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OPINION

Trump Making America Hate Again

Trump Making America Hate Again
U.S. President Donald Trump speaks following a meeting on infrastructure at Trump Tower, August 15, 2017, in New York City. He fielded questions from reporters about his comments on the events in Charlottesville, Virginia and white supremacists. (Drew Angerer/Getty Images)

Robert Reich By Tuesday, 15 August 2017 08:10 PM EDT Current | Bio | Archive

Donald Trump's unwillingness to denounce the white supremacists who came to Charlottesville, Virginia, last weekend bent on violence has been part of his political strategy from the start.

Remember, weeks after he began his campaign by alleging that Mexican immigrants were criminals and rapists, two brothers in Boston beat up and urinated on a 58-year-old homeless Mexican national, with one of the brothers subsequently telling police, "Donald Trump was right, all these illegals need to be deported."

Instead of condemning the brutality, Trump excused it by saying that "people who are following me are very passionate. They love this country and they want this country to be great again."

During campaign rallies, Trump repeatedly excused violence toward protesters. "You know what they used to do to guys like that when they were in a place like this? They'd be carried out on a stretcher, folks," he said in February 2016.

After white supporters punched and attempted to choke a Black Lives Matter protester, Trump said that "maybe he should have been roughed up."

Trump was even reluctant to distance himself from David Duke and the Ku Klux Klan.

Since becoming president, Trump's instigations have continued. As Rep. Mark Sanford, a Republican from South Carolina, told the Washington Post, "I'd submit that the president has unearthed some demons."

In May, Trump congratulated body-slamming businessman Greg Gianforte on his special election win in Montana, making no mention of the victor's attack on a reporter the night before.

Weeks ago, Trump even tweeted a video clip of himself in a WWE professional wrestling match, slamming a CNN avatar to the ground and pounding him with punches and elbows to the head.

Hateful violence is hardly new to America. But never before has a president licensed it as a political strategy or considered haters part of his political base.

In his second week as president, Trump called Wayne LaPierre, CEO of the National Rifle Association, to the White House. Soon after, LaPierre told gun owners they should fear "leftists" and the "national media machine," which were "an enemy utterly dedicated to destroy not just our country, but also Western civilization."

Since then, the NRA has run ads with the same theme, concluding that "the only way we stop this, the only way we save our country and our freedom, is to fight this violence of lies with a clenched fist of truth."

It's almost as if someone had declared a new civil war. But who? And for what purpose?

One clue came last week in a memo from Rich Higgins, who had been director for strategic planning in Trump's National Security Council. Higgins wrote the seven-page document, entitled "POTUS & Political Warfare," in May, and it was recently leaked to Foreign Policy magazine.

In it, Higgins charges that a cabal of leftist "deep state" government workers, "globalists," bankers, adherents to Islamic fundamentalism and establishment Republicans want to impose cultural Marxism in the United States. "Recognizing in candidate Trump an existential threat to cultural Marxist memes that dominate the prevailing cultural narrative, those that benefit recognize the threat he poses and seek his destruction."

There you have it. Trump's goal has never been to promote guns or white supremacy, or to fuel attacks on the press and the left. These may be means, but the goal has been to build and fortify Trump's power. And to keep him in power even if it's found that he colluded with Russia to get power.

Trump and his consigliere, Steve Bannon, have been quietly encouraging a civil war between Trump's base of support — mostly white and worried — and everyone else.

It's a war built on economic stresses and racial resentments, and it's fueled by paranoia. Encouragement is conveyed by Trump's winks and nods to haters, and by his deafening silence in the face of their violence.

A smaller version of this civil war extends even into the White House, where Bannon and his proteges are doing battle with leveler heads.

National Security Adviser H.R. McMaster fired Higgins. Reportedly, Trump was furious at the firing.

Last weekend, McMaster was quick to term the Charlottesville car attack "terrorism." Ivanka Trump denounced "racism, white supremacy and neo-Nazis." Chief of Staff John Kelly reportedly pushed Trump to condemn the Charlottesville haters.

Let's hope the leveler heads win the civil war in the White House. Let's pray the leveler heads in our society prevent the civil war Trump and Bannon are trying to instigate in America.


Robert Reich, a former U.S. Secretary of Labor, is professor of public policy at the University of California at Berkeley and the author of "Saving Capitalism: For the Many, Not the Few," now available in paperback. His new film, "Inequality for All," was recently released. To read more of his reports, Click Here Now.

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RobertReich
Two days late, Donald Trump finally condemned violent white supremacists. He was pushed into it by a storm of outrage over his initial failure to do so in the wake of deadly violence in Charlottesville, Virginia.
trump, violence, war, higgins
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2017-10-15
Tuesday, 15 August 2017 08:10 PM
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