Walter Rhein Podcast

My Conservative Rural Teachers Wore Klan Robes and Raped Students

15 min · 24. juni 2026
episode My Conservative Rural Teachers Wore Klan Robes and Raped Students cover

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This newsletter is free now and forever thanks to you. It’s also OF HUMAN ORIGIN (no AI). I worked too hard for too long to start cheating now. 🤣🤣 Thanks for your support: 30% off [https://walterrhein.substack.com/b66e5c2e] 💙 40% off [https://walterrhein.substack.com/01f1b0e8] 💙 50% off [https://walterrhein.substack.com/0d3e6643] 💙 60% off [https://walterrhein.substack.com/6a8f4788] Though the teachers came in professional attire, it was obvious they longed to wear their klan robes. Every day, you could see the shadow of their hate garments surrounding them like an aura. Even though the robes were white, they cast a shadow that threatened to block out all the light and color in the world. I didn’t know what I was in for when I first stepped into that ancient brick asbestos ridden building. Or I should say my waking mind didn’t know. That was the part of my being that focused on Saturday morning cartoons, toys at the dime store, and chocolate bars. But the unconscious part of me started sounding the alarm the moment the building appeared on the horizon. This was the primordial part of me. The knot of nerves going from my neck to my bowels. This is the part of you that has been programmed through the trauma of centuries. It remembers the moments where the light of your ancestors was nearly extinguished and it sends warnings. “Danger!” “Go no further!” “Do not trust!” “Run!” The thing about those teachers with their camouflaged white robes was that they knew the incantations to make children ignore their second mind. “You’re being ridiculous!” “This is the way it’s always been!” “You have to obey authority!” Then came the very worst lie of all, “You should be grateful.” Our daily punishment came in the ritualistic performance of gratitude. First we were expected to offer thanks for the chance circumstance of our birth. “Just think, if you’d been born in some other country, they would have tortured you every day.” We were just kids. We didn’t know what torture was. All we knew was that we were hungry and that we were scared and we relied on powers greater than ourselves for our very survival. The teachers could have taught us about love and compassion and decency. They could have modeled it with their actions. But they were loyal only to hate and punishment. Their lessons revolved around fear, obedience, and sin. “You’re bad little children. You were born bad. You were born imperfect. Fortunately you have us to set you straight. I’ll say it again, you should be thankful. You should thank us every day.” They didn’t like it when we asked questions. “Isn’t god all powerful?” “Yes!” “Then why would god make an imperfect child and require other imperfect people to fix those children.” “Why you impertinent little brat!” Thanks for your support: 30% off [https://walterrhein.substack.com/b66e5c2e] 💙 40% off [https://walterrhein.substack.com/01f1b0e8] 💙 50% off [https://walterrhein.substack.com/0d3e6643] 💙 60% off [https://walterrhein.substack.com/6a8f4788] One of the first assessments of my conscious mind was that the purpose of school was to make children disinclined to ask any questions. I learned to absorb an endless wave of contradictions. They drilled me with lessons on how to read, but then when I picked books to read myself, they became enraged. They drilled me with lessons on how to do sums. But when I made my own calculations, the fury came. As we grew older, it became more commonplace for the teachers to lead their preferred students away. They’d come back changed, silent, and withdrawn. We were always the ones who were made to feel shame. They insisted we were the ones who had done something wrong. Early on, I realized that the whole operation only provided the premise of an education. Some part of me, the sleeping mind, recognized that there was value in the lessons that they provided. But those lessons were disguised in a way to make them seem absurd and meaningless. They were delivered in a way that felt spiteful and dismissive. “Sums are for losers, the way you gain status is through athletics.” I was new to the world. I hadn’t yet figured out how to sort groups into good and evil. I was confronted with a chaotic mass where everything I’d ever experience in life came at me in unexpected flashes without any warning. My instinctive self knew the warnings. It sent me signals through, nausea, fear, and panic. Little by little, I learned how to listen. The first days in my rural, public, white supremacy school were pure misery. I lost weight. I developed asthma. Yet day after day I was loaded onto a miserable bus filled with predators and sent to an institution that did its best to crush my inner spark of decency. We weren’t a church family, so that