This article argues that any antiracist initiative that continues to rely on upholding the colonial fiction and practices of human “races” merely repackages Eurocolonial domination. Drawing on decolonial theory, epistemic-justice scholarship, African and Africana philosophies of relation, and the togetherness Wayfinder framework, the HARMONY model, and Justice AI GPT, we demonstrate how contemporary antiracism frequently reproduces the very hierarchies it seeks to dismantle while presenting alternative pathways toward a future without racism. We synthesise perspectives from Sheena Michele Mason, Shayla Sima Dube, and Christian Ortiz to outline a paradigm that lends itself to the abolition of the belief in and practice of race, and thereby racism itself, without erasing culture, lineage, or collective struggle. Our contribution is fourfold: (1) a brief genealogy of “racelessness” in African and Africana thought, (2) a critique of epistemicide and “white-comfort engineering” that co-opts liberation discourses, (3) an exposition of “racelessness” as the logical endpoint of antiracism, and (4) a practical roadmap for reclaiming identity and creating a future without antiblack racism through land, language, and lineage.
Mason et al. (Mon,) studied this question.