wanted to be left alone, and now you are.

    …The silence is yours to keep.

    And spare us the “Well, I didn’t vote for this” chorus. Or the “Not this American” disclaimer. That’s the same empty comfort as “not all men” or “not all white people.” If you knew and you stayed quiet, you gave permission. Your silence is a vote in favour. Your inaction is a voice of approval.

    If you really are “not all,” then you’re the one who has to speak—loudly, often, and until it costs you something. Otherwise, you’re just nodding along while the order is taken: Do you want to super-size your fries for an extra 300 billion in taxes?

    [ts_support_turnip_style]

  • REBOOT: THE WHITE HOUSE

    REBOOT: THE WHITE HOUSE

    What is it every HELP DESK keeps telling us to try?

    Turn it off.

    Credit: reddit

    Then back on again.

    Credit: @photommartin

    The bottom photo I was saving for Pride Month 2020 kick off here at TURNIP STYLE.

    I remember how happy I was to see photos of the White House lit up in the Pride Rainbow that summer. I was excited for my LGBTQ+ Community in the US. I was hopeful.

    Well fuck. That didn’t last very long.

    I wanted to use this photo and write a cute little inspirational story about 2020 being the year to look back and LEARN from our successes and stumbles and work to get to a place where love did win and we could leave hate and division behind us.

    Now I just sit here. I write a few words. Delete them. Nothing sounds right. Nothing feels right.

    I often say the wrong thing at the best of times; never mind when I am this sad, angry and broken. All I have left to say from the bottom of my very broken heart is; I hear you, I see you and YOU matter to me.

    Credit: cinnamon

    Let’s all TURN UP AGAINST HATE & RACISM.

    xx turnip