Not
to be outdone by his previous string of lies (now extending for about
two years), President Donald Trump stood in public this week and,
without any proof, stated that the migrants who are marching north
seeking relief from crime and oppressive governments and abject
poverty contain within that mass of humanity Middle Easterners (read
that Muslims) who want to harm the U.S.
He
started his racist rants while he was busy trampling his Republican
opponents into the dust in his party's primary campaign and he has
never let up. His diatribes
included Mexicans and Muslims and the drumbeat against them never
stopped, although he tried to mitigate his fear-mongering just a
little, by saying that there might be “some good people”
among them. Mostly, though, he warned that all of these outsiders,
those “others,” pose a direct threat to his core
supporters and voters.
The
president has said that he could shoot someone on Fifth Avenue in New
York City and he wouldn't lose a vote. It's beginning to look as if
he was reading his constituents correctly. There is virtually
nothing he can do or say that will lessen their support. Most of his
adherents seem to want it that way and like that he says things that
are so prejudicial and hateful that they would not say them aloud
themselves. But, he does, and they like it.
Ignorance
of how the real world works is what allows someone like Trump to act
in such a manner. For example, the migration of thousands of men,
women, and children from Central America is likely the clearest sign
that these people are desperate and they fear something that is very
real: the likelihood that, if they stayed in their homes and
villages, they might be subject to torture or extrajudicial killing
by either government hit squads (fearing that some might be socialist
or communist) or the drug lords might order them to cooperate with
them or suffer pain or death. This president has no capacity to
understand that the world, in a global economy, works differently
from real estate predators in New York City, where his bravado and
braggadocio count for a “good deal.” It doesn't work in
the real world, but Trump and his minions in the administration do
not seem to realize any of that, and the Republican congress has been
convinced or intimidated into complying with the wishes of a
know-nothing, as he struts around on the world stage, a pale
imitation of Benito Mussolini in the 1920s.
Again,
creating “alternative facts” out of whole cloth, the
president went through his litany of epithets against the thousands
that are headed north, that they are bringing crime and drugs and all
manner of negative elements to the U.S. So far, however, he has not
said they are bringing disease, as he has said many times in the
past. He may have already said this by the time this is read. He
threatens to cut off financial aid to the countries that fail to stop
the humanity heading for his home turf, hoping to find a kinder and
gentler place to raise their babies and children. But, that's what
it is. U.S. policy over many decades has played its part in forcing
people to leave their homes and villages without anything of their
belongings but what they can carry. And, as they journey hundreds
and possibly thousands of miles, they lose even the few possessions
they were able to carry.
It
is not surprising that Trump cannot put himself in their shoes, for
he has never wanted for any material thing in his seven decades of
life. What is surprising is that his followers, many of whom are the
equivalent (in terms of their place in U.S. society) of the mostly
Honduran migrants, are not able to see themselves in the same
conditions. Untold numbers of Americans who support Trump are placed
at the margins of society and are not likely to move from there, no
matter how elaborate Trump's lies are.
Even
the mass media in the U.S. has lent itself to the scare-mongering of
Trump. This week, the Columbia Journalism Review (CJR) had this to
say about it: “The idea that the caravan was being used by
Middle Eastern terrorists to camouflage their passage to the U.S.
began spreading on right-wing blogs last week, and made its way to
Fox News on Monday morning. During a Fox
& Friends
segment on the caravan, Pete Hegseth claimed that '100 ISIS fighters'
had been captured in Guatemala; a couple of hours later, Trump
tweeted about it. Reporters who have been travelling with the
migrants refuted the claim, and by Monday afternoon, it fell to Fox’s
Shepard Smith to clarify that 'Fox News knows of no evidence to
suggest the president is accurate on that matter.' And the president
has offered no evidence to support what he has said.”
“No
evidence to support what he has said” is par for the course for
Trump, who tried out a different lie earlier this week: The
Democrats did it. Somehow, he thinks the people will believe that
the main opposition party would have enough money to support
thousands of people fleeing for their lives. And, he also has tried
out this one: George Soros did it. Trump wants the people to
believe that the billionaire, who contributes to Democrats and
liberal causes would somehow spend large amounts of money to
encourage thousands to abandon their lives, throw their worldly goods
into a backpack, and head north.
The
president's islamophobic and racist views of the nation and the world
have found an election issue that has fallen into his lap just weeks
before the mid-term election. He is using it to the greatest
advantage of himself and his party. After all, it worked in both his
primary campaign and in the general election, so why shouldn't it
work now? For someone who was able to find “some good people”
among the white supremacists and nazis in Charlottesville last year,
he is finding it very hard to find the good people among the
migrants, one of whom told NBC News this week that he and the rest
just want to find a place to live where they can work (and earn a
living). Although we can't know all of migrants, we can believe that
the overwhelming percentage of them are good people. Who walks that
far carrying babies and young children to commit mayhem in the U.S.?
We can leave that to the Trump Administration.
Trump
has ridden the horse of racism and the issue of “illegal
immigration” to appeal to his base for a number of years and he
doesn't want to stop now. As CJR noted, “The plight of
migrants seeking refuge from violence and poverty demands coverage,
but news outlets don’t have to frame that reporting on Trump’s
terms.”
A
great manipulator of the news and his television audiences from his
reality show, The Apprentice, he has been the one who has manipulated
the press in its coverage of him and his incessant Tweets. But then,
how would the press cover his antics or not cover his antics? His
erratic behavior makes good copy and the biggest outlets for “news”
are owned by his friends and colleagues, the billionaire class and
their friends and minions who are only worth $40 million or $50
million. Instead of covering the issues, they have covered him and
that's what he and his base want.
The
press needs to do more reporting on the people who are marching on
the road to (they hope) freedom, which they expect to find at the
U.S. southern frontier. After all, the nation of immigrants has
welcomed people from many nations for hundreds of years, excluding of
course, the genocide of the Native Americans and the kidnapping and
sale of human beings in the atrocity known as chattel slavery. Even
if he once read a book about these things, he has forgotten or, more
likely, has never been able to empathize or sympathize with others'
travails. We can't look to the White House for leadership on the
issue of mass migration, even if the U.S. is a main cause, because
nothing is Trump's fault and, therefore, nothing could be America's
fault. Because he's perfect. Just ask him.
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