When we say we want equality, too often we really mean we want equal freedom to exploit. And this is why we are witnessing the rise of multicultural MAGA with people like Nicki Minaj and Kash Patel. On the surface, it may not be immediately clear how this connects to a show like Bridgerton. But think of it this way: the show presents a world in which Black and brown people are represented at the top of society, yet the systems that produce wealth and maintain hierarchy remain untouched. Kathani “Kate” Bridgerton, née Sharma, hails from India — a country whose labor, taxes, and resources fueled the grandeur of the British Empire, from cotton and spice plantations to the looted sapphires that decorated aristocratic wardrobes. What does it mean to celebrate an Indian character joining the nobility of the largest empire on earth while the real historical wealth a family like hers would have enjoyed also would have forced her countrymen into poverty? Similarly, Minaj and Patel operate within powerful cultural and political systems. They are visible, celebrated, and sometimes emulated, but their prominence does not challenge the structures that allow exploitation to persist.

