Faith Is to Religion as Ignorance Is to White Supremacy
Faith is to religion what ignorance is to white supremacy: the invisible fuel that keeps both systems alive. The post Faith Is to Religion as Ignorance Is to White Supremacy appeared first on The Westside Gazette.

“America’s 250 years deserves not a celebration but rather an atonement for its continued efforts to maintain a hierarchy of white supremacy and to desecrate the pillars of democracy.” John Johnson II 05/07/26
By John Johnson II
Faith is to religion what ignorance is to white supremacy: the invisible fuel that keeps both systems alive.
Faith asks believers to accept doctrines as truth without empirical proof or sensory evidence. It invites them to trust in the unseen, to find comfort in promises made but not fulfilled, and to embrace a reality validated by shared belief rather than objective examination. For millions faith becomes a euphoric stimulant comforting emotional refuge where doubt becomes weakness and questioning feels like betrayal.
Religious ceremonies reinforce this attachment. The music, the dancing, the rituals, and the often-lengthy sermons do more than inspire; they marinate belief. They create emotional highs that strengthen commitment and protect doctrine from critical analysis. If stripped of emotional reinforcement and subjected only to cold, objective scrutiny, millions of claims would struggle to survive. Yet faith shields them, preserving meaning because believers need the comfort more than they require the proof.
Ignorance performs a similar function for white supremacy.
Where faith protects religion from skepticism, ignorance protects white supremacy from truth. It acts as an anesthetic, numbing individuals from confronting the brutal reality that systemic racism intentionally crushes the hopes, dreams, and mobility of Black people, other of color, and members of the LGBTQ community.
White supremacy survives because too many people refuse to examine its foundation. They inherit myths of superiority without questioning who built them or why. They defend segregated schools as “tradition,” dismiss housing discrimination as “market forces,” excuse unequal healthcare as “personal responsibility,” and justify voter suppression as “election integrity.” Ignorance allows injustice to wear the costume of normalcy.
The white supremacist ideology is intellectually bankrupt, yet it survives because ignorance functions like blind faith. It convinces ordinary people that privilege is merit, that exclusion is order, and that inequality is natural. It grants psychological comfort to those unwilling to admit that their advantages resulted from the suffering of others. Amazingly, the Psychological Association refuses to label these behaviors as a form of psychosis.
The better schools, safer neighborhoods, inherited wealth, political access, and social protection long reserved for whiteness were not accidents of history—they were policy decisions. Redlining was policy. Segregation was policy. Employment discrimination was policy. The prison pipeline was policy. Every detail was deliberate; nothing happened by chance.
In the end, faith can uplift, but ignorance only imprisons.
Faith may offer spiritual hope, but ignorance sustains moral decay. White supremacy depends on people choosing comfort over conscience, myth over evidence, and privilege over justice. Its greatest weapon is not hatred alone—it is the cultivated ignorance that allows hatred to masquerade as heritage.
And until ignorance succumbs to truth, America will remain a nation preaching democracy while practicing hierarchy.
YOU ARE THE JUDGE!
The post Faith Is to Religion as Ignorance Is to White Supremacy appeared first on The Westside Gazette.