Racists like our president try to shape Americans | The ...
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Aug 27, 2019 · Racial elitists
try to shape Americans to their own
image, and the problems brought on by the black-white divide continue.
Racists like our president
try to shape Americans | …
Sure, President Donald Trump is a racist. So what? Growing up as a kid in West Tulsa in the 1940s, I could summon a racist anytime by calling, “Mama? Daddy?” Nearly all our parents were racists. I was a racist, too.
My dad, like Donald Trump’s granddad, immigrated from what surely was the most foul country in the world at the time.. That was lily white, racially pure Germany, epicenter of the worst war in history, where millions were murdered in death camps. The war that overall killed 60 million people.
But let’s figure out how my mama and daddy and I came to be racists. In 1865 the North won the Civil War and freed the slaves, afterward passing Constitutional amendments giving all citizens voting and other rights, like “equal protection of the laws.”
In the era of Reconstruction, President Ulysses Grant sent blue-clad soldiers down South to enforce those rights against tenacious white resistance. Suddenly black people were voting, electing representatives to the U.S. Congress and state legislatures even in the old Confederacy. Those first years after the war flowered with freedom for black people as America became a more decent, even Christian, country.
For his doctoral dissertation in history, William L. McCorkle, my colleague in the 1960s at this paper, wrote how the newly founded, crusading Kansas City Star of the 1880s reported on black protest meetings. The Star condemned unjust police shootings of black citizens. That African-Americans could protest and survive is a hint that white and black people were learning to live together. Had that continued, we might long ago have worked through our racial problems.
But after losing the popular vote and making himself U.S. president through an electoral college trick, Rutherford B. Hayes kept his bargain with Southern electors by withdrawing those blue soldiers and ending Reconstruction. The Old South hardened and, while enforcing Jim Crow cruelty, stopped most blacks from voting.
Then the Supreme Court’s 1896 Plessy v. Ferguson decreed that forsing blacks into separate schools, restaurants, neighborhoods and job prospects was OK. Both blacks and whites were increasingly denied the chance to meet and learn about each other.
After that, our racist elites applied many measures — as a sculptor might shape a work of art from malleable clay — to mold white Americans into racists, teaching them intolerance and cruelty: Blacks were pushed to the back of the bus, barred from whites-only schools, waiting rooms, witness stands, water fountains, public restrooms. Ku Klux Klan violence and lynchings raged across the South and even the North.
Even my ******* and mom were victims of those racial elitists. Both were born in 1903 — my mom in south Missouri, ******* 5,000 miles away in Germany. Educated only to the eighth grade, they breathed in that toxic atmosphere.
I came along in 1934 and quickly picked up the venom, yelling cruel words to black ******* who lived two blocks from our home. College and the U. S. Army mostly rescued me from that sickness. Even my parents mellowed in their late years, my dad (from Nazi Germany) kidding my mom that she was more racist than he. Before they died they became better neighbors to that nearby black community.
When The Star hired me as reporter in 1958, the newspaper would not then publish the sort of black protest stories it had published in 1882. That changed with a new editor in 1963. Most newspapers mostly got over racism, as — very slowly — did a majority of Americans.
Donald Trump? He stayed behind, eagerly sucking in the racist stench lingering from a past century. He was prosecuted in the 1970s for refusing rentals to blacks in New York City. Nowadays, what he spouts every day of his life as president of the United States is proof.
Like those sculptors I mentioned earlier, he’s busily trying to shape Americans to his own image
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Trump's racism is an impeachable offense. The precedent of ...
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trump-s-racism-impeachable-offense-precedent...
Like Johnson,
Trump is a
racist. It’s clear that the president has singled out black, Hispanic and Muslim members of Congress for “ridicule” and “contempt” by his credulous white base.
There’s No Such Thing as a Good Trump Voter
People voted for a racist who promised racist outcomes. They don’t deserve your empathy.
Donald Trump ran a campaign of racist demagoguery against Muslim Americans, Hispanic immigrants, and black protesters. He indulged the worst instincts of the American psyche and winked to the stream of white nationalists and anti-Semites who backed his bid for the White House.
Millions of Americans voted for this campaign, thus elevating white nationalism and white reaction to the Oval Office.
Understandably,
critics of Trump have used this to condemn Trump voters, tying them to the likely consequences of their vote, blaming them for foisting Donald Trump on the country and the world. To this, there’s been a pushback. “[P]lease understand what is happening here,”
writes Michael Lerner in the
New York Times in a column titled “Stop Shaming Trump Supporters.” “Many Trump supporters very legitimately feel that it is they who have been facing an unfair reality.” He continues: “The left needs to stop ignoring people’s inner pain and fear.
The racism, sexism and xenophobia used by Mr. Trump to advance his candidacy does not reveal an inherent malice in the majority of Americans.”