meant I didn’t know anybody. The churches in our town had all been trained to believe that they were the one true belief. They’d stand at the podium in their white robes and preach that anyone who didn’t believe as they did was somehow less than human. All the churches provided this lesson and all the children who went to those churches were uniquely tainted. They gathered together in the shadows in the corners and peered out at the unaffiliated with ravenous eyes dripping with judgment. Even without the benefit of experience, I recognized there was something odd about their expressions. When they spoke they claimed they stood for love and compassion and humanity. But when they looked at you their eyes twinkled like those of a predator. They didn’t resent that you weren’t of their group, they loved it. Knowing you were of a belief different than their own gave them permission to perceive you as a toy. They’d lurk then pounce and they’d each grab a limb. Then they’d pull and cackle and laugh as if delighting in the funny noises of a plaything rather than perceiving the cries of distress from a human being. Some of the bullies made you scream just to alleviate their boredom. Then they moved away with dull and glossy eyes that had already had the light of humanity snuffed out. One cold November morning, I found myself walking through the asphalt playground. The playground had once been grass and that had been one of my few points of comfort at the school. But I returned the next fall to find it had all been obliterated by the combination of stone and tar. Everything had been covered. The small tree in the corner where I’d been able to go to be alone and recharge had been torn up. The roots had been paved over. It was all gone. It smelled bad, and when the bullies threw you down it was hard and unforgiving. I endured it for a few days, unable to eat at lunch as always. I moved through the halls with my head bowed as was expected of me, attempting desperately not to draw attention. But there came a day, standing alone on a cold morning, where the burden felt too much. I felt hopeless. I felt despair. I almost cried, but I knew that if I cried I would be lost. The monsters would smell the blood of a wounded animal, come running, and pounce. A few days later, I got punched in the mouth. He threw me down, said, “I’ve always wanted to punch you in the mouth,” an then he punched me. That was the first time I ever experienced that kind of assault. Before the blow hit, I remember being paralyzed with terror. Was he going to destroy my teeth? Was he going to make my nose bleed? Would I be permanently disfigured? Then his fist hit my face. I was surprised that it didn’t hurt that much. He was a weak little piss-ant. The blow landed, there was a kind of hot flash. The bully, who had been sitting on me, got up and walked away as if he’d satisfied himself. It was odd watching him retreat. It was almost like he could have at least thanked me for that intimate moment we’d just shared against my will and without my consent. He walked off, almost hurrying as I was left to consider my feelings. I gingerly touched my lips with my fingers. I touched them with my tongue from the inside. There was maybe a slight taste of blood, but all the teeth seemed okay. That’s when I learned that the humiliation is probably worse than the physical pain. This is an important lesson because the majority of the bullies I’d encounter in my life were much more well versed in humiliation than physical torture. Physical torture is terrible. It crushes your body. The bullies that use physical torture might one day take your life. As a society, our focus tends to be more on physical assaults. They are easier to identify, even though we all know the aggressors usually go unpunished. Physical assaults leave visible marks, blood, bruises, and broken bones. That’s why the cruelest of tormentors turn to humiliation instead. A physical bully might kill you. An emotional bully might compel you to kill yourself. They turn your own conscious mind against you. But growing up in the white supremacy school, I learned their weakness. They can tell you lies. Then can seize control of your thoughts. But they can never reach your unconscious mind. The primordial part of you that remembers the trauma of generations can never be fooled. It always screams the truth. The power of the most dangerous bullies is that they know how to trick you into dismissing all the alarms. “Go into the dark alley.” “You can trust me.” “You’re being emotional.” “This is the way it has to be.” “Life isn’t fair, it’s not me.” My teachers were emotional bullies. My father was too. This was the tempest I was born into. Me a happy little child who only wanted to please. I was innocent and soft and simply wanted to do what was expected of me. Unfortunately, all my mentors made it clear that I was inadequate to please them. That was really the first and foundational lesson of