I hate doing politics on here. Truly. I’d rather talk life, sports, music, faith, people or anything positive. But silence stops being an option when the noise turns cruel.
So here’s the honest question, no theatrics, no party spin, just truth, how do people continue to back Donald Trump while he openly pushes racist rhetoric and still call that leadership?
This isn’t left versus right. This isn’t red versus blue. This is about character. Words matter, especially when they come from someone who’s supposed to represent all of us. Racism from the highest office isn’t accidental, it’s intentional, it’s damaging, and it tells entire communities they’re disposable. That’s not strength. That’s not leadership. That’s rot.
Debate policy all day. Disagree with me, fine. But racism is not a policy position. It’s a moral failure. Expecting decency, empathy, and restraint from someone with that much power isn’t radical, it’s the bare minimum. And with Trump, this isn’t a one-off. It’s a pattern. The shock wore off a long time ago.
If you’re a Christian and you support that rhetoric, I genuinely need help understanding how. How do love thy neighbor, humility, compassion, and grace square with mocking, dividing, and demeaning entire groups of people? We’re called to serve God, not a politician. WWJD isn’t a slogan, it’s a standard.
Democracy isn’t supposed to be loud hate and blind loyalty. It’s supposed to be accountability. It’s supposed to be dignity. It’s supposed to mean that leadership lifts people up, all people, across race, background, belief, and story.
We can be better than this. We have to be. A nation that claims freedom and justice can’t keep excusing racism because it wears a familiar jersey. It’s been going on for far too long, honestly, since our country was founded. We the people need to stand up and stop the nonsense.
Love isn’t weak. Inclusion isn’t naive. Calling out injustice isn’t divisive. It’s necessary.
Let’s find a way.
Peace
Joe