See, there should be absolutely no doubt about what happened this week. When Donald Trump shared a video that portrayed Barack and Michelle Obama as apes, he didn’t “make a mistake,” “stir up controversy,” or “post something offensive.”
Instead, he tapped into one of the oldest, most grotesque, and most dangerous racist tropes in American history: the dehumanization of Black people, reducing them to animals—and not just any animals, but apes. It was vulgar, vile, utterly disgusting, and completely unacceptable. What’s more, it was seditious.
This trope—so deeply rooted in America’s dark past—has long been used to justify slavery, lynching, segregation, and state-sanctioned violence. And it’s far from accidental. Far from humorous. On the contrary, its intent is violent, and its impact is devastating.
When asked if he would apologize to the Obamas, Trump replied: “No. I didn’t make a mistake.”
He’s right—this wasn’t a mistake. It’s woven into his very being. Racism runs deep in Trump’s blood; it festers beneath his seemingly “lily-white” skin. It permeates his deranged mind. His voice carries the echoes of white supremacy, while his actions betray the venom of bigotry. Racism seeps through his fingers like poison.
This is the same man who once placed full-page ads calling for the execution of the Central Park Five—teenagers who were later exonerated. The same man who led the racist birther conspiracy against the first Black president. The same man who, after white supremacists marched in Charlottesville chanting “Jews will not replace us,” declared, “There are very fine people on both sides.” And the same man who shared a meal at Mar-a-Lago with Nick Fuentes, an openly white nationalist.
The pattern is clear: it’s deliberate. The escalation is predictable—and with Trump, as with everything else, it’s only going to get worse. We must stop it now.
Because we simply cannot tolerate this kind of behavior anymore…
What truly is intolerable—and what we must confront head-on—is the silence and complicity of those who continue to support him. These are the monsters feeding the beast of bigotry.
Racism doesn’t exist in isolation—it thrives only when it has enablers. It needs money. It requires reputations to be whitewashed. And today, some of the most powerful corporations, CEOs, and cultural figures in America are doing exactly that—they’re complicit in a crime that threatens the moral fabric of our society.
Enough is enough. These monsters must be stopped.
If you kneel before power while that power spreads racism, you are not neutral—you are complicit.
When CEOs and billionaires line up at the White House, bearing gifts, when they bankroll presidential inaugurations, when they fund vanity projects like a $300 million White House ballroom, they aren’t just currying favor—they’re endorsing the very behavior that comes with that power. And when that power openly traffics in racist dehumanization, their money becomes an accomplice: funding torture, fueling danger, and even contributing to death.
Here’s a list of businesses that have supported Trump—courtesy of Newsweek. And here’s how some of them are helping to spread racism through their association with the Beast of Bigotry:
And the list doesn’t stop at individuals.
Major corporations—tech giants, defense contractors, energy conglomerates, financial firms—have poured billions into Trump’s 2025 inauguration and into building a lavish White House ballroom. Amazon. Google. Meta. Microsoft. Apple. Palantir. Nvidia. Coinbase. Lockheed Martin. Boeing. Chevron. Comcast. And many others across tech, crypto, defense, energy, and manufacturing.
This isn’t passive participation—it’s active sponsorship of racism. In 2026, Trump is the modern-day David Duke of American racism. These names and companies are pouring money into the contemporary iteration of the Ku Klux Klan—led by Grand Wizard Trump.
When corporations fund a bigot, they legitimize him. When they remain silent in the face of blatant racism, they send a message louder than the crackling of burning crosses.
To these corporations, profits matter more than the sanctity of human life. Access matters more than tolerance. Comfort matters more than harassment. We must remove the white hoods from these white men who remain silent—and subservient—in the face of tyranny and bigotry.
Not a single one of these donors has condemned the racist attack on the Obamas. Not a single one has drawn a clear line. Not a single one has said, “This is unacceptable.” Not a single one. Is that acceptable to you?
In this moment, silence is tantamount to consent—for the barbaric Neo-Nazi who spews hatred toward Black people at the press of a button.
Racism in America doesn’t survive on hatred alone—it endures because powerful people decide it’s tolerable—or at least profitable. Because they believe the outrage will pass. Because they assume consumers will keep buying, cheering, streaming, and investing.
But they’re wrong—or at least, they should be.
Boycott them. Picket them. Call them out by name. Send letters. Withdraw your money, your attention, your clicks, your brand loyalty.
Let’s make racism expensive again. Let’s take a stand—collectively, together. No one should remain silent any longer. What happened to the Obamas should serve as a wake-up call: this is what hatred looks like when it feels invincible.
Trump is responsible for his own racism—but so are all those who prop him up, fund him, normalize him, profit alongside him, and share responsibility for the damage he causes.
Racism has accomplices—and America must start treating them like the criminal klansmen they are.