the white supremacy school. They told us that we were inadequate. They told us we were flawed. They told us we were sinners. They called us slackers and losers and embarrassments. Everything they said and did was designed to fortify their deeply held personal belief that we were all less than human. We were expected to endure this treatment on the false promise that one day we’d grow into our status as people and be recognized, though there was little evidence that ever happened. Early on I learned it was worthless to appeal to the teachers at the white supremacy school to stop the torment. “He hit me.” “What did you do to deserve it?” There was never any question that I was somehow in the wrong even though I was the one who had endured the assault. I sat with that for a few days. I went through every sequence I was supposed to follow. No cavalry was coming. That process is what culminated in the day of despair. Then, something clicked. I decided to reject the paradigm. The moment the thought came, I felt a warm sense of approval from my second mind. “Yes,” it seemed to say. “You too have a right to survival. You are part of this world. It’s nobody’s truth to say you don’t belong here, no matter what absurd authority they claim. Fight back!” “But who will give me permission?” “I do, damn it! I do!” That same day, as always, some other pack of bullies approached me on the playground, but this time I decided not to run. They came at a full-on sprint and they expected me to flee so they were put off balance by my defiance. I kicked the first one in the groin. I’d learned from my experience with the face punching bully that I wasn’t strong enough to cause any real damage. Yet it was enough, down he went howling. The others stopped and looked and then something unexpected happened. They flagged down the same teacher that had ignored me before. “Mrs. Butterball! Look what Walter did!” I waited, expecting Mrs. Butterball to put them to the same question. “Well, what did you do to provoke him?” Instead, her permed hair and painted tan contorted into a face of rage. All the fury she’d absorbed from the pulpit emanated out of her as she charged me like a runaway planet. Only then did I notice the slight darkness around her eyes that came as a consequence of the holes in her klan garment. “How dare you attack this innocent child! Don’t you know that violence is evil? Why, I should beat you within an inch of your life to teach you!” she screamed. “You’re a bad boy, you’re a sinner, you’re a cheater, you’re an immoral monster!” Naturally it was all part of the programming, but I’d already figured her out. Even on that early day her response wasn’t as much of a surprise as you might have expected it to be. I turned for guidance from my sleeping mind. “Don’t listen to her. You did what they told you to do and they didn’t fulfill the promised contract. These people are false. Do not take her words into your heart.” So I stood and I listened to her screams. The lies fell like rain upon a stone. I sat through the meeting with the principal where they explained to me how dangerous it was to kick another boy in the groin. I sat as my parents nodded at me and told me not to do that ever again. Then, the very next day on the playground, when the bullies attacked, I kicked even harder. But this time I pounced on the prone and writhing body. I put my hand on his throat, looked into his eyes, and when I spoke I allowed my sleeping mind to choose the words. “Shut up and listen. I don’t care who you tell. I don’t care if I’m punished. If I see you coming after me I’m going to put you on your back. Next time I won’t stop kicking until you’re dead. Do you hear me? I’ll put you down. If you complain, if they punish me, I’ll give you anything they do to me a thousandfold. Do you get it yet? I’m not your plaything. I’m not your toy. I have a right to be here. Leave me the f**k alone. I swear to god.” Then, heart pumping, I got up and walked away indifferent to the rest of the pack that looked at me with astonishment. They were all cowards. I knew that already. My sleeping mind knew. They didn’t tell. They didn’t bother me anymore. But they bothered others. They still do. I’d discovered the whole damn system was a lie. The teachers with their invisible klan hoods spewed nonsense. They claimed to want to protect us, then they raped us and abused us. They claimed to care about justice, but they demonstrated they cared only about impunity. They didn’t care at all for the abused. But I also learned I had an ally in my instinctive self. We’re parts of the universe whether those that falsely claim dominion recognize it or not. The universe knows the truth. All I had to do was listen. I listened. Little by little, the primordial knowledge became easier to perceive. Oppressors shout lies and insults and attempt to deceive. The universe sings glorious truth with such pristine, pure and eternal beauty that it fills your heart with