Martin Kush
3 min readMay 22, 2023

Thank you for this article. Whiteness always uses violence to perpetuate its power. It’s believers know their power is unsustainable in the long run and they know it does not make them “good”. But for many of them, the benefits of whiteness justifies the depravity. Racism and whiteness, the brutality of it, even makes them money. As you pointed out in your article, Penny became a millionaire overnight by killing one person. Others have and more will follow his example incentivized by their whiteness and money.

They don’t mind losing their humanity, souls and any semblance of civility, once they can control the narrative and claim that their murder, violence and lynchings of non-White people are heroic acts deserving rewards.

That’s why anyone who professes to be white is deadly dangerous to society and mentally out of touch with reality. They will not save America, only those people who shun whiteness can save this country.

Yet we have a system and government made up primarily of people who aspire to whiteness or who believe they cannot have their positions unless they support whiteness. The result is a whiteness government at all three branches–executive, legislative and judicial. Even if you have non-white people in government positions, they remain at the behest of whiteness or act as if they do. Those that lash out against whiteness get thrown out of committees and even the house. E.g. https://www.youtube.com/live/Cqj80dfpAh8?feature=share
And many more like this for 100 years.

We need laws against “Karens.” Anyone that calls the police and it turned out to be a Karenization, should be an offense at least equivalent to attempted manslaughter. They should be a law that allows the family to sue them in civil court.

It’s great that police have lawyers via their unions for free to help them escape their murder, plus a fund to pay for these cases when they lose a civil case. When they murder someone because of race, those funds should go towards paying for the victim’s families for perpetuity via an annuity for the entire family at least three generations apart.

Finally, for any police or vigilante who gets money above the amount for a cheap and simple lawyer, and I mean a cheap lawyer, all remaining proceeds should be turned over by the court to the family of their victim. If the funds for them are collected in secret, IRS flag their bank accounts once they are a perpetrator and audit any sudden increase in income levels or in accumulation of assets. All should be turned over to the victims upon completion of the investigation. IRS should have fines added to their income for several years where they do not voluntarily give over the funds to the victims family.

If they have no family, all proceeds should go towards poor and disadvantaged people (people below the poverty line) in the areas as an annuity over time under the trusteeship of a state government department and audited by a federal audit department and the report made public.

Give us local, state and federal government candidates that have these on their manifesto and run on these important items, and they have shall have our vote.

This is the kind of change I am advocating for in my book. My point is there are solutions to all these social problems of whiteness and it must be based on incentivizing economic policies that penalizes racism and gives the benefits to those being attacked.

A government that can pass and enforce laws like these is the only one worth voting for for anyone who really wants to be anti-racist.

Thanks, again for this article.

Sign up to discover human stories that deepen your understanding of the world.

Free

Distraction-free reading. No ads.

Organize your knowledge with lists and highlights.

Tell your story. Find your audience.

Membership

Read member-only stories

Support writers you read most

Earn money for your writing

Listen to audio narrations

Read offline with the Medium app

Martin Kush
Martin Kush

Written by Martin Kush

Author exploring social justice, the economics of racism, and history. Empowering readers to understand and challenge systemic inequalities.

No responses yet

Write a response