It makes me wonder where society would be if the artists had sealed their eyes, their mouths, their fingers, and their ears to the world every time something vile entered the room.
Where would we be if everyone who still carried conscience, clarity, craft, or courage had turned their backs rather than risk standing near what they could not tolerate?
What would be left of any public space, any shared culture, any record of resistance, any human attempt to name what is happening and refuse it, if the people capable of doing that work simply walked away the moment the grotesque showed its face?
Where would we be if every decent person decided participation was contamination, and so abandoned the field to those with no shame at all?
Because that is what happens. The absence of principled people does not create purity. It creates vacancy. And vacancy does not remain empty. It gets filled.
If the people who still care about language, truth, art, humanity, dignity, complexity, and moral weight decide to leave every place that has been touched by something ugly, then all they are really doing is making more room for the ugly to spread without friction.
I understand disgust. I understand revulsion. I understand the instinct to say I will not stand where that stands. But I do not think all departures are noble.
Sometimes leaving is not refusal. Sometimes it is surrender dressed up as standards. Sometimes the people who should remain are the very ones who leave, and the ones most eager to dominate are the ones relieved to see them go.
If everyone turned their backs and stopped participating in holding down their space, the abominations would not retreat. They would move in. They would fill the silence. They would take the loosened ground, the abandoned rooms, the unattended platforms, and call it victory.
Not because they earned it, but because no one stayed to deny it to them. The world does not improve simply because good people remove themselves from what disgusts them. Often it gets worse. Quiet at first, then meaner, then flatter, and then more openly cruel.
And all the while the people who left can tell themselves they stayed clean, while the people who remained are the ones still trying to keep something human alive inside the contamination.
I do not think every space is worth saving. I do not think every fight is worth having. But I do think there is a difference between stepping away from something dead, and abandoning something contested. And I think too many people confuse the two.
If the artists had always looked away, if the writers had always gone silent, if the people with any moral imagination had always withdrawn from the places where ugliness appeared, then the world would belong even more fully to the ugliest among us than it already does.
Not because they are stronger. Because everyone else kept leaving.



What strikes me most is the way this refuses the idea of purity as a solution. There’s a real difference between protecting yourself and leaving the ground unattended. And maybe part of human responsibility is remaining present enough to prevent the empty space from being occupied only by what has no conscience of itself.
This is beautifully written and eloquently makes your point. Brava!