One of the greatest axioms
that has enabled racist America
to maintain and sustain such a prized
and demonized disposition has been:
“To disagree does not necessarily mean
for one to disavow.”
Though a seemingly simple statement,
such ideology has been heralded
by many pompous pontificated pimping
politicians, using it as if a pope-like
mesmerizing sense of infallibility. Thus,
gaining the ability to confuse believers
when demonized errors collide with truth.
In the present pandemic paradigm of life
in America, this axiom of “to disagree does
not necessarily mean to disavow”, challenges
itself in the most conscientious of minds:
Should such belief be to the benefit of self or
to those that oppose and oppress us? And
can man, like God, be truly infallible?
While each of us must discern our own answers
to these trying questions, a personal sense of
poetic justice and wisdom causes me to proclaim
that apathetic silence on the matter, cannot be
claimed as an excusable error of conscience.