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Inspiration

Care as Resistance:Power Against Disposability

Valarie Kaur
Valarie Kaur
Jan 16, 2026
5 min read
Watch · 6

TLDR: In this brief address, spiritual activist Valarie Kaur frames care—the deliberate choice to value human life—as a revolutionary power against state systems built on indifference. She responds to the death of Renee Good (and others) by arguing that the repeated refusal to care ("I don't care") accumulates into a logic of disposability that justifies disappearance, incarceration, and killing. Against this, Kaur calls for collective care as a form of fierce resistance: reaching for one another, speaking the names of those lost, finding courage, and being good. In this framing, care is not sentiment—it is political power.

Read · 5 sections

What does the logic of "I don't care" really build?

Kaur opens with a concrete scene: Renee Good, a specific person, whose death is at the center of this talk. A neighbor—a doctor—asks to help, to check if Renee is still alive, still saveable. A federal agent refuses: "I don't care." This single utterance, Kaur argues, is not isolated. It is part of a system. "All the I don't cares add up to this," she says, naming the outcome: a logic that tells certain people, "You are disposable. Your life doesn't matter."

The logic accumulates through specific violences: "We can disappear you, incarcerate you, deport you, torture you, or kill you in the street and say it is your fault." Kaur is naming something precise here—the way indifference becomes permission. When someone does not care whether you live or die, they can harm you and blame you for it. "They say it was her fault," Kaur says of Renee Good. The blame itself is a way of making indifference seem justified: if it was her fault, then not caring becomes reasonable.

Kaur places Renee Good's death in historical context: "Renee Good's murder is an extension of the violence that black and brown and indigenous people have long known on this soil." This is not new cruelty. It is the continuation of centuries of violence against people whose humanity has been systematically refused. The repetition of indifference—the refusal to care—has a genealogy.

How does care become a form of power?

Kaur's intervention is to reframe care not as weakness or sentiment, but as revolutionary power. "But we care," she declares. And in that declaration, something shifts. The refusal to accept the system's indifference becomes an act of resistance.

"And in our care lies enormous power," Kaur says. This is the crux of her argument. Power is not the property of the federal agents with budgets exceeding military spending. Power resides in the choice to care—in the refusal to accept that anyone is disposable. In the refusal to believe the agents' narrative that it was Renee's fault, that her death was justified.

Kaur catalogs what care does in practice: "We will reach for one another in the dark. We will say the names of the ones we love. We will find courage we did not know we had. We will be good." These are concrete actions. Reaching. Speaking names. Finding courage. Being good. Care is not passive—it is active resistance. It is the work of showing up, of staying connected, of refusing to let anyone be forgotten or abandoned.

What is the scale of the violence Kaur is naming?

Kaur does not treat Renee Good's death as an isolated incident. She grounds it in a present crisis: "In this moment, thousands of armed and masked agents with a budget that exceeds that of the militaries of most nations on Earth are deployed in cities across our country. From here in Los Angeles to Minneapolis, ripping families apart, caging our neighbors, storming schools and hospitals, terrorizing and disappearing our people."

This is systematic. It is happening in multiple cities. It is resourced beyond measure. And it is built on a single logic: that some people do not matter, that they can be disappeared, caged, or killed without accountability. "Under the logic of I don't care, we will show the nation that we care," Kaur says. The contrast is stark. One logic treats people as disposable; the other declares their worth by refusing to abandon them.

What does it mean to be good in this moment?

Kaur's final call is striking: "We will be good in the name of Renee and Keith and all we have lost." Being good is not a moral nicety. It is an act of memorial and defiance. It is saying: these people mattered. Their deaths will not be erased. Our response is to care harder, to love more fiercely, to build the world they deserved to see.

"We will be braver with our love we have ever been," she adds. This reframes love—care—not as something gentle, but as something that requires bravery. To care in a system built on indifference is to take a risk. It is to refuse the status quo. It is to assert that another way is possible.

