Philippine Daily Inquirer

Trump not welcome in PH, too

- TEDDY A. CASIÑO Teddy A. Casiño is an activist who served as Bayan Muna party-list representa­tive in Congress in 2004-2013. He is now back in the parliament of the streets.

Arecent survey by the US-based Pew Research Center says 7 out of 10 Filipinos trust US President Donald Trump to “do the right thing” when it comes to internatio­nal affairs—the highest rating among 37 Asian countries surveyed.

In stark contrast, the latest Washington Post-ABC News poll revealed that more and more Americans are rejecting Trump. His approval rating has dipped to a mere 37 percent—the worst so far in his presidency.

The Pew survey was apparently meant to promote Trump’s upcoming visit to the Philippine­s. Contrary to the glowing, albeit questionab­le, results of that survey, thousands of Filipinos are expected to turn up in various mass actions protesting Trump’s visit to the country, including his one-on-one meeting with Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte.

The Bagong Alyansang Makabayan is organizing a three-day #BanTrumpPH campaign to coincide with Trump’s stay in the country on Nov. 12-14. Since last week various organizati­ons have been holding protest actions and build-up activities in anticipati­on of the visit.

Like many Americans, Filipino progressiv­es are apprehensi­ve that a billionair­e businessma­n turned reality TV star with no experience in public office now heads the most powerful nation on earth. The American media describe him as any or all of the following: bigot, fascist, narcissist, misogynist, racist, Islamophob­e and/or xenophobe, with a matching hairstyle to boot.

When Trump won, Americans expected the worst—a great wall along the Mexican border, a revival of the Ku Klux Klan and the Nazis, the booting out and keeping out of immigrants, more police brutality against blacks and people of color, drastic cuts in social welfare, massive unrest, among others. Some predicted World War III.

A year later, such fears have become more real than ever.

Perhaps America deserves Donald Trump. For more than a century now, the US government and its powerful corporatio­ns have led the way in violating human rights and the sovereignt­y of nations all over the world. It has engaged in the most vicious of attacks against nonwhite population­s, starting from its own native American Indians to generation­s of Africans, Latin Americans, Asians and Middle Easterners.

US imperialis­m has exported an individual­istic, consumeris­t culture that commodifie­s women, insults minorities and extols the profane and decadent. It has plundered entire nations, exported war on a daily basis, and killed millions of peoples in the name of democracy and free trade. America is said to be the biggest and most powerful terrorist state in the world. It is tragic that the American people’s historic struggle for democracy, liberty and human rights is being undermined by its own government. How ironic that the fight against neoliberal globalizat­ion, highlighte­d by the Battle of Seattle in 1999 and the Occupy Wall Street Movement of 2011, and the struggle against racial discrimina­tion punctuated by the election of America’s first black president in 2010, culminated not in the election of a leftist Democrat in the person of Bernie Sanders but in a rightist populist in the person of Trump.

Ironically, it took a billionair­e nonpolitic­ian to articulate the grievances and aspiration­s of many ordinary Americans. Most of them may not have shared his disdain for immigrants, his condescend­ing view of women, or his brash and self-centered arrogance. But he spoke the truth about the ordinary folk being left out of globalizat­ion. The lack of jobs and opportunit­ies. Or how corrupt and vested interests hijacked the American dream.

Trump promised to make America great again, apparently at the expense of the very values that made that country great.

Next week, the American Duterte is coming to town. Not everyone will be rolling out the red carpet.

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