Monday, July 15, 2019

What Trump Understands About America



Donald Trump has a shrewd understanding of America. He knows it's not "one nation, under god, with liberty and justice for all." He knows it's not a country in which all men are created equal. Trump knows there are two Americas, Trump's America and another America.

In one America, people react with shock when a President issues vile racist tweets against women lawmakers. In the other America, people say nothing. 
In one America, people speak out in protest after a President claims that African, Haitian, and Salvadoran immigrants come from "sh**hole" countries. In the other America, people nod in agreement. 
In one America, people become outraged when administration officials snatch migrant children from their mothers' arms and detain them for weeks in filthy conditions with no repercussions. In the other America, people remain silent.
And in one America, people condemn a President for describing protestors alongside neo-Nazis as "very fine people." In the other America, people shrug.
...But Trump's recent tweets could show that he understands America better than his critics realize. 
These two Americas have long co-existed. 
One is the country represented by the Statue of Liberty, and its invitation to poor and tired immigrants "yearning to breathe free." 
The other is the one that virtually wiped out Native Americans, enslaved Africans, excluded Chinese immigrants in the late 19th century and put Japanese Americans in concentration camps. 
From the rarified perch of the White House, Trump's racist tweets tap into the id of this other America. 
And here's what's so frightening about this: It is not a big stretch to say that when a leader uses the kind of language that Trump uses against minorities, it may increase the chances of violence being used against them.

A return to a distant, angry, dark time.
I've heard commentators say we're on the verge of a second Civil War. That makes a mockery of the carnage of that war, where at least 600,000 Americans were killed. 
Yet there is another 19th-century parallel that resonates. One commentator recently said we're on the brink of a "political civil war."
That comment evoked another era that reminds me of this one -- the decades running up to the Civil War. 
Then, as now, we were splitting into two different countries. Political compromise was impossible on another issue that revolved around American identity -- slavery. Congressional lawmakers carried pistols on the House and Senate floors. 
The impending Civil War was described as "irrepressible conflict" -- the nation would become either a slave-holding nation or a free-labor country. There was no middle ground. 
That period also saw the rise of the nation's first anti-immigration party. They were called the "The American Party," otherwise known as the "Know-Nothings." They blamed Irish and German immigrants for rising crime and poverty rates, and riots erupted across America in the 1840s and '50s. 
"Party members tended to come from the working classes and had a strong anti-elitist bent," Amy Briggs wrote in National Geographic
"Their platform sought to limit immigration and the influence of Catholicism, and they used ugly ethnic stereotypes to stir up hatred against the recent German and Irish arrivals."

America at a crossroad.
Trump's tweets show we are now in the middle of another "irrepressible conflict." We can't forever be a country that prides itself for welcomingimmigrants and religious diversity while also being one that puts immigrant children in cages and shrugs when our President makes racist statements. 
To paraphrase another President -- Abraham Lincoln -- we eventually "will become all one thing or all the other."

7 comments:

  1. Yes, Americans have a long history of ugly behaviour.

    "Immigrants: The Last Time America Sent Her Own Packing"
    https://www.historynet.com/immigrants-the-last-time-america-sent-her-own-packing.htm

    Trump is exploiting the ugliness. Did you know that Trump supporters have 90% of privately owned guns in the US?

    Mound, I've been following Colonel Lawrence Wilkerson, former Chief of Staff for Secretary of State Colin Powell, now a Prof at William and Mary. Wilkerson doesn't pull any punches. Maybe you are familiar with his analyses. Here's a sample: "Maine 2019 Spring Gathering & Colonel Lawrence Wilkerson Speech"
    https://youtu.be/kZA2yIFkhKg

    Wilkerson's biggest problem is the general apathy of the American people. They will simply let Trump get away with anything.



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  2. Hi, Toby. Yes, I'm familiar with Wilkerson. He does call it as he sees it and he's never far from the mark.

    What infuriates me is that a faction of the political caste has discovered how to exploit the breakdown of social cohesion. Two lines from the previous post: "we no longer even agree on problems" and "we're moving away from useful political debate to destructive factionalism."

    We're fond of attributing these to the other side, the right, but can you not think of someone who persistently indulges in the same thing ostensibly on the side of Trudeau? A person who vilifies the entire other side as "ghastly" and promises to settle scores.

    My deep concern for the decay in social cohesion arose out of the climate emergency. Years ago I began writing of the essential role of strong social cohesion if we were to have any hope of coping with climate change and associated threats.

    In wartime emergencies differences are set aside and bitter adversaries adopt a broad loyalty necessitated by the conditions. We're in as dire an emergency as we've ever known yet the forces of rebuke and divisiveness are as strong as ever. How will that play out as we pass through this ordeal?

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  3. An excellent analysis of the "new" Aamerica, Mound. In some ways, the country never changes.

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  4. When I heard of the murder of civil-rights activist Sadie Roberts-Joseph, Mound, I couldn't help but wonder if it was the work of a crazed racist emboldened by the hateful, racist rhetoric of his president: https://www.cnn.com/2019/07/16/us/sadie-roberts-joseph-activist-suffocation/index.html?utm_source=CNN+Five+Things&utm_campaign=c40a5e185e-EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_2019_07_16_07_05&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_6da287d761-c40a5e185e-85060201

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  5. One America, Owen, has resurfaced in the mainstream. Good angel versus bad angel. It was never gone but instead remained just beneath the surface until,like the cicada, conditions were just right to emerge once more. This echoes Bob Altemeyer's book, "The Authoritarians."

    http://web.archive.org/web/20081030234816/http://members.shaw.ca/jeanaltemeyer/drbob/TheAuthoritarians.pdf

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  6. Yup, just another Rethuglican ... but w/o the good manners.

    This will not end well.

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  7. I hope the authorities can track down her killer soon, Lorne. As I understand it she was suffocated and then dumped in the trunk of her car. It was all done within a 2 hour window that suggests the killer was stalking her and struck quickly when the opportunity surfaced. It definitely has the appearance of a hate crime.

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