joy. Eventually, I recognized that the teachers at the white supremacy school were angry exactly because they’d rejected that cosmic symphony. Without it, they couldn’t practice self-love and they resented the evidence of self-love in any other. They targeted children. That’s the world I was born into. That’s the world that still exists. That’s the world it would become my destiny to dismantle. Thanks for your support: 30% off [https://walterrhein.substack.com/b66e5c2e] 💙 40% off [https://walterrhein.substack.com/01f1b0e8] 💙 50% off [https://walterrhein.substack.com/0d3e6643] 💙 60% off [https://walterrhein.substack.com/6a8f4788] I'd Rather Be Writing is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. Get full access to I'd Rather Be Writing at walterrhein.substack.com/subscribe [https://walterrhein.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

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Hey Friends! Checking out some new equipment and broadcasting live from the Costa Verde. It was nice to check in! Thank you A. Eevie Bateman [https://substack.com/profile/443649430-a-eevie-bateman], Cryn Johannsen [https://substack.com/profile/148826259-cryn-johannsen], Margaret Williams, MS, ACC [https://substack.com/profile/12044824-margaret-williams-ms-acc], THE TRAJECTORY [https://substack.com/profile/126135419-the-trajectory], Sandra [https://substack.com/profile/18011536-sandra], and many others for tuning into my live video! Join me for my next live video in the app. I'd Rather Be Writing is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. Get full access to I'd Rather Be Writing at walterrhein.substack.com/subscribe [https://walterrhein.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

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episode AI Writing Can Never Make You Forget That You Are Reading artwork

AI Writing Can Never Make You Forget That You Are Reading

This newsletter is free now and forever thanks to you. It’s also OF HUMAN ORIGIN (no AI). I worked too hard for too long to start cheating now. 🤣🤣 Thanks for your support: 30% off [https://walterrhein.substack.com/b66e5c2e] 💙 40% off [https://walterrhein.substack.com/01f1b0e8] 💙 50% off [https://walterrhein.substack.com/0d3e6643] 💙 60% off [https://walterrhein.substack.com/6a8f4788] There’s a magical thing that happens when you pick up a fantastic story created by a master artist. It doesn’t happen right away. At first, you look at the words and your mind recognizes them as ink marks formed into the familiar shape of letters. Then, slowly, your awareness shifts and you start to recognize the meaning. You read on for a moment longer, still aware of who you are as a person and the room you occupy. The separation between you and the text lingers, but it slowly begins to fade. If the words are true, within a relatively short amount of time, something wonderful happens. The lines blur. You lose yourself in the moment. Your mind links up with the text and suddenly you’re not looking at ink marks on paper. Instead, you’re walking through an exciting new world with a group of people you will come to see as friends. When you reflect on this experience, it will be with the awareness that it was something that happened to you, not something you observed. We care for the people we meet in books. We feel real emotions when tragedy befalls them. We laugh from the depths of our soul. We cry actual tears. Authentic human writing can make you forget that you’re reading. That’s the difference between work of human origin and artificially created slop. The human work has a soul. AI work does not. The real tragedy of our age is that the tech oligarchs have come to recognize they cannot compete with legitimate brilliance. So, rather than try, they instead sabotage your ability to engage. Tech oligarchs are the usurpers and the book burners. No matter how gifted a writer might be, it still takes a few minutes to complete the link up. Those of us who are readers have come to regard the link as precious. We are provoked to anger when we’re interrupted. It’s like being awakened from a pleasant dream. “Can’t you see that I’m reading?” That simple question illustrates how much of an intrusion it is to disturb somebody’s gentle connection with the written word. The tech oligarchs know this all too well. In order to prevent us from having genuine moments of soul sharing, they’ve created an endless tidal wave of distractions. They haven’t taken the books, they’ve clouded our ability to see them. Today, our children are captured by scrolling services. These represent AI curated options that, although offered under the illusion of choice, are really not that distinguishable from one another. The scroll is eternal. It operates on the promise that there will eventually be some sort of reward, but the truth is that it’s designed to render any form of link-up impossible. The scroll keeps us in that perpetual state of promise without