The Truth About Harm Within Oppressive Systems Some people argue:âI didnât build the system. So I canât be responsible for the harm it causes.â Be
The Truth About Harm Within Oppressive Systems
Some people argue:
âI didnât build the system. So I canât be responsible for the harm it causes.â
Because our unique position in societyâbeing both Black and womenâgives us a front-row seat to how power works across race, gender, class, and more. We are often expected to stay silent about harm done to us in order to maintain someone elseâs comfort, reputation, or narrative of innocence. But our experiences allow us to see and name what others overlook or deny.â
Hereâs the truth:
Even if you didnât create a system, you can still cause harm within it.
You can still benefit from it.
You can still choose whether to challenge it or continue it.
đ History Gives Us Clear Examples:
Plantation Mistresses (White Women):
White women didnât design the institution of slavery. But many of them actively participated in itâmanaging enslaved people, enforcing punishments, and separating families.
Their power didnât match that of white menâbut they still used it to harm. (Continues today)Black Male Leaders in the Civil Rights Era:
Many were brilliant freedom fightersâbut some were also deeply misogynistic behind closed doors. Black women often did the bulk of the labor, only to be erased from credit, silenced when harmed, or dismissed as âdivisiveâ for asking for respect. (Continues today)Religious Institutions:
Some clergy didnât invent patriarchyâbut they used religious language to justify abuse, silence women, and keep Survivors from seeking justice. (Continues today)
đ Now, Letâs Make It Tangible:
In the Workplace:
A manager may not have built corporate capitalismâbut if they underpay, overwork, or ignore harassment against a Black woman, theyâre actively causing harm.In Relationships:
A partner may say, âI love Black women!â But if they manipulate, gaslight, or coerceâespecially under the cover of shared traumaâthey are still exercising power over someone vulnerable.On Social Media:
A person may say theyâre âpro-Blackâ while joking about dark-skinned women, mocking victims, or promoting violence. That is not liberationâitâs recycled harm dressed in new clothes.
đ± Truth Is a Doorway to Healing
Letâs be real: most people donât want to see themselves as harmful. None of us do.
But healing begins with truthânot just about what happened to us, but what weâve done to others.
You donât have to be the architect of the system to make the decision:
đ„ Will you feed the fireâor help put it out?
đŁïž Closing Call:
If we want to build new systems rooted in love, justice, and real safetyâ
we must stop excusing harm simply because the hand wasnât the one that laid the first brick.
Accountability is not punishment. Itâs the foundation of trust.