It
is probably not especially politically correct to bring more race
matters into the debacle that is also known as the Donald Trump quest
for the Presidency. He has called out and targeted racial and
ethnic groups, as well as targeted individual women because of their
appearance (or more, but we won’t go there). He has supported
basic thuggery, offering to pay the legal fees for a man who
sucker-punched an African American protester, and egging on others who
beat up a protester. The latest goes from the amusing to the
amazing. Although there is a video showing his campaign manager,
Corey Lewandowski putting his hands on former Beibart reporter Michelle
Fields, he and Trump have said that eyes can lie. Even in the
face of video evidence, he denied touching Fields. He and Trump
tried to dismiss her as “delusional”, essentially “blaming the victim.”
Imagine
that Corey Lewandowski were an African American man. Imagine that
he nearly knocked down a white woman reporter. Can you hear the
outrage? Can you hear the demands? Were Lewandowski African
American, would he have been caricatured as a hoodlum or thug,
pandering to the stereotypes? Or would Mr. Trump have had Black
Lewandowski’s back as firmly?
I
am not surprised that Mr. Trump has condoned Lewandowski’s violence,
nor that he has taken the “wuss” role by suggesting the reporter, who
was attempting to get his attention, had “touched” him (and that maybe
he should press charges). It is entirely consistent with his
other campaign behavior. He has suggested that his supporters
should “riot” if he does not get the Republican nomination. His
amazing incivility adds to the vaudevillian atmosphere of this bizarre
campaign. How different would it be if Corey Lewandowski were
Black?
A
black man could not have put his hand on a white woman with
impunity. If he did, he probably would not have had to wait more
than a week to be charged for his transgression. He might have
apologized, whether he were asked to do so or not, both from civility
and from cultural conditioning. Trump and Lewandowski assumed
that Michelle Fields, a white woman, could be thrown under the bus by
two powerful white men who called her a liar, delusional, and any other
slur they could get away with. A black man would not have
had the luxury – he would have had to rush into rapid CYA (cover your
hind parts) mode.
Those
women who are supporting Trump need to be well aware of his propensity
to disregard and disrespect women. Loyalty notwithstanding,
Lewandowski’s untoward behavior deserves some reaction – maybe not a
firing, but some form of suspension, or something that suggests that a
“hands on” campaign need not be literally hands on, or that the “ground
game” that Lewandowski is often praised for does not mean that he
should knock reporters down to the ground.
Those
African Americans (and there are a few), who are supporting Donald
Trump need to ask themselves what the reaction would be if Corey
Lewandowski were Black. Would Trump be as supportive? Would
others? And just for the record, who are the senior African
Americans on the Trump team? Just asking. Not complaining
if there aren’t any.
I
am of the generation that used to play “what if” all the time.
Knowing, but determined to imagine and speculate, what would happen if
you flip the script. What if McKinney, Texas police corporal, the
white Eric Casebolt had pulled a blonde white girl by the hair instead
of pulling the braids of the black Dajerra Becton? Or, what if a
black officer, not Casebolt, had pulled a white girl by her blonde
locks? The very muted outrage that we heard when Becton was
assaulted would have turned into a crescendo had a black police officer
had the temerity to assault a white teen.
Similarly,
if a car full of black plainclothes NYPD police officers had chosen to
hassle a white mailman because he hollered at them, would there have
been the same arrest and cover-up that has taken place in the white
police officers in Crown Heights arrested Glen Grays and forced him to
abandon his mail truck?
I
am not sure why I play “what if” or “just imagine”. It is a game
that has not point. We know that race still matters, and that
matters still aren’t fair. Still, as I watch Mr. Trump circle the
wagon around Corey Lewandowski, I just have to wonder how different his
reaction (and the public reaction) might be if Lewandowski were
Black. Just wondering.
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