Racist: a person who shows or
feels discrimination or prejudice against people of other races or who believes
that a particular race is superior to another.
We
spent last weekend at a cabin in the mountains with friends—liberal ones even,
of whom I am especially fond—where we had extremely limited cell phone service
and absolutely no TV or radio. We had a great time not checking Facebook every
few minutes and not watching any news whatsoever, opting for a fabulous ghost
town-to-caved-in-tunnel hike along an old railroad bed and having an absolute
riot with friends drinking beer and not talking politics.
But
on the way home, mostly in an effort to hear how the Rockies had done without
us to cheer them on (not well), we tuned into some news. In addition to our sad
sports update we heard that the nation had been ripped in two along racial
lines by President Trump and it might take generations to heal and that
something very bad had happened in Charlottesville, VA.
Wow.
Upsetting news indeed.
As it turns out three different white supremacy groups had gotten permits to demonstrate against the proposed removal of the statue of Robert E. Lee (Lee never owned slaves by the way, as an aside and a curiosity). When confronted by groups identified in most reports as blacklivesmatter members and the new Antifa (anti-facist is what it stands for, at least) violence broke out and eventually a young woman named Heather Heyer was deliberately struck by a car driven by Alex Fields, Jr. who must be one of the dumbest human beings on the planet. Ms. Heyer died at the hospital of her injuries and I hope Mr. Fields is punished to the fullest extent of the law.
Tragic.
Absolutely tragic.
The
media was aghast that President Trump had lent support to white supremacists.
Republicans were distraught that their party’s leader had failed to heal a
nation in shock. The new and somewhat
less improved Fox News said that the President had missed a golden opportunity
to reach out to all Americans and make it a healing moment.
I
was beside myself to find out what horrible words President Trump had spewed
that had the nation in such a tizzy. I found four You Tube versions of his
speech on Saturday and watched them all, certain that I had missed something.
Here
is what he said—in all four accounts: “We condemn in the strongest way possible
this egregious behavior on many sides.
The hate and the division must stop.
“…We have to come together as Americans with love for our nation and true affection for each other…Above all else we must remember this truth: No matter our color, creed, religion or political party we are all Americans first.
“…Our
citizens must restore the bonds of trust and loyalty between each other. We
must love each other, respect each other and cherish our history and our future
together.”
I
was and still am thoroughly confused by the reactions I heard to those words. I
kept googling to find out what huge chunk of the movie I must have missed. I
found a recording of a group of counter protestors, some armed with clubs or
tool handles, some wearing masks, who charged the group of other protestors
and/or vice versa, it was actually hard to tell, and an ugly fight broke out.
So
that wasn’t good, but I was still confused about the reaction to what I thought
were very well-considered and forceful as well as healing words by the
President. For those of you on the left, I am not making that up.
I
had to have it literally explained to me that the media and those they control like
puppets were upset because Trump blamed all sides for the violence and
failed to actually condemn the KKK, Neo-Nazis and White Supremacists specifically.
I guess I get that but he also didn’t blame #onlyblacklivesmatter, and Anti-fa
by name either.
So
on Monday I heard the President specifically condemn the KKK, Neo-Nazis and
White Supremacists by name and not the other groups involved in the brawl. I
heard him specifically offer his sympathies for the family of Heather Heyer
(her tragic death occurred after his remarks above made on Saturday) and
suggest that Alex Fields be prosecuted to the full extent of the law. He also
said hate in any form must not be tolerated and that offenders on both sides
need to change their ways.
Made sense to me.
In
response, the media again accused him of missing a healing moment. One of the
Charlie’s (Rose, Todd…they all look and sound like Anderson Cooper to me) said
he guessed that must have been an attempt to reassure the nation Trump was
against hatred but Charlie didn’t think any Americans were convinced.
There
was also a point made that he didn’t condemn the white supremacist groups by
name for 48 hours and only did so because of media pressure (don’t make me
laugh) and did it by reading a speech written by someone else (because he’d be
the first president to ever do that).
They
drew no comparison of that point to the fact that Barack Obama waited five days
after a blacklivesmatter enthusiast shot four police officers to
death in Dallas with a high powered rifle.
The
situation in Charlottesville was horrible. The KKK, Neo-Nazis and White
Supremacists are disgusting as is everything for which they stand. I can, have
and will continue to say the same about #onlyblacklivesmatter and Antifa.
“Pigs
in a blanket, fry ‘em like bacon.
“What
do we want? We want ‘em dead.
“When
do we want it? Now!”
Maybe
you missed it but that was an #onlyblacklivesmatter march soundtrack shortly
before the Dallas shootings.
In
no way does that justify anything the
white supremacy groups say or stand for but it is one more block in the giant
Jenga puzzle that establishes BLM and Antifa as hate groups.
To
blame Donald Trump’s seven-month presidency to date for the racist divide and
outrage that exists today is the most incredibly thin and groundless accusation
I have ever heard.
After
eight years of the “post-racial” Obama presidency during which he set this
country back 50 years or more in race relations by his reaction to the cops
stopping a black professor from breaking into his own home at two in the
morning, to Trayvon Martin looking like his own son, to his thoughtless
handling of events in Fergeson, St. Louis, Dallas, et al; and from his
unfounded and statistically unsupported never-ending narrative of police
oppression of black men I fail to see how anyone can place blame for racial
tension anywhere but at the feet of that pretender of a president.
There
is not one unadjusted, untwisted, undistorted fact that supports the Obama
narrative which is not the same thing as saying prejudice and racism didn’t
exist in this country before his Nazi tactic of turning races against each
other.
It did.
But not like it does today. And
not like it did before a sitting president put it under his microscope and made
it a burning and seemingly irreconcilable issue as long as anyone expects
victim classes to take any responsibility for their own behavior.
“Until the police accept
responsibility for their discriminatory behavior toward people of color, there
can be no peace.”
--Barack
H. Obama
“Our
citizens must restore the bonds of trust and loyalty between each other. We
must love each other, respect each other and cherish our history and our future
together.”
--Donald
Trump
Which sounds more troublesome to
you?
If you really believe Donald Trump is the problem I have no words left.
I will not apologize, nor do I
expect my President to apologize for believing that all lives matter and that
all hate groups are bad.
I’m just that kind of racist.
And you should be too.
"To blame Donald Trump’s seven-month presidency to date for the racist divide and outrage that exists today is the most incredibly thin and groundless accusation I have ever heard."
ReplyDeleteMay not find another sentence I've agreed with more this month.