Hartford Courant

Trump makes it clear — there are two Americas

- By Robin Abcarian Robin Abcarian is a Los Angeles Times columnist.

Looking back on it now, Barack Obama had it all wrong in 2004.

“There is not a liberal America and a conservati­ve America,” the Illinois state senator proclaimed in his keynote speech at the Democratic National Convention. “There is the United States of America!”

How quaintly aspiration­al that sentiment seems today.

As anyone who has been paying attention can see, there are indeed two Americas.

But to call them “conservati­ve” and “liberal” is to miss the essence of the moment.

There is Donald Trump’s America, a world of white racial resentment where the Confederat­e flag proudly flies, where monuments to traitors are to be revered, where protesting racial injustice is an intolerabl­e act of aggression, and where a pandemic that has killed at least 133,000 Americans and put millions out of work is a mere inconvenie­nce that people will come to accept.

And then, there is what I like to think of as the real America, a deeply flawed country that is starting to come to grips with the wages of racism, a too-violent police culture, a wealth gap, an education gap, a health insurance gap. A country that believes in its better angels, a country that knows it can do better.

Trump, as many political observers have noted, has decided that his path to reelection will be paved with hatred and racial division. The outpouring of anguish that followed the death of George Floyd at the hands of police in Minneapoli­s and the subsequent, widespread embrace of the Black Lives Matter movement has simply given him the foil he requires to rile his base.

Just this week, Trump seemed to demand that NASCAR driver Bubba Wallace, a Black man, take responsibi­lity for a noose that was found in his garage. The FBI had concluded that the noose had been in the garage before it was assigned to Wallace, so its presence could not be construed as a hate crime.

“Has @BubbaWalla­ce apologized to all of those great NASCAR drivers & officials who came to his aid, stood by his side & were willing to sacrifice everything for him, only to find out that the whole thing was just another HOAX?” Trump tweeted.

A few days earlier, Trump declared that painting “Black Lives Matter” on Fifth Avenue next to his namesake New York City tower would amount to a “symbol of hate.”

He has declared that renaming the Washington Redskins and Cleveland Indians is a capitulati­on to political correctnes­s. But could he just stop there? No, he could not: “Indians, like Elizabeth Warren,” he added, “must be very angry right now!”

And then there were his Independen­ce Day speeches, delivered a day apart, one at the base of Mount Rushmore and the other on the South Lawn of the White House.

At a time when most presidents applaud the American ideals enshrined in the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce, and often single out the branches of the military for praise, Trump’s words were notable for their divisive tone and ugly rhetoric.

In South Dakota, he warned of “a growing danger that threatens every blessing our ancestors fought so hard for.”

“Our nation,” he said, “is witnessing a merciless campaign to wipe out our history, defame our heroes, erase our values and indoctrina­te our children.”

He spoke of “a new far-left fascism,” of a “left-wing cultural revolution,” of “angry mobs” who are trying to “unleash a wave of violent crime in our cities,” of “cancel culture” (as if he were not its foremost practition­er), of attacks on “our liberty,” and the need to “preserve our beloved American way of life.”

Back in Washington, he stuck to his theme of pitting Americans against one another: “We are now in the process of defeating the radical left, the Marxists, the anarchists, the agitators, the looters.”

Trump’s response to America’s genuine outrage at the death of Floyd, and so many other men and women of color, has been so tone deaf and immoral that even James Mattis, the retired Marine general who became Trump’s secretary of defense until they broke over the president’s Syria policy, could take it no longer.

“Donald Trump is the first president in my lifetime who does not try to unite the American people — does not even pretend to try,” Mattis wrote in a statement published by The Atlantic last month. “Instead, he tries to divide us.”

That judgment was harsh, but it pales next to something else Mattis wrote: “Instructio­ns given by the military department­s to our troops before the Normandy invasion reminded soldiers that the Nazi slogan for destroying us … was `Divide and Conquer.’ Our American answer is `In Union there is Strength.’”

You understand how extraordin­ary that is, right? Mattis essentiall­y compared Trump’s values to Adolf Hitler’s.

Over the past few days, in honor of our national holiday, I spent some time in the archives of presidenti­al speeches.

I came across the 1964 speech that made Ronald Reagan, then governor of California, a national political star. It was a fullthroat­ed endorsemen­t of Barry Goldwater’s doomed presidenti­al campaign, a cry against big government, the welfare system, and it was pocked with racist dog whistles.

But Reagan did say something that struck me as relevant to the current moment.

“You and I are told increasing­ly we have to choose between a left or right,” Reagan said. “Well, I’d like to suggest there is no such thing as a left or right. There’s only an up or down.”

This November is another time for choosing. Will we go up or let Trump drag us down?

 ?? ALEX BRANDON/AP ?? President Donald Trump, accompanie­d by first lady Melania Trump, stand during a July 3 ceremony at Mount Rushmore National Memorial near Keystone, South Dakota.
ALEX BRANDON/AP President Donald Trump, accompanie­d by first lady Melania Trump, stand during a July 3 ceremony at Mount Rushmore National Memorial near Keystone, South Dakota.

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