The Asian Age

Bigotry seems on rise: Bush

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New York, Oct. 20: George W. Bush issued a sharp denunciati­on of bigotry, white supremacy and falsehoods on Thursday, in what was seen as a clear rebuke of politics in the age of President Donald Trump.

In a New York speech, the two-term former president warned that the coarsening of the national tone and divisive themes are threats to American democracy.

“Bigotry seems emboldened. Our politics seems more vulnerable to conspiracy theories and outright fabricatio­n,” Mr Bush said.

Though he did not mention Trump by name, Mr Bush offered an implicit rebuke of the current administra­tion and the controvers­ial politics that emboldened millions of voters who swept Trump to victory last November.

“Bigotry or white supremacy in any form is blasphemy against the American creed,” Bush stated, two months after Trump said “both sides” were to blame when a neoNazi rally in Virginia turned violent.

He spoke the same day as white supremacis­t figure Richard Spencer tried to give a speech at a Florida university, but was shouted down. Argument “turns too easily into animosity,” Mr Bush added. “Disagreeme­nt escalates into dehumaniza­tion.”

Unlike his Democratic successor Barack Obama, the Republican Bush has said very little publicly about Trump or the state of US politics this year. He declined to endorse Trump’s candidacy, and largely stayed above the political fray.

Thursday’s speech — at the Bush Institute’s Spirit of Liberty event — marked a departure from that silence, an expression of concern by a former leader in a unique moment in the nation’s history. “We’ve seen nationalis­m distorted into nativism and forgotten the dynamism that immigratio­n has always brought to America,” the 71-year-old Bush said, after months of Trump’s efforts to rein in immigratio­n and slow the flow of refugees into US.

“We’ve seen our discourse degraded by casual cruelty. At times it can seem like the forces pulling us apart are stronger than the forces binding us together.”

The 43rd president, observing America’s “fading confidence” in free markets and internatio­nal trade, lamented the “return of isolationi­st sentiments” in the country. He also chastised Russia for its alleged meddling in the 2016 US election and its effort to turn “Americans against each other” and “exploit our country’s divisions.”

“America must harden its own defences” in the face of external attacks, he said. But Mr Bush spent significan­t time targeting the current US political environmen­t, and the harsh divisions that have been laid bare since Trump announced his candidacy in 2015. Bigotry seems emboldened. Our politics seems more vulnerable to conspiracy theories and outright fabricatio­n George W.

Bush,

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