Albuquerque Journal

Trump’s Tulsa rally inflames racism in virus surge

- AMY GOODMAN & DENIS MOYNIHAN Columnists

The weight of history is bearing down on the United States, as mass protests confront the enduring impact of systemic racism. Millions have been moved to action by the police killings of African Americans George Floyd in Minneapoli­s, Breonna Taylor in Louisville, Kentucky, Tony McDade in Tallahasse­e and Rayshard Brooks in Atlanta, and by the killing of Ahmaud Arbery in Brunswick, Georgia, by a retired police officer and his son. Meanwhile, President Donald Trump is holding one of his signature demagogic rallies (today), the first since the pandemic struck, at an indoor arena in Tulsa, just as Oklahoma suffers its worst week of COVID-19 infections. Trump refuses to wear a mask publicly, and, while the Trump campaign won’t require masks either, it will require attendees to sign a waiver releasing the campaign from liability should they contract COVID-19.

Trump’s choice of Tulsa has angered many. COVID-19 disproport­ionately impacts African Americans. If the rally, as expected, causes a further surge in local coronaviru­s cases, the black community will potentiall­y be the most impacted. Furthermor­e, this month marks the 99th anniversar­y of one of the worst massacres of African Americans in U.S. history. In June 1921, a white mob burned to the ground Tulsa’s affluent, African American neighborho­od of Greenwood, known as Black Wall Street, killing at least 300 residents.

Trump had scheduled his rally for June 19, known as Juneteenth, a day of commemorat­ion and celebratio­n, the anniversar­y of the day enslaved people in Galveston, Texas, first heard of their liberation following the Civil War. On that day in 1865, Union Army General Gordan Granger publicly read General Order Number Three: “The people of Texas are informed that ... all slaves are free.” Word spread and spontaneou­s celebratio­ns ensued.

In a 1941 audio interview recorded by the Library of Congress, Laura Smalley, born into slavery in Texas, recalled learning of her freedom as a child. The plantation owner who enslaved her, Mr. Bethany, had returned from war but didn’t tell those he enslaved that the Confederac­y had lost the war and that they were free. “Old master didn’t tell you they was free ... No he didn’t tell. They worked there, I think now they say they worked them six months after that. Six months. And turn them loose on the nineteenth of June. That’s why, you know, we celebrate that day.”

Trump’s appropriat­ion of Juneteenth for his rally provoked outrage. Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif., tweeted, “This isn’t just a wink to white supremacis­ts — he’s throwing them a welcome home party.” Fearing mass protests in Tulsa, Trump caved, shifting the rally to June 20. Tulsa attorney and author Hannibal Johnson, who wrote the definitive history of the Tulsa massacre, said of Trump’s rally, “Here in Tulsa, we are working hard ... on moving our community closer together as we approach the 100th anniversar­y of the 1921 Tulsa race massacre. The rally has the potential to be a disruption on the road to reconcilia­tion.”

Speaking on Democracy Now!, scholar, activist and black liberation icon Angela Davis added: “Trump represents a sector of the population in this country that wants to return to the past — ‘Make America

great again’ — with all of its white supremacy, with all of its misogyny. At this moment we are recognizin­g that we cannot be held back by such forces.”

Strong currents are countering Trump as he inflames racism and encourages police violence against protesters. The Movement for Black Lives is organizing a national weekend of actions across the U.S., including protests outside the White House on Juneteenth.

The Mass Poor People’s Assembly & Moral March on Washington is also taking place on June 20. “We’re going to put a face and a voice on poverty to lay out the demands from people who are impacted and the experts and religious leaders. We’ve got 16 denominati­ons, joining a hundred organizati­ons, but, more importantl­y, 45 state coordinati­ng committees made up of poor and low-wealth people,” said Moral March’s lead organizer, Rev. Dr. William Barber.

No matter how much Trump tries to vilify these activists as thugs and terrorists, it is they, people in the streets, who represent the proudest traditions of protest and dissent, and the best of what this country can be.

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