President
Donald J. Trump is a Racist! Nonetheless, he is not the first U.S.
President to harbor such views - Dwight D. Eisenhower, Richard M.
Nixon, Lyndon B. Johnson, and Franklin D. Roosevelt, among others.
Yet they also advanced racially inclusive policies during their
terms. But Trump joins Woodrow Wilson as a president whose actions
have been consistently bigoted from the beginning of his term. Wilson
ordered rigid segregation of the federal workplace and screened a
showing of the movie, Birth
of a Nation,
a prejudiced screed painting the Reconstruction period as one where
newly freed, ignorant African Americans oppressed southern whites and
defiled white womanhood.
Trump’s
actions closely parallel those of Wilson and have manifested
themselves throughout his adult life, many of them modeled on the
attitudes and behavior of his father, Fred Trump. Donald and Fred
were found guilty of discriminating against black citizens in their
real estate properties in a federal suit brought by the Nixon
Administration in the 1970s. Subsequently Donald called for the death
penalty for five minority youth who were alleged to have gang-raped a
white female jogger in New York City’s Central Park (in a state
that did not have a death penalty), purchasing a full-page ad in the
New York
Times to
make his case. After they were exonerated, he persisted in saying
they merited the death penalty. He followed that up by ordering the
operators of his Atlantic City, New Jersey casinos not to have black
dealers handling his money and that only Jews and other whites be
allowed to do so. In 2011, Trump joined the birther movement which
claimed that Obama was born in Kenya and thus ineligible to serve as
President of the United States, only finally agreeing that Obama was
born in the U.S. in late 2016 when his campaign advisors insisted
that he recant the allegation. But recently, he has said he would
have won the presidency by a larger margin had he continued to push
that prejudiced trope.
On
September 22, 2017, Trump criticized African American NFL players,
calling them sons of bitches, for their kneeling protests against
police brutality during the singing of the national anthem. It would
have been more than appropriate for the demeaned players to
accurately refer to him as the son of a KKKer since his father, Fred
Trump, had aligned himself with this anti-black, anti-Semitic,
violent organization that made its name by lynching Jews and African
Americans. Therefore, Trump’s recent reference to African,
Haitian, and El Salvadoran immigrants as being from sh*thole
countries is the latest of his xenophobic rants. Even more
disconcerting is that Trump’s cabinet secretaries, other
staffers, and House and Senate Republicans continue to lie on his
behalf when he makes these racist statements. On top of all this, he
is a congenital liar, having done so more than two thousand times
since taking the oath of office as confirmed in an exhaustive
analysis by the Washington
Post in
late 2017.
Moreover,
Trump’s ongoing misogyny against women of all racial and ethnic
backgrounds continues unabated. After the release of the infamous
Access
Hollywood
tape in the late stages of the 2016 presidential campaign, on which
he said that when you are famous you can do anything to women, “…
even grab them by the p*ssy,” he
explained it away as locker room talk and remained on the path to
victory. Since that time, more than a dozen women have come forward
accusing him of sexual assault and inappropriate sexual contact; in
the past week, it has been revealed that Trump’s personal
attorney paid a porn star $130,000 to remain silent about a
consensual sexual relationship. He also aggressively supported Judge
Roy Moore, accused as a pedophile by multiple women, when they were
young girls, in his bid for an Alabama U.S. Senate seat. Moore went
on to be defeated in the general election, losing the seat to a
Democrat for the first time in twenty-five years.
Meanwhile,
Trump and his family continue to pursue business deals that are
tinged with corruption: alleged money laundering by selling
apartments and condos in Trump properties to foreign criminals;
conducting financial relationships with banking institutions that
have been banned by the U.S. government; and opening a Trump hotel in
Washington, D.C. down the street from the White House, where foreign
diplomats and dignitaries and American captains of industry pay top
dollar for rooms and meals (whose prices have steadily risen) while
meeting with Trump and his cabinet secretaries to do business. Suits
have already been filed under the emoluments clause (Article
I, Section 9, Clause
8) of the U.S.
Constitution which forbids the President from accepting gifts from
foreign governments and others while in office since Trump retains an
active ownership of the Trump Corporation.
Current political
projections from Dr. Larry Sabato, professor and director of the
University of Virginia Center for Politics, suggest that Republicans
may be vulnerable to a Democratic takeover of the House and Senate
during the 2018 midterms. However, the Democrats again seem to be
fixated on Trump’s personal frailties - racism, misogyny, and
corruption - in the belief that they will be the basis for Republican
defeats and/or his impeachment. They seem to be hell bent on going
down the same 2016 rabbit hole that led to Democratic losses of the
presidency, the U.S. Senate, several Democratic state legislatures,
and governorships, pushing the latter to less than twenty. Despite
Trump’s documented, aforementioned personal failings and his
low approval ratings, they are not sufficient for Democrats to take
back control of the Congress or to remove him from office. There are
no equivocations in what he and Republicans stand for:
anti-immigrant, anti-black, anti-health care, anti-Muslim, and
anti-women policies - overall racist in tone and political
positioning. Yet Trump and his party have clarity in their political
stances which has proven to have appeal along with turnout.
Democrats,
on the other hand, are trumpeting a variety of views, many of which
contradict each other, and strategies that have proven to be
wrong-headed as we head into the 2018 mid-terms. For example, the
billionaire hedge fund manager, Tim Steyer, a committed progressive,
has spent millions of dollars of his own money to fund a drive to
impeach Trump, and Congressman Al Green has developed legislation in
the House to impeach the president. Neither initiative has gained
traction nor are they going anywhere. Steyer’s millions and
Green’s advocacy would be better directed towards voter
registration and turnout at the state level, in State Assembly and
Senate Districts, concomitantly with federal elections (as has been
demonstrated to be effective in the recent elections in Alabama, New
Jersey, and Virginia). While Democrats are pursuing political dead
ends, Republicans are continuing their voter suppression efforts
against citizens of color: African American and Hispanic men in
particular, via denying the vote to prisoners who have served their
time (while simultaneously using their prison population numbers to
sustain majority white eligible voter districts at the state and
national levels); and making voting more difficult for minority
elderly and millennial college students with onerous voter ID
requirements. They are also pumping more money into organizing
suburban voters as they acknowledge the Democratic threat and ginning
up their base of Trump voters, whom Trump and his allies feed
regularly with racist, nationalistic, and anti-public education
tirades.
What
does this all mean for our nation? First, if Trump retains his power
at the federal and state levels, even for one term, K-12 public
education will become decimated from under-funding, demonization, and
private-sector marketing to low-income parents. Second, the teaching
profession will be devastated as pay, benefits, and pensions will be
further downsized by legislative schemes funded by the education
reform Cartel. Third, any hopes of addressing climate change, which
Trump and his followers declare to be a hoax, in spite of recent
catastrophes in Florida, Texas, California, and Puerto Rico, will be
null and void. Finally, one full term of Trump with a Republican
House and Senate could result in a major erosion of democracy and its
institutions. Given these likely outcomes, it is imperative that
Trump and Republicans be downsized during the 2018 mid-terms in
preparation for removing him from office via the 2020 presidential
election, unless Special Prosecutor Mueller is able to uncover enough
evidence to have him impeached and tried in the Senate. If he were to
be impeached, the Democrats would likely be unable to corral the
necessary two-thirds vote to remove him from office. Thus, Democrats
need to develop a unified message that will resonate in the public
square. Otherwise, their political future is bleak.
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