On Twitter, Chris Cillizza of the
Washington Post gave his version of this argument. “The assumption that ‘Trump voter = racist’ is deeply corrosive to democracy. Also wrong,”
he said, adding that there “is nothing more maddening—and counterproductive—to me than saying that Trump’s 59 million votes were all racist. Ridiculous.”
Meanwhile, more than 300 incidents of harassment or intimidation have been reported in the aftermath of Trump’s election, according to the Southern Poverty Law Center. NBC News
confirmed several, including incidents where vandals spray-painted slurs (“Heil Trump”) and swastikas on churches serving Hispanic or LGBT communities. At San Diego State University, a hijab-wearing Muslim student
says she was confronted and robbed by two men who made comments about Trump, and at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, a Muslim student
says a man approached her and threatened to set her on fire unless she removed her hijab. At the University of Pennsylvania, black members of the freshman class
were added to a racist social media group, where students were threatened with lynchings.
Millions of Americans are justifiably afraid of what they’ll face under a Trump administration. If
any group demands our support and sympathy, it’s these people, not the Americans who backed Trump and his threat of state-sanctioned violence against Hispanic immigrants and Muslim Americans. All the solicitude, outrage, and moral telepathy being deployed in defense of Trump supporters—who voted for a racist who promised racist outcomes—is perverse, bordering on abhorrent.
It’s worth repeating what Trump said throughout the election.
His campaign indulged in hateful rhetoric against Hispanics and condemned Muslim Americans with the collective guilt of anyone who would commit terror.
It treated black America as a lawless dystopia and spoke of black Americans as dupes and fools. And to his supporters, Trump promised mass deportations, a ban on Muslim entry to the United States, and strict “law and order” as applied to those black communities.
Judging from his choices for the transition—figures like immigration hardliner Kris Kobach and white nationalist Stephen Bannon—it’s clear he plans to deliver on those promises.
Whether Trump’s election reveals an “inherent malice” in his voters is irrelevant. What is relevant are the practical outcomes of a Trump presidency.
Trump campaigned on state repression of disfavored minorities.
He gives every sign that he plans to deliver that repression. This will mean disadvantage, immiseration, and violence for real people, people whose “inner pain and fear” were not reckoned worthy of many-thousand-word magazine feature stories.
If you voted for Trump, you voted for this, regardless of what you believe about the groups in question. That you have black friends or Latino colleagues,
that you think yourself to be tolerant and decent, doesn’t change the fact that you voted for racist policy that may affect, change, or harm their lives. And on that score, your frustration at being labeled a racist doesn’t justify or mitigate the moral weight of your political choice.
In the same way that the election-year demand for empathy toward Trump supporters obscured the consequences of Trump’s support for his targets, this demand for empathy does the same. It’s worse, in fact.
In the wake of Trump’s win, the United States was hit with a wave of racist threats, agitation, harassment, and violence,
following a year in which hate crimes against Muslim Americans and others reached historic highs. With Trump in office, millions of Americans face the prospect of a federal government that is hostile to their presence in this country, and which views them as an intrusion, even if they are citizens. Even if they’ve lived their entire lives as Americans.
To face those facts
and then demand empathy for the people who made them a reality—who backed racist demagoguery, whatever their reasons—is to declare Trump’s victims less worthy of attention than his enablers. To insist Trump’s backers are good people is to treat their inner lives with more weight than the actual lives on the line under a Trump administration. At best, it’s myopic and solipsistic. At worst, it’s morally grotesque.
Between 1882 and 1964, nearly 3,500 black Americans were lynched. At the peak of this era, from 1890 to 1910, hundreds were killed in huge public spectacles of violence. The men who organized lynchings—who gathered conspirators, who made arrangements with law enforcement, who purchased rope, who found the right spot—weren’t ghouls or monsters. They were ordinary. The Forsyth County, Georgia, sheriff who looked the other way while mobs lynched Rob Edwards, a young man scapegoated for a crime he did not commit, was a well-liked and popular figure of authority, as described by Patrick Phillips in his book
******* at the Root: A Racial Cleansing in America.
And the people who watched these events, who brought their families to gawk and smile, were the very model of decent, law-abiding Americana. Hate and racism have always been the province of “good people.”
To treat Trump voters as presumptively innocent—even as they hand power to a demagogic movement of ignorance and racism—is to clear them of moral responsibility for whatever happens next, even if it’s violence against communities of color. Even if, despite the patina of law, it is essentially criminal. It is to absolve Trump’s supporters of any blame or any fault.
Yes, they put a white nationalist in power. But the consequences? Well, it’s not what they
wanted.
“One can be, indeed one must strive to become, tough and philosophical concerning destruction and death, for this is what most of mankind has been best at since we have heard of man,” wrote James Baldwin in his seminal work,
The Fire Next Time. “But it is not permissible that the authors of devastation should also be innocent. It is the innocence which constitutes the crime.”
What we cannot do is pretend this wasn’t a choice, that no one was responsible.
Donald Trump ran a campaign of racist demagoguery against Muslim Americans, Hispanic immigrants, and black protesters. He indulged the worst instincts...
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