any hope of reward. Perhaps the whole point of the mechanism is to entice the human race to reject reading as a concept. We’re deliberately denied access to alternative perspectives, and eventually we become frustrated. Is it the expectation of our digital overlords that we’ll eventually become conditioned to cast learning aside so we might occupy ourselves with productive labor? That seems overly malicious, but it’s not a theory I would discount without proof. We live in a society that’s built on distraction. The competition to steal your attention is fierce, and there’s no longer any expectation that promises must be fulfilled. We live in an era of clickbait. The authors of this digital vomit don’t want your mind, they only want to compel your finger to tap the button on your mouse. That’s the end of the interaction. Wham, bam, don’t let the search engine door hit you on the way out. Attention is the only objective. They don’t want to convince you. They don’t want to interact with you. They don’t want to share anything with you. All they want to do is distract you for a moment before you make your way on to the next distraction. We’ve been tricked into living like this because the tech overlords fear the link up more than anything. They know they can’t compete once human beings communicate. Communication creates community. From community people derive their power. Therefore, the ruling class has come to view quiet reflection as the enemy. They’ve become highly effective at stamping it out. There are still a few old codgers like me rolling around. I’m of the class that remembers making my selection at video stores rather than on streaming services. I still go to libraries. I enjoy the sensation of being overwhelmed by all the diverse perspectives that have been created by the glorious human race. But I’m fearful for a generation of kids that’s grown up with curated streaming services that are the equivalent of the doom scroll. The only difference is that streaming service menus go from left to right, social media goes from top to the endless bottom. Notice that we have no tools to curate these lists. We can’t designate what actors we don’t want to watch. We can’t set dates. No, the era of personal choice is over. We have to sit and accept what the AI entity thinks is best for us. We’re not allowed to contemplate whether that AI might have a nefarious objective. We’re not allowed to contemplate anything anymore. Contemplation is the enemy of control. The oligarchs know that better than anyone. There are some mornings when I come downstairs and I see my children captured by screens. In those moments I feel as if I’ve failed as a parent. Their eyes, their ears, their very being has been condemned to a prison. The worst part is that the door is open, and yet they remain there willingly. We haven’t yet cultivated our evolutionary warning about this kind of trap. It’s a prison formed by banal diversion. It’s easier to scroll than it is to think, so we end up scrolling forever. Adults have to be reminded that thinking is beautiful. They must be compelled to teach their children. Scrolling is an abomination. It’s killing us. We’ve traded a beautiful life for a fortress of solitude. Recently, I had a task for my daughter. I discovered her sitting on the couch in the living room. Much to my delight, she wasn’t holding a screen connected to some malicious oligarch whispering sweet words of deceit. Instead, she held a book. She held a real, physical book that she’d checked out from the library. In that moment, I experienced a surge of affection for that book. In my vision, it was almost as if she was curled up on the sofa with a puppy. It felt very much like a living thing to me, not cold and digital and dead like the bright light of a toxic screen. The pages were as organic as leaves. She seemed so connected to the Earth and life and her basic humanity that I became emotional. She hadn’t noticed me entering even though I walk with a heavy foot. She’d escaped the distractions and discovered the link. My soul recognized this as a rare and beautiful thing. I stopped myself from calling out to her, and instead I slowly backed away. There’s no task more important than allowing your children to revel in the beautiful connection to another mind that only a work of human origin can provide. There is still hope. But we also must recognize that we’re surrounded by danger. The distraction is false. The beauty of this life comes from making true connections. Tell your friends. Tell your kids. Tell everyone. It’s time to recover the power and the joy of making your own choice. This newsletter is free now and forever thanks to you. It’s also OF HUMAN ORIGIN (no AI). I worked too hard for too long to start cheating now. 🤣🤣 Thanks for your support: 30% off [https://walterrhein.substack.com/b66e5c2e] 💙 40% off [https://walterrhein.substack.com/01f1b0e8] 💙 50% off [https://walterrhein.substack.com/0d3e6643] 💙 60% off [https://walterrhein.substack.com/6a8f4788] I'd Rather Be Writing is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. Get full access to I'd Rather Be Writing at walterrhein.substack.com/subscribe [https://walterrhein.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

