W.A. Hayes
1 min readSep 8, 2022

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In all seriousness though, I would say 'no' because skin color in of itself does not have any meaning to me, other than indicating one's ethnicity, which can lead to indicating a distinct culture--but that's beside the point.

I need not experience prejudice or bigotry (most especially due to my skin color) to make the statement I had made that you subsequently answered to. I have eyes and it is enough to see certain things going on in this world that obviously lack congruency with our so-called values, including race-related matters.

Thing is, can you settle with the answer of 'no', that 'no' being made under the premises of seeing nothing of value or preference in skin color--black or white--and not because I would be afraid to endure the 'racially-based burdens' that black people face?

In the end, I could care less about race because it is a horse that has been beaten to death, times a hundred. It, along with sex, gender, and a few other things, are overly-obsessive topics in today's culture.

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W.A. Hayes
W.A. Hayes

Written by W.A. Hayes

Gentleman, Scholar, and Punk Poet. I'm a male, so I will let you figure out my pronouns.

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