The
specter of a Trump White House is unconscionable and traumatizing to
many. Some have suggested that we give the president-elect a chance,
and hope, even pray for his success—as if Donald Trump is a
normal politician, and it is normal to place one’s faith in a
candidate whose ascent to power was based upon raw appeals to
ethno-nationalism and white skin solidarity, with a promise to punish
an array of religious, racial, ethnic and political scapegoats if
elected. We cannot and should not acquiesce to this kind of
dictatorial power.
Mainstreaming
Trump’s policies and associations means normalizing a fascist
leader. Amid the mad rush to normalize a leader of fascist hooligans,
Trump’s policies and associations are being mainstreamed.
Vowing to deport millions of undocumented Latino immigrants, create a
Muslim registry and bring back torture, the president-elect is
assembling a cabinet of white supremacists, anti-Semites,
Islamophobes and homophobes.
Among
Trump’s inner circle are
Steve
Bannon,
the 21st century version of Goebbels and an Ivy League hatemonger as
his senior adviser;
Lt.
Gen. Michael T. Flynn,
the reincarnation of Himmler as national security adviser;
Sen.
Jeff Sessions,
a white-collar Klansman and the reincarnation of Bull Connor for
attorney general;
Betsy
DeVos,
a
child
labor proponent
as
secretary of education who wrested the position from homophobe Jerry
Falwell, Jr.;
Steve
Mnuchin,
a
vulture
capitalist
who
peddled subprime mortgages in communities of color and profited from
their fraudulent foreclosures; Milwaukee Sheriff
David
Clarke,
a potential pick for Homeland Security would send 1 million people to
Guantanamo and who has had
four
people die in his county jail,
including a newborn baby;
Rep.
Tom Price
(R-Ga.),
who as HHS secretary would end Obamacare, Medicaid, Medicare, funding
for Planned Parenthood and access to contraception, and
Ben
Carson,
who as HUD secretary would to bring back racial discrimination in
housing. This, as the nation experiences an increase in hate crimes,
committed by individuals emboldened by the rise of Trump.
As
Americans of good will brace for the revanchist assault on democracy
that surely will come—on civil rights and civil liberties,
freedom of the press, women’s reproductive rights, LGBTQ
rights, the environment and the rule of law—we realize our
collective backs are against the wall, that the bully who makes our
children cry is coming to get us. And we know the lives of millions
are in danger because history tells us this. As James Baldwin said,
“It is certain, in any case, that ignorance, allied with power,
is the most ferocious enemy justice can have.” Railing against
political correctness and multiculturalism, angry white male
supremacy is asserting itself, with the intent of inflicting pain on
the multitudes.
While
the disenfranchised and marginalized under normal circumstances may
turn to the government as a last resort to seek relief from
violations of their rights, in Trump’s America made great
again, there will be no relief or respite from hate crimes when Trump
will enact hate crimes into law. What do we do when the president is
the leader of the lynch mob—the very person inciting the
violence, then codifying and institutionalizing it –and there
is no one to help you? We organize and resist, and learn lessons from
those with an education in suffering.
Although
there is a long history in this country of authoritarian governments
abusing power, there is also a rich history of resistance and
rebellion.
As
the precedent for the president-elect’s Muslim registry,
Japanese
Americans—of
whom 120,000 were forced from their homes and imprisoned like
criminals in internment camps, two-thirds of them U.S.
citizens—understand the threats inherent in Trump’s
America. Vilified and their loyalty and patriotism questioned,
Americans of Japanese descent lived under barbed wire—their
lives uprooted and destroyed, their property seized, all without due
process. And yet they resisted. Some were draft resisters and
conscientious objectors, while others renounced their citizenship. As
a community, Japanese Americans fought for and eventually received
$1.2 billion in reparations in 1988.
Meanwhile,
as Trump plans to immediately deport or imprison up to 3 million
undocumented Latino immigrants, it is telling, though not surprising,
that Jewish Americans who survived the
Holocaust
are
now reliving their trauma, as
the
election of Donald Trump triggers memories
of
being rounded up under Nazi Germany, their families sent to
concentration camps and exterminated. They know it all started with
hate speech, followed by acts of violence and oppression codified
into law—with Jews deemed non-citizens and non-persons with no
rights and no humanity, forced to wear yellow stars and numbered
tattoos. Now, Jewish American millennials are awakening to a
resurgence of antisemitism in America, compelling them to learn
lessons and draw strength from their ancestors, who led uprisings in
the ghettos and death camps of Europe and joined partisan resistance
groups.
In
addition, Trump would deprive Americans of their most cherished
rights by criminalizing political protest and dissent, imprisoning
flag burners and ripping them of their citizenship. Native
Americans—who have suffered centuries of official government
policies of genocide, relocation, containment and deprivation, along
with broken treaties and empty promises—have fought for their
land for 500 years. And they have continue to resist their oppression
at
Standing
Rock,
the emergent civil rights cause of our time. Water protectors have
faced an assault of freezing water cannons, dogs and pepper spray, as
they block the 1,172-mile
Dakota
Access Pipeline
across
the Missouri River, which crosses into Sioux land without their
consent, and could have disastrous environmental consequences in the
event of a spill. As a result of the protests—in which veterans
participated—the Army has halted construction on the pipeline,
demonstrating the power of resistance.
Further,
as a multitude of Americans fear for their lives and safety under
Trump, black people in this country have always lived with the trauma
that comes with facing the incessant threat of death. The notion that
black people’s lives are in constant danger—a concept
which the Black Lives Matter movement has illuminated and magnified—
is by no means a new one. After all, slavery was not merely an
institution of economic exploitation and oppression, but also a
plantation police state. The threat was so severe, so palpable that
30,000 African-American slaves escaped to Canada in the nineteenth
century, liberating themselves from state-sponsored terrorism,
imprisonment, forced labor and police violence in America. Similarly,
5 million blacks fled the violence and exploitation of the Jim Crow
South during the Great Migration of the twentieth century.
In
the wake of this election, I have been reflecting on my great-great
grandfather, Henry Whaley, born in South Carolina in 1862. Henry was
a baby when his parents Clarissa and Daniel escaped to James Island
in Charleston with a group of slaves to save their lives during the
Civil War. He was wrapped in an apron on his mother’s back as
they crossed the river, with the slave patrol approaching in the
distance. According to our family’s oral history, Henry started
to cry, and Daniel told Clarissa to kill Henry lest the baby attract
the attention of the slave catchers. Had Clarissa killed Henry, she
would have taken her own life as well. Rather, she breast-fed her
baby to quiet him down, and saved the lives of her son, and all the
other refugees in the process.
Those
who have endured intergenerational trauma stemming from the
relentless drumbeat of injustice have responded by strategizing,
organizing and fighting back. Now we must resist the very real
prospect of living in Trumpland, that abnormal yet very American
place which will expose us to irreversible physical harm, psychic
damage and assaults on our dignity—all cloaked in the red,
white and blue. Just like the black refugees fleeing slavery, the
Japanese-Americans who refused to go quietly to the internment camps,
the Jews who resisted in the ghettos and concentration camps of Nazi
Germany, and the Native Americans who would not give up their land
without a fight, all Americans must confront the climate of
oppression and retributive justice in our midst—and fight with
our humanity.
It
is time for all of us to draw from our collective suffering and fight
the good fight against oppression—resist our current
circumstances rather than normalize them.
This commentary originally appeared in The Huffington Post
|