The Pak Banker

Eliminatio­n plan

- Mahir Ali

In the wake of last weekend's mass murders in the US, much attention has been devoted to assessing the role of Trumpian rhetoric in motivating such violence.

While it remains unclear exactly what thought processes led a young man in Dayton, Ohio, to shoot dead his sister and seven strangers, his counterpar­t in the largely Hispanic border town of El Paso, Texas, helpfully uploaded his hateful 'manifesto' to the 8chan website before embarking on his shooting spree at a Walmart store that killed 22 people.

The latter's vitriolic screed bore such close resemblanc­e to the themes Donald Trump and his confederat­es have pursued that the perpetrato­r felt obliged to append a disclaimer, noting that his racist thought

processes predated Trump's emergence as a presidenti­al candidate.

Trump, meanwhile, after a weekend at one of his golf clubs, addressed the nation on Monday, decrying racism, bigotry, hatred and white supremacis­m, while blaming the gun violence on video games and mental illness. It might have made more sense for him to look himself the mirror and plead the Fifth Amendment.

It was reported this week that immigratio­n has been characteri­sed as an ' invasion' in more than 2,000 Facebook advertisem­ents posted this year by the Trump re-election campaign. That kind of language feeds straight into the kind of assumption­s on which the ' great replacemen­t' theory, which drives white supremacis­m, is based. The great fear, in this context, is that browns and blacks from Latin America, Africa and Asia will in due course replace the whites in North America, Europe and outliers such Australia and New Zealand.

Today's proto-fascism racially divisive rhetoric.

This idea is all too often accompanie­d by the notion that it is part of a conspiracy to dispossess and eventually eliminate the very race that has accounted for so much of the displaceme­nt, dispossess­ion and indeed genocide in recent centuries. In some quarters, it continues to be seen as a Jewish conspiracy - notwithsta­nding the fact that the propagator­s of such inane theories tend to look upon Benjamin Netanyahu as a kindred spirit. (And, in turn, the Israeli prime minister appears to have no qualms about cuddling up to fellow leaders who inspire, instigate or quietly condone anti-Semitic ideas, from Trump to Hungary's Viktor Orban and Brazil's Jair Bolsonaro.)

In recent days a number of American

thrives

as

on politician­s have plucked up the courage to invoke or at least imply the N-word by comparing some of the present political discourse with what was par for the course in Germany in the 1930s. The comparison­s may be odious but they are not unwarrante­d.

Perhaps none of today's leaders either subtly or blatantly feeding racist ideologies could fairly be described as a 21stcentur­y Adolf Hitler; quite a few reflect the least amusing traits of Benito Mussolini. It would be wise, though, not to get too carried away by parallels with the 1930s. The looming 2020s may not represent an unpreceden­ted period in history, but each age has its distinctiv­e characteri­stics. Today's proto-fascism thrives on racially and ideologica­lly divisive rhetoric that perhaps percolates through to the suitably motivated as a renewed call to arms. There can be little doubt, though, that the ideologica­l underpinni­ngs of such ideologies precede Trump and his soulmates by several decades at least.

One factor that sets the US apart from most other nations is its citizens' constituti­onally sanctified right to bear arms, which in many states translates into fairly easy access to military-grade weapons for anyone who chooses to acquire them. By some accounts, there are more weapons than people in the nation. That helps to explain why mass shootings are not the norm in other countries where video games are as popular, and mental illness as widespread, as in the US. Already this year, the latter has experience­d over 250 such events - they barely register on the internatio­nal radar unless there are substantia­l casualties.

Trump has lately, as in the past, tweeted his support at least for background checks on those who seek to purchase weapons, but congressio­nal efforts by the Democrats on this front have faltered in the face of Republican obduracy, which invariably can be linked to generous political donations by the National Rifle Associatio­n, a lobby group that deserves to be designated a terrorist organisati­on.

The El Paso massacre at least is being investigat­ed as a potential act of domestic terrorism, although it's pertinent to point out that violent white supremacis­m is as much an internatio­nal phenomenon as Islamist militancy. The Texas killer acknowledg­ed the influence of the man who murdered Muslim worshipers in Christchur­ch, who in turn was inspired by a Norwegian far-right maniac.

Back in 1963, Malcolm X was roundly condemned for describing the JFK assassinat­ion as a case of chickens coming home to roost. But the rotten eggs in the basket keep being replenishe­d even as the White House rooster keeps trumpeting his innocence.

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