Yesterday7 min
episode The Platner Debacle Is the Fault of Corporate Democrats and Outrage Journalists artwork

The Platner Debacle Is the Fault of Corporate Democrats and Outrage Journalists

I predict that the corporate democrats are once again going to take the exact wrong lesson from the Platner Debacle. Instead of listening to the people, they’re going to subject us to an offensive lecture because that’s what they always do. “See? See what happens when you demand something other than one of our anointed candidates? Now be good little voters and get behind the bland corporate white man we select for you.” They do this over and over. It goes hand in hand with their lie about how “progressives can’t win” in red areas even though when you look at election results you see them doing exactly that. The other thing you see is centrists losing, but somehow the corporate Democrats never acknowledge that fact. We’re in this authoritarian mess because of corporate Democrats. They lost the presidency, they lost congress. Even worse, when they actually had control of everything in 2021, they lacked the courage to meaningfully use their power. All they had to do was put all the insurrectionists in jail—all of them. Platner was a mess from day one, but that’s as much an indictment of the corporate Democrats as it is of him. The voting public is so fed up with what the DNC shoves in our faces that they’re willing to support basically anything else. That’s what created MAGA. Yet, the DNC still sticks with their, “Do what we say” narrative. The voters in Maine clearly indicated that they’re fed up with politics as usual. Unfortunately, now we’re stuck with the DNC selecting a candidate… again. When given the choice to help or punish, the corporate democrats always reach for the whip. Our current media is also complicit in this disaster. Both the legacy media, and the crop of obnoxious “former celebrity” losers who flock to substack and have 10,000 paid subscribers over night. These are individuals who are more interested in outrage content than following the truth. It’s frustrating, because we literally have the power in our hands to get good people elected. If the journalists on this and other platforms with huge followings would just elevate good people, voters would have the information that allowed them to make informed decisions. But so many of our most well funded “journalists” are just undercover agents for corrupt corporate entities. Before the Maine primary, I became disgusted with all the dialogue presenting the race like it was already Platner vs Collins. A. Eevie Bateman [https://substack.com/profile/443649430-a-eevie-bateman] mentioned that there was another democratic candidate on the ballot. I tracked down his web page, sent him an email and Eevie and I interviewed him the next day. It was simple. What this interview showed me was that there are good candidates out there. It’s just that the DNC and the “celebrity” media works hard to suppress them. David Costello has years of experience in public office. The advantage of that is that he knows the job. He has reasonable solutions for problems that won’t be undone by nefarious political mechanisms. This is why I prefer a candidate like Costello over somebody like Heather Cox Richardson [https://substack.com/profile/4875576-heather-cox-richardson]. In my opinion, HCR is very well suited to elevating good candidates. She’s got a massive platform. I don’t believe in electing people to senate who have never been in government before. It’s too long a term. State government should be a testing ground. You put people in office, see if they actually perform, discover if they have any skeletons in their closet, and if they pass all those tests then you elect them to longer terms. Make them demonstrate they have integrity. Make them prove it with positive action over years. The problem we’re living through right now is that the DNC gets rankled if the voters are allowed to select the candidate. They got so angry at Mamdani’s win that they tried to sabotage it. They become furious about primary challengers even though primaries are the best way to gain visibility for new talent. Our current DNC only stands for control and corruption and that’s why people are flocking to untested voices. Unfortunately, we end up stuck with Fettermans who the DNC can point to and say “See? See?” The DNC doesn’t try to fix anything, they just want to maintain control. What we need is a party that will actually listen. We could get there if our “celebrity” journalists started listening too. I’ve yet to see Qasim Rashid post his apology over his coverage of Platner. Many of my creator friends