Recovery-ish
In this episode of Recovery-ish, Chad and Robert are joined by longtime advocate and organizer Haner Hernandez for a sharp, unfiltered conversation about why “staying neutral” is no longer a viable stance in the recovery movement. Together, they interrogate the current policy landscape, break down the real-world impact of recent political shifts, and remind listeners that advocacy without historical context is just noise. From the war on drugs to today’s culture wars, they trace how race, class, and power continue to shape who is protected, who is criminalized, and who gets left behind. The discussion doesn’t romanticize activism. Instead, it calls out the savior complex that too often creeps into advocacy spaces and challenges the field to move beyond performative allyship. Drawing lessons from the HIV/AIDS movement, Haner underscores the power of organized communities, disciplined messaging, and data that can actually be trusted. The trio explores how incremental change and long-haul strategy often win more ground than outrage alone—and how easily movements can be co-opted when leadership loses touch with the people most impacted. With their trademark candor and irreverence, the hosts dig into the messy intersection of harm reduction, social justice, and recovery—lifting up the need for unity without erasing difference, and empathy without abandoning accountability. This episode is a reminder that recovery doesn’t happen in a vacuum. It’s shaped by policy, fueled by community, and sustained by people willing to speak up, organize smart, and refuse to mistake silence for safety.
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