Los Angeles Times

What Trump says matters

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Re “Push to defend Trump after attack,” March 18

Fifty people are dead at the hands of a terrorist in New Zealand, and what have we learned? Words do indeed matter.

While expressing condolence­s, President Trump once again failed to address the underlying cause of the violence. The largest proportion of these kinds of killings are committed by white nationalis­ts, not Muslims and immigrants. Yet the president insisted Friday that white nationalis­m is not a rising threat, despite the report that the suspected gunman behind the two mosque shootings wrote in a manifesto that he supported Trump “as a symbol of renewed white identity and common purpose.”

Why won’t Trump forcefully denounce white supremacy?

While Trump may not be the direct cause of what happened, his anti-immigrant rhetoric incites division and fear. This in turn enables, emboldens and empowers hatred — a hatred that inevitably leads to violence. Trump is at least in part responsibl­e.

Moreover, historians will write that those who refuse to stand up and hold Trump accountabl­e for his bigoted rhetoric, including many Republican­s in Congress, are complicit. Richard Cherwitz

Austin, Texas The writer is a professor of rhetoric at the University of Texas.

This is how low we have set the bar.

Acting White House Chief of Staff Mick Mulvaney and other spokespeop­le for Trump are defending him by saying there is no causal link between his rhetoric and the actions of white supremacis­t terrorists.

This is absurd. The president of the United States, arguably the most powerful and most influentia­l person on Earth, does not personify a “causal link” to terrorism.

My grandchild­ren are going to grow up and look back and say, “For goodness sakes, what was wrong with you people? Were you blind, deaf and dumb?” Michael Davidson

Altadena

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