The two-week “liberation corridor” between Juneteenth and U.S. Independence Day, sometimes called “White Juneteenth,” offers a yearly moment to reflect on how collective identity is defined, protected and enforced.

This period asks us to look honestly at the rituals, symbols and national stories that shape belonging, especially at a time when an openly white nationalist federal administration is escalating attacks on both a changing global order and growing domestic resistance.

Using an Africana Studies Conceptual Category method, we reject trauma-centered identity as the primary ground for challenging oppression in all its forms. Instead, we ask what “liberation” can and should mean within the contemporary world system. The United States remains a contested social structure, built through a white nativist mission that must not be allowed to define the center while others are conditionally tolerated based on their submission to it.

Rituals such as the planned 250th anniversary “celebration” of the U.S. too often elevate founding violence as noble, inevitable, or superior while masking the systemic harms that continue in its name. Rather than accepting exclusionary definitions of belonging or narrow legal standards for who is allowed to belong, this discussion continues our work of reclaiming self-determined expression.

We center internal restoration, international solidarity and the collective pursuit of real repair as necessary pathways toward true liberation.

TheHub.news is a storytelling and news platform committed to telling our stories through our lens.With unapologetic facts at the center, we document the lived reality of our experience globally—our progress, our challenges, and our impact—without distortion, dilution, or apology.

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