Like I suspect many other Americans, I continue to be shocked and appalled by the crassness, vulgarity and open racism and homophobia that defines the current occupant of the White House. Indeed, despite the airs he attempts to put on, he strikes me in essence as trailer park trash with money. No wonder he's been less than well received by old New York money. Now, with the entire world condemning his description of Hati and the entire continent of Africa as "shitholes," Der Trumpenführer and weak kneed Republicans who are afraid to condemn his foul language has given Democrats a gift that will go on giving in the run up to the 2018 midterms. How better to motivate blacks to get out and vote that to make it clear that Republicans hate them? A column in the New York Times looks at Trump undisguised racism and documents that it is not something new. Here are highlights:
When it comes to President Trump and race, there is a predictable cycle. He makes a remark that seems racist, and people engage in an extended debate about whether he is personally racist. His critics say he is. His defenders argue for an interpretation in which race plays a secondary role (such as: Haiti really is a worse place to live than Norway). It’s time to end this cycle. No one except Trump can know what Trump’s private thoughts or motivations are. But the public record and his behavior are now abundantly clear. Donald Trump treats black people and Latinos differently than he treats white people. And that makes him a racist. Is it possible to defend some of his racially charged statements by pointing out that something other than race might explain them? Sure. Is it possible that he doesn’t think of himself as a racist who views white people as superior to nonwhite people? Yes. But the definition of a racist — the textbook definition, as Paul Ryan might say — is someone who treats some people better than others because of their race. Trump fits that definition many times over: • Trump’s real-estate company was sued twice by the federal government in the 1970s for discouraging the renting of apartments to African-Americans and preferring white tenants, such as “Jews and executives.” • In 1989, Trump took out ads in New York newspapers urging the death penalty for five black and Latino teenagers accused of raping a white woman in Central Park; he continued to argue that they were guilty as late as October 2016, more than 10 years after DNA evidence had exonerated them. • He spent years claiming that the nation’s first black president was born not in the United States but in Africa, an outright lie that Trump still has not acknowledged as such. • He began his 2016 presidential campaign by disparaging Mexican immigrants as criminals and “rapists.” • He has retweeted white nationalists without apology. • He frequently criticizes prominent African-Americans for being unpatriotic, ungrateful and disrespectful. • He called some of those who marched alongside white supremacists in Charlottesville last August “very fine people.”
For more on this topic, read my colleague Nick Kristof wrestling with the topic during the 2016 campaign: “Here we have a man who for more than four decades has been repeatedly associated with racial discrimination or bigoted comments about minorities,” he wrote. “While any one episode may be ambiguous, what emerges over more than four decades is a narrative arc, a consistent pattern — and I don’t see what else to call it but racism.”
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