A movement gained momentum when Donald Trump became the 45th President of the United States last week.
The Safety Pin movement. A safety pin on a lapel or shirt shows that “you are safe with me. I stand beside you.”
This movement first started in the UK after Brexit, when immigrants were feeling unsafe on the street. A safety pin on a jacket or sleeve or collar was worn to show tolerance, that the wearer stands in solidarity with marginalised groups feeling threatened.
The same idea has taken off in the US following Trump’s election. People are using pins to identify themselves as an ally. To show they disagree with the nationalistic, racist, sexist hatred that we’ve heard too much about from the Republican Presidential Elect.
Problem is, it’s a ‘solution’ invented by those who are post privileged (i.e. white) and, for all its good intentions, the safety pin has also attracted backlash.
“We don’t get to make ourselves feel better by putting on safety pins and self-designating ourselves as allies,” Christopher Keelty wrote for The Huffington Post. “Marginalised people know full well the long history of white people calling themselves allies while doing nothing to help, or even inflicting harm on, non-white Americans.”
American comedian Dave Chappelle perhaps put it most simply, when he appeared on Saturday Night Live at the weekend.
“The whites are angry,” he said, while talking about the election result.