attempted to warn him of how they saw Platner as problematic and he didn’t listen. I’ll give him credit for interviewing Francesca Hong after I did. I’ve reached out to him several times asking him to interview more of the great people from my list of candidates—but we’ve never had a dialogue. I mention him because he seems like one of the good ones, but there’s so much more he could do. We should be working together. If he’d interviewed David Costello, maybe we’d be in a better position right now. He’s not the only one. I’ve been literally begging all the massive platforms to help cover the primaries. The only people who have helped are those platforms that are more or less the equivalent size of my own. Honestly, I’m done asking. People out there with one thousand, four thousand, and ten thousand subscribers can get the word out about great candidates. The mainstream media and the celebrity journalists aren’t going to help us. From what I see, they’re only interested in promoting corporate interests. Indulging in constant rage content keeps the voters angry and uninformed. That’s why we get Platner instead of Costello. A decent media would have promoted all the flaws with Platner before he managed to sabotage this race. Even now, they’re patting themselves on the back for getting him to resign and not calling for him to go to jail. When a man is accused of raping a woman, it’s not sufficient punishment to say, “Well, now he has to drop out of his race for one of the most powerful offices in the world.” No, we need to start demanding true accountability. Nobody should even whisper about a redemption arc until they’ve served their sentence and provided restitution to all the people they hurt. If they can’t fix what they broke—then they have to work humbly for the rest of their lives. What we’re seeing right now is a repeat of the same media and political incompetence than sabotaged Kamala. The DNC failed to support her. The media posted endless criticisms even as they disregarded the fact that she was running against a criminal and a sex offender. When she “lost,” the DNC pivoted to their tired racist narrative of the need to run a white man. The media allowed them to get away with it. We need a massive change in philosophy and it has to happen one person at a time. Even as it stands right now, candidates that get their start with small publications are likely to turn to the big ones when they start to gain national attention. We need to understand that we have to transform the media. We have to help build each other up. That means we have to revoke our support for the big platforms that aren’t doing their jobs and help the small platforms that are. The simple fact is that our corrupt political system is going to change. It’s either going to self-destruct under the appalling weight of its own incompetence, or we’ll correct the ship and save all of humanity. It’s up to all of you to get us on the right track by supporting the politicians and writers out there who are actually fighting for truth instead of enriching themselves on distraction and outrage. The best thing you can do to pressure the big journalists is withdraw your support. There are platforms on Substack run by men facing rape allegations that still have thousands of paid subscribers. There are felons and grifters and “former” republicans that aren’t working for us. Why are people still supporting them? This morning alone I received dozens of comments attacking the woman who bravely came forward about Platner. When I checked the profiles, I found that every single one of them financially supported one of the main centrist platforms. It’s weird. It’s like these groups are attempting to manufacture the appearance of support with fake profiles. Just because somebody has a thousand paid supporters doesn’t make them legitimate. It’s a pretty easy thing to fake. There’s a lot of money out there being spent to brainwash the general public and create the illusion of credibility. When you get a gut feeling that something is off, believe it. We have to be more diligent about curating the content we consume. People who say, “Why didn’t you come forward before now” are not being honest. The truth is that we did come forward before. It’s just that nobody listened. Start listening before it’s too late. The best way to do that is to curate your list and hold writers responsible. Don’t be coerced into financially supporting your own oppression. Reject the lies of corporate media and corporate politics. Find good candidates in your area and advocate for them. Find good writers and support them. We do have the power to fix our country, we just have to stop supporting people who refuse to do the work. I'd Rather Be Writing is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. Get full access to I'd Rather Be Writing at walterrhein.substack.com/subscribe [https://walterrhein.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

9. juli 20268 min