Philippine Daily Inquirer

Taylor Swift vows to use her voice to speak out vs racial injustice

- By Allan Policarpio @alpolicarp­io

In observance of the recent Juneteenth, an annual holiday commemorat­ing the emancipati­on of African-american slaves in the United States, pop star Taylor Swift vowed to further educate herself on the history of racial injustice and use her voice to stand up for others.

“Personally, I have made the decision to continue to educate myself on the history that brought us to this present moment,” Taylor said in a recent Twitter thread, where she also announced that, from here on, June 19 will be an off day for all her employees in honor of the event, which is also called Freedom Day.

The death of George Floyd at the hands of police compelled the singer-songwriter and her family to reflect and figure out how to be better allies to those who experience racial discrimina­tion.

“For my family, everything that has transpired gave us an opportunit­y to reflect, listen, and reprogram any part of our lives that hasn’t been loudly and ferociousl­y antiracist, and to never let privilege lie dormant when it could be used to stand up for what’s right,” she stressed.

Earlier, Taylor expressed disgust over the fact that her native Tennessee still has Confederat­e monuments that celebrate “racist historical figures who did evil things,” like those of the “white supremacis­t news editor” Edward Carmack (already taken down by protesters) and of the “brutal slave trader” Nathan Bedford Forrest.

“Taking down statues isn’t going to fix centuries of systemic oppression, violence and hatred that black people have had to endure,” Taylor wrote. “But it might bring us one small step closer to making all Tennessean­s and visitors to our state feel safe—not just the white ones.”

“We need to retroactiv­ely change the status of people who perpetuate­d hideous patterns of racism from ‘heroes’ to ‘villains,’” she added.

The 30-year-old recording artist, who has been more vocal about her politics and beliefs as of late, also called on to local authoritie­s to stop “fighting” for such statues.

“When you fight to honor racists you show black Tennessean­s and all of their allies where you stand,” Taylor said. “And you continue this cycle of hurt. You can’t change history, but you can change this.”

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Taylor Swift
Taylor Swift

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines