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Spreading Solidarity in a Time of Pandemic

Reflections on coalition building for a post-corona America

Tim Wise
6 min readMay 26, 2020
Photo by Nina Strehl on Unsplash

For now, forget the conspiracy mongers, the anti-vaxxers, and those who falsely think wearing masks to prevent the spread of COVID will kill you. They are unworthy of being taken seriously. Ignore the camo-clad, ammosexual lockdown protesters who insist we should all get back to work, and who mock social distancing as an unnecessary burden at best, a trial run for tyranny at worst.

Ignore them, or at least abandon hope of engaging them as if they were open to persuasion by dint of facts and logic. They are a fringe — a dangerous fringe to be sure, but a fringe nonetheless — and other than a close eye from those who monitor potential domestic terrorists, they do not merit the attention they receive. Make no mistake: they are hardly indicative of a majority mindset. Most Americans oppose their message and worry about opening things up too quickly, without a clear path for protecting public health.

In other words, the protesters do not speak for the so-called “common man.” Nor do they represent some vulnerable working class for whom we should have sympathy. Data suggests they are not by and large those who have lost income or reasonably fear economic ruin. While black and brown folks are being most hammered by job loss…

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Tim Wise
Tim Wise

Written by Tim Wise

Senior Fellow, African American Policy Forum, critical race theorist, and author of 9 books on racism and racial inequity in the U.S.

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