Daily Times (Primos, PA)

America is still dealing with the problem of race

That was not a scene from 1930s Nazi Germany that took place in the streets of Charlottes­ville, Va., last weekend.

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It wasn’t even a scene from the 1950s or ‘60s Deep South. Those outcasts wore sheets and white hoods.

That mob carrying tiki torches and chanting “blood or soil” and worse in Charlottes­ville didn’t bother covering their faces. They don’t hide their bigotry. They display their hate for all to see.

This is America in 2017. Yes, we still have a race problem.

More than 150 years after waging a Civil War that cost 600,000 American lives in an effort to preserve the Union, we remain divided.

Now that same hatred has cost another life.

Heather Heyer, 32, was killed when a white supremacis­t allegedly slammed his car into a crowd of counterpro­testers. Another 19 were injured.

The events in Charlottes­ville – and the ensuing debate that followed – has picked at a scab that has festererd in this country for a long time.

Making things worse, at a time when the nation desperatel­y needed a president to serve as uniter in chief, President Trump chose instead to divide us.

First, the man who takes to Twitter to respond to even the mildest slight,was uncharacte­ristically silent in the hours after trouble started brewing in Charlottes­ville. When he finally read a passionles­s, emotionles­s statement, he could not resist ad libbing that blame must be shared by “many sides.”

That touched off a firestorm that his staff tried to quell Sunday with a statement – that did not carry the president’s imprimatur – condemning the actions.

Under withering criticism, Trump relented Monday and condemned many of the groups involved in the Charlottes­ville protest by name, including the Ku Klux Klan, neo-Nazis and white supremacis­ts as “criminals and thugs.”

But his monotone delivery belied the meaning of his words. In short, the president’s heart did not seem to be in it. It took him 48 hours to come to this point. It only took another 24 for him to reverse course, and to do something never seen before emanating from the Oval Office, even if he delivered it in the gilded lobby of his Trump Tower home in New York City.

In a press gathering meant to stress his infrastruc­ture plan, the president, in the words of his own staff, “went rogue,” veering off the script and lashing out at those who criticized his initial reaction to the violence in Charlottes­ville.

Trump doubled down on his original belief that “both sides” shared blame. He went on to suggest that not everyone taking part in the rally to protest the removal of a statue of Confederat­e leader Gen. Robert E. Lee was a Nazi or white supremacis­t. He insisted there were people intent on violence in both camps and also “you also had people that were very fine people, on both sides.”

He suggested the “altleft,” as he referred to the counter-protesters, and an unfair press who were leading the charge to remove symbols of the Confederac­y across the South, and wondering if Washington or Jefferson were next in line for similar treatment.

There you have it— the gaping wound of racism in America once again laid bare, this time with the commander-in-chief picking away the scab.

Trump no doubt is right when it comes to some blame lying on both sides, and there being good and bad elements of both.

But where he is dead wrong is trying to place those with such hate dripping from their lips on equal footing with those who arrived to counter their beliefs.

This is not new ground for Trump. He has consistent­ly ridden this troubling element of American society as he first trampled a large field of Republican opponents to win the nomination, then stunned everyone by beating Democrat Hillary Clinton, even if she actually finished with 3 million more votes.

It was evident in his long associatio­n with the birther movement, questionin­g the citizenshi­p of the nation’s first African-American president. He vowed to build a wall on the Mexican border. He flatly suggested a ban on Muslims entering the country. He questioned the impartiali­ty of a federal judge because of his Mexican heritage.

All of that was red meat to his base, fueling feelings of resentment, of being overlooked, passed by, ignored by the elites on the two coasts. Trump vowed to “drain the swamp.”

Now he appears to be drowning in it, while the rest of the nation treads water in the battle to deal with hate.

Even those you would think would be his closest allies, big business, last week bailed on the president, unable to reconcile his stance that lent credence to hate, bigotry and anti-Semitic bile.

Trump did what most would once have thought unthinkabl­e: Offering countenanc­e to those with beliefs this country once fought to stop in World War II.

More than 150 years after this nation went to war with itself, shedding the blood of brothers over the issue of slavery, this nation is still dealing with the poison of bigotry.

Only now, emboldened by the White House, it could not be more open. Make no mistake, those tiki torches were an ugly reminder of what this country still has yet to extinguish.

Hate is very much alive. Bigotry has not gone away.

It continues to eat away at society, lying at the root of much of the discord we deal with every day.

And the flames are being fanned by a president who does not seem to understand that his words embolden and offer credence to things that are the antithesis of America.

Hate is very much alive. Bigotry has not gone away.It continues to eat away at society, lying at the root of much of the discord we deal with every day.

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