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The Imitation, The Lies, and The Truth: An Unfiltered Reality Check

  • Feb 20
  • 2 min read

Updated: Apr 16



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I am utterly astounded by the sheer audacity and desperation of those who have attempted—unsuccessfully—to slander, imitate, and undermine me while simultaneously trying to appropriate what they can never truly embody. It is beyond comprehension how individuals could engage in such malicious defamation, attacking every aspect of my identity, yet still strive to emulate me. The contradiction is glaring—how can you vilify someone while simultaneously trying to become them?

Let me be clear—this is not about arrogance or vanity; this is an educational moment rooted in history and truth. Society has long perpetuated a false hierarchy that places Caucasian women above Aboriginal and Indigenous women—the Original Women, from whom so much has been taken, imitated, and repackaged. This is not an opinion; it is a historical reality.

We are not the same—and I say this with no malice, only fact. Comparing me to these women is as absurd as comparing myself to Marjorie Taylor Greene—we come from entirely different origins, bloodlines, hemispheres, and our histories, contributions, and cultural influences reflect that distinction. I am of the Original People, while others are derivatives of that origin. This is not a slight, but an acknowledgment of reality.

Yet, despite this, there are those who continue to operate under a false sense of superiority, convinced that their status is natural rather than manufactured. The truth is, the majority of Aboriginal and Indigenous people do not view Caucasian women as the pinnacle of beauty or desirability—in fact, the lengths to which some must go just to maintain a basic standard of appearance speak volumes. If one's natural state cannot thrive without synthetic intervention, then the question must be asked: who is truly aspiring to be whom?

This is not an attack but a call for self-reflection and truth—not for me, but for those who have spent their time obsessing, scheming, and attempting to diminish what they could never be. Instead of investing energy in undermining, imitating, or resenting, it would be far more productive to learn, respect, and acknowledge the reality of historical influence and cultural contributions. True confidence is built on self-awareness, not on tearing others down or attempting to replace them.


 
 
 

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