Monthly Archives: July 2025

What It Means to Be ‘Woke’ in America


Soacha “Woke” isn’t a threat; it’s a pulse check on our collective conscience.

Qoryooley Once upon a time, “woke” wasn’t a slur or a joke line on cable news. It wasn’t shorthand for cancel culture or a lazy catchall for everything certain pundits find inconvenient or uncomfortable. It was a simple, urgent plea: stay awake. Stay alert to the quiet cruelties that pass for normal.

The word’s roots run deep. In 1938, blues musician Lead Belly ended a song about the Scottsboro Boys — nine Black teenagers falsely accused of raping two white women — by warning listeners to “stay woke.” It was literal survival advice: watch for injustice, or it will swallow you.

By 1962, William Melvin Kelley used “woke” in The New York Times Magazine, cementing its meaning as cultural and social awareness. Playwright Barry Beckham later echoed it in Garvey Lives!: “Now that Mr. Garvey done woke me up, I’m gon’ stay woke.”

Today, “woke” has been reduced to a prop, a scare word deployed by those threatened when others begin questioning the status quo. The same voices that once railed against “political correctness” now weaponize “woke” as though empathy were some invasive fungus creeping through America’s moral soil.

At its best, being woke means recognizing that systems don’t heal on their own. Racism didn’t vanish because we passed a few civil rights laws; misogyny didn’t dissolve when glass ceilings cracked; LGBTQ+ people didn’t suddenly gain safety because a court said they could marry.

Yes, there are excesses. Every movement has its noisy fringes, performers more interested in scolding than persuading. But those outliers don’t define the core. They distract from it.

Being woke asks you to look beyond your own comfort and listen. It means admitting that your version of “normal” might rest on someone else’s exclusion or pain. That’s not easy work. Moral growth never is.

But here’s where the misunderstanding blooms: a large part of America now believes we live in a binary world, that there are only two camps — “wokeism” and “Trumpism.”

But wokeism is an overreaction to a real thing. Trumpism is an overreaction to the overreaction. It’s a convenient narrative because it reduces everything to a cartoonish standoff, turning complex moral debates into a shallow spectacle.

Yet moral clarity isn’t a cage match. Wokeism arose as a reaction to real inequities that were too often ignored or denied. Trumpism, rather than offering a thoughtful counterpoint, swelled into a cultural tantrum, feeding off resentment and nostalgia for a world that never truly existed for everyone. It thrives not on solutions but on perpetual outrage.

We can refuse this false dichotomy. We don’t have to choose between purity tests and grievance politics. We can reclaim “woke” as an invitation to stay aware, to keep listening, to act.

Being woke isn’t a curse on society; it’s society’s immune system.

Scaping The Goats

Donald Trump has never met a conspiracy theory he didn’t want to cash in on. Now, the monster he nurtured is pounding on his gold-plated door, pitchfork in one hand, Epstein’s ghost in the other.

For years, Trump and his supporters dined on the Epstein conspiracy buffet. The promise of a shadowy “client list,” the thrilling suggestion that global elites (especially Democrats) were all pedophiles, cannibals, or worse.

Trump teased, reposted, winked. He knew exactly how to keep that carnival running.

But here’s the plot twist: Trump’s own MAGA influencers now demand proof. They want that fabled Epstein list — and they want it yesterday.

The problem? There is no list. There never was. We’re told.

Jeffrey Epstein, the predator who died by suicide in 2019 while awaiting federal trial, remains MAGA’s favorite boogeyman. His death, officially a suicide, is still called a “deep state hit job” in far-right circles. They insist he kept a blackmail ledger on the rich and powerful. Naturally, they imagine it’s filled with Democrats, Hollywood liberals, and a rotating cast of imagined villains.

Trump, who once partied with Epstein and called him “a terrific guy,” now finds himself pinned under the conspiracy he once stoked.

Attorney General Pam Bondi, once a MAGA darling herself, is now on the chopping block. Her department recently released a memo confirming two major buzzkills: Epstein killed himself, and there’s no secret “client list” hidden in some Mar-a-Lago broom closet.

Cue the meltdown.

Steve Bannon called Bondi’s memo “deep state propaganda.” Charlie Kirk said he was “profoundly betrayed.” Even Roseanne Barr, from her lawn-chair studio in conspiracyland, demanded Trump “handle” Bondi immediately.

Trump reacted like a man caught sneaking out of a side door: he praised Bondi as “fantastic,” but also told followers “some people just don’t understand the big picture.” He lobbed cheap shots at Rosie O’Donnell and tried to redirect to Hunter Biden’s laptop. But even his best deflection skills can’t outrun this one.

MAGA influencers make their fortunes selling rage and the illusion of hidden knowledge. Without Epstein conspiracies, they lose donations, clicks, and relevance. They don’t want Trump’s version of the truth — they want the myth.

Trump knows that feeding them is cost-free — until it’s not. He has dropped movements before. Remember Birtherism? He milked that cow from 2011 to 2016, baiting the base. When it no longer served him, he blamed Hillary Clinton and took credit for “solving” the fake mystery.

Then came QAnon. Trump flirted with its fever-dream nonsense, calling its followers “people who love our country.” By 2020, he reposted Q memes hundreds of times. And when that ship began to sink? Overboard they went.

This time, the Epstein conspiracy isn’t cooperating. MAGA wants a sacrifice. And Bondi is first in line.

Trump’s reluctance to throw her overboard shows a rare weakness: he’s running out of scapegoats. Eventually, you run out of flunkies and find yourself alone at the microphone.

Trump still might Houdini his way out. He might find a new fake enemy, inflate another scandal, or declare that “fake news” twisted everything. But the fractures are visible. He’s already trying to frame Obama as first author.

But MAGA influencers smell blood. And they’re hungry.

When you build your empire on conspiracies, sooner or later, they show up to collect.