And Kaur's final commitment: "And as long as there are people who breathe, who need us to protect them, to fight for them, to care about them, we will be." Care is not a moment. It is a practice that extends as long as there are people to care for. It is sustainable commitment, not temporary emotion.

Where to go from here

Kaur has organized resources for people who want to act on this call to care. She directs readers to her newsletter at revolutionarylove.org/sign-up, where she provides concrete ways to help—in this case, specifically resources related to Minnesota and the crisis she is addressing. The work of care is not abstract. It has resources, networks, and next steps. The invitation is to join that work.

Transcript

[0:00] A neighbor who is a doctor asks to help,

[0:04] asks to check her pulse. Maybe she is

[0:07] alive. Maybe she can be saved. But the

[0:09] agent says, "I don't care."

[0:14] Renee Good's murder is an extension of

[0:18] the violence that black and brown and

[0:20] indigenous people have long known on

[0:23] this soil.

[0:25] All the I don't cares add up to this.

[0:29] You are disposable. Your life doesn't

[0:33] matter. We can disappear you,

[0:35] incarcerate you, deport you, torture

[0:38] you, or kill you in the street and say

[0:40] it is your fault.

[0:44] They say it was her fault.

[0:47] They think we will believe that. They

[0:52] think we will not care. Like they do not

[0:57] care.

[1:00] But we care.

[1:03] >> We care.

[1:04] >> Yes, we do.

[1:06] >> We care.

[1:07] >> That's right. We do.

[1:11] >> In this moment, thousands of armed and

[1:13] masked agents with a budget that exceeds

[1:16] that of the militaries of most nations

[1:18] on Earth are deployed in cities across

[1:20] our country. From here in Los Angeles to

[1:23] Minneapolis, ripping families apart,

[1:25] caging our neighbors, storming schools

[1:28] and hospitals, terrorizing and

[1:30] disappearing our people. Under the logic

[1:32] of I don't care, we will show the nation

[1:36] that we care. And in our care lies

[1:40] enormous power.

[1:42] >> That's right.

[1:43] >> We will reach for one another in the

[1:45] dark. We will say the names of the ones

[1:47] we love. We will find courage we did not

[1:50] know we had. We will be good.

[1:54] >> We will be braver with our love we have

[1:57] ever been. We will be good in the name

[2:00] of Renee and Keith and all we have lost.

[2:04] And as long as there are people who

[2:07] breathe, who need us to protect them, to

[2:10] fight for them, to care about them, we

[2:14] will be

Valarie Kaur
AuthorValarie Kaur

Watch more from Valarie Kaur on YouTube.

View profileWebsite
Explore Topics
Care-activismState-violenceRevolutionary-loveDisposabilityCollective-power

Got Questions?

Frequently Asked Questions

Kaur argues that repeated refusals to care accumulate into a system that treats certain people—particularly Black, Brown, and Indigenous people—as disposable. This logic justifies disappearance, incarceration, deportation, torture, and killing by framing these harms as justified or the victims' fault.
Kaur reframes care from sentiment into active resistance. She argues that collective care—reaching for one another, speaking names, finding courage—represents power that directly counters state systems built on indifference. In our care lies the ability to refuse the narrative that anyone is disposable.
Renee Good (and Keith, mentioned later) are specific people killed by state violence. Kaur names them as memorial and as resistance against erasure—refusing to let their deaths become abstract statistics in a larger violence.
Kaur calls for reaching for one another, saying the names of loved ones, finding courage, and being good. She also directs people to her newsletter at revolutionarylove.org/sign-up for specific resources related to helping communities affected by state violence, particularly in Minnesota.
She frames Renee Good's murder as an extension of centuries of violence against Black, Brown, and Indigenous people in the United States, situating it within a long genealogy of systemic indifference to certain lives.
In a system built on indifference and disposability, choosing to care—to protect, fight for, and value people—requires bravery because it opposes the dominant logic and risks accountability from those in power.
She describes thousands of armed federal agents deployed across multiple cities (mentioning Los Angeles and Minneapolis specifically) with budgets exceeding most nations' militaries, ripping families apart, caging people, and terrorizing communities.

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