What Will You Do When Genocide Catches Up To You?

What Will You Do When Genocide Catches Up To You?

It did. It has. The Biden administration and most leaders of and in the United States as well as outside have brought it to you. For Black and Brown people, it’s been going on since La Niña, La Pinta, and La Santa Maria disembarked on this side of the hemisphere. Current leaders are just quickening the job by the way they’re reacting to the coronavirus pandemic.

It’s been over two years since we discovered the virus that would upend our lives. That’s not to say that we, oppressed people, haven’t had our lives crushed by colonialism, imperialism, capitalism, racism, xenophobia… the powers that be, but now they’ve supercharged their abuse toward us. That especially includes our disabled—the immunocompromised, the ones with one or multiple chronic illnesses/conditions, comorbidities, that have been beyond abandoned—they are being exterminated.

The crazy thing is that Biden’s administration isn’t even hiding its crimes:

Isn’t that incredible? Isn’t that monstrous? It’s “encouraging” that people who have several illnesses are the ones who are dying of covid? Christ Almighty. Oh, but people with scruples, with a conscience have been ringing the alarm about it. Log on to Twitter and search for “eugenics.” You’ll find several tweets calling it exactly that:

It should come as no surprise to those of us in the trenches of cultural and sociopolitical criticism to know that disabled advocates have been telling us that the covid train was coming for their lives, for our lives:

Imani is absolutely right. The people who are usually the most oppressed within a system are the ones who know it more. Black and Brown people know the United States more than anybody else. Our artists, our advocates, our academics, our community leaders, our historians know more about our current systems than anybody else, but what happens when white people grow a conscience and a spine and call what’s happening to us for what it is? They go viral:

She is correct. Inequality is the elephant in the room. Inequality is what has our people suffering at a higher rate from covid than most other groups:

As the COVID-19 pandemic has unfolded in the United States and health experts have collected increasing amounts of data, it has become apparent that persons of color are being affected disproportionately more than whites. Hospitalization rates from COVID-19 are especially high among non-Hispanic American Indians, non-Hispanic blacks, and Alaska Native persons. Hispanics and Latinos are not far behind. On the whole, COVID-19 hospitalization rates among these groups are four to five times higher than they are among non-Hispanic whites.

There’s more:

The researchers did not find any racial or ethnic differences in mortality rates among people hospitalized with the disease. Yet a disproportionate number of Black and Hispanic people became sick enough to require hospitalization, and they made up 53% of inpatient deaths.

Even our children are disproportionally affected by the pandemic:

Among the 281 patients in the study, 143 (51%) presented with respiratory disease, and 69 (25%) with MIS-C. Sixty-nine patients (25%) were diagnosed with another acute SARS-CoV-2-related clinical syndrome or condition, such as gastrointestinal symptoms or neurologic disease. Nearly 58% of those with the severe respiratory form of COVID were Hispanic and 35% of those with MIS-C were Black.

White call-outs are heard because now that someone is fit to be the face of public discourse say them, but how much of a difference can they make? A change of language, of course:

Most of the links I shared here mention racism, immigration, socioeconomic status as being the major factors for our predicament, and they’re 100% correct. Only listening to white people make a ruckus about what’s happening is part of the problem, though, but good God, how many white people are calling out these disparities now? How many were calling them out before?

They say we should judge a nation by the way it treats its most vulnerable. If that is the case, there’s a special place in hell for America, for imperial powers, for the way it treats Native Americans, Black people, Brown people, poor people, the old, the young… the disabled.

The Biden administration let unemployment benefits expire, sending millions of people back to poverty.

The Biden administration won’t extend student loan relief, let alone cancel it.

The Biden administration is mostly concerned with sending people back to work for their corporate overlords despite record breaking levels of people contracting covid, including our precious children.

The Biden administration has kept school open despite protestation from teachers and parents.

The Biden administration washed its hands by throwing the pandemic ball at states instead of handling it itself.

The Biden administration is worsening climate change by approving "more oil and gas drilling permits than Trump.”

The Biden administration has kept most of Trump’s immigration policies.

Hospitals are overworked and understaffed—at the verge of collapse.

The PPP loans program was allowed to end.

The Supreme Court ended the eviction moratorium.

Artist Relief, among other grants for struggling artists, is no longer taking applications.

All these things, and more, affect our people, our disabled, disproportionately.

All of this is preventable, but the powers that be are putting profit, gaining and retaining power, above our wellbeing.

This is literal genocide, but few people seem to care.

Don’t you?

How can we change this?

By pressuring our representatives, our media, our celebrities, and everyone and anyone who can make a material difference for the better for us.

How do we start?

We talk about it.

We bring it up any chance we could.

We share the words of the people who are at the margins, the people whose voices have been ignored and muffled.

By people, I mean people like you and me.

When genocide knocks on your neighbor’s door, raise hell.

Don’t wait for it to knock on yours.

A mainstream or indie magazine would usually pay me between $250-$450 for one of my pieces. Since I decided to go solo for the sake of keeping my voice unedited and uncensored, I created this website. Keeping it afloat and these pieces coming is not just time-consuming, but it’s also costly because it angers a lot of those same mainstream papers and magazines (along with their donors) for calling them out—so their favorite retaliation tactic is deplatforming. Especially of unapologetic and unhypocritical Black and Brown voices. Ideally, I’d like to raise between $250-$450 per piece and many of you have actually stepped up to the plate and helped me accomplish that. For that, I thank you from the bottom of my heart. If you would like to see more of these and support one of the few unbought indie voices, please contribute:

If you prefer Zelle (vargas365@gmail.com), Venmo (@Cesar-Vargas-1), or Cash App ($vargas365) like I do, please try them instead. My PayPal: CesarVargas365. Or become a Patron and continue to contribute to the advancement of our independent rhetoric with no strings attached. Click here: patreon.com/cesarvargas365.

César Vargas is an award-winning writer, advocate, strategist, speaker, and social critic with a loyal following and a robust social capital that spans from coast to coast: Editors, journalists, celebrities, activists, artists, executives, politicians, and multiple communities. He was named one of 40 Under 40: Latinos in American Politics by the Huffington Post. He’s written about internal and external community affairs to several news outlets and quoted in others: The Huffington Post, NBC, Fox News, Voxxi, Okayafrica, Okayplayer, Sky News, Salon, The Guardian, Latino Magazine, Vibe, The Hill, BET, and his own online magazine—which has a fan base of over 25,000 people and has reached over a million—UPLIFTT. He’s familiar with having a voice that informs, invigorates, and inspires people—creating content that usually goes viral. He recently won two awards from Fusion and the National Hispanic Foundation for the Arts for his films Some Kind of Spanish and Black Latina Unapologetically. He attained a degree in Films Studies from Queens College, CUNY. He is currently raising and distributing funds for Haitians in Sosúa.



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