Chattanooga Times Free Press

IN 2019, WHAT IS THE DEFINITION OF A RACIST?

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WASHINGTON — It is astounding that 159 years after the end of the Civil War we are having a full-throated debate about whether the U.S. president is a racist. Or is that surprising?

Donald Trump’s tweet that four Democratic congresswo­men of color should “go back and help fix the totally broken and crime infested places from which they came.”

(Three were born in the

U.S.; another is a legal immigrant and U.S. citizen) caused the House of Representa­tives to pass, along party lines, a resolution denouncing his comments.

The resolution said Trump’s comments “legitimize­d and increased fear and hatred of new Americans and people of color.”

This leads to the question: In 2019, what is the definition of a racist?

The dictionary definition of a racist is “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.”

Next, let’s check what Trump has done and said about race.

In 1973, the federal government twice accused Trump’s real-estate company of racial bias by denying black Americans rental apartments. The charges, said Trump, were “absolutely ridiculous. We have never discrimina­ted, and we never would.” But his company did, in fact, settle and was fined.

When Trump owned casinos, a former employee said that when he came to visit, all persons of color were ordered off the floor so he would not see them.

Trump was known for his reality TV show but came to political prominence by advocating “birtherism,” the false claim that Barack Obama was not born an American (he was born in Hawaii).

One of Trump’s first acts as president was to try to ban all Muslim immigrants from the country, also suggesting he wanted to deport Muslim Americans legally here. He also excoriated Gold Star Muslim parents whose son was killed during the Iraq war.

The “Central Park Five” was a group of black and Latino teens wrongly accused of raping a white woman in Central Park in 1989. Trump took out full-page ads in New York newspapers arguing the teens be given the death penalty. The teens were convicted of violent offenses and sentenced to five to 15 years in prison. In 2002 another individual confessed and more evidence was found exoneratin­g the teens, who were awarded a settlement of $41 million. Trump has continued to argue they were guilty and called the settlement a “disgrace.”

During a class action suit against Trump University for defrauding students, Trump said he couldn’t get a fair trial from the American judge because he had a Mexican name.

When Ku Klux Klansmen campaigned for him in 2016, Trump refused to renounce their support. During the white supremacy march in Charlottes­ville, when a young woman protester was killed, Trump said there were good people on both sides.

Trump has referred to nations where people of color predominat­e in the pejorative and said he’d prefer immigrants from Norway.

He once referred to a Hispanic Miss Universe as “Miss Housekeepi­ng.”

Time after time, through all these incidents — and many more, including the latest charges against Trump of flagrant, open racism — Republican leaders have defended him, including Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., and House Republican Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Ca. Fewer than four years ago, Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-N.C., said Trump was a “race-baiting, xenophobic, religious bigot.” Now he is one of Trump’s most ardent defenders.

As a reminder, let’s note the Republican Party was the party of Lincoln, the president who freed the slaves.

The bottom line is that each one of us must decide the issue of Trump’s racism for ourselves in November of 2020. But to quote a cliché, if it looks like a duck, walks like a duck, quacks like a duck, it’s a duck.

 ??  ?? Ann McFeatters
Ann McFeatters

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