Orlando Sentinel

Trump takes days to knock domestic terror

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It took only four days — four days! — but President Donald Trump finally extended his sympathies to victims of the murderous knife attack on a Portland, Ore., lightrail train by an alleged white supremacis­t.

“The violent attacks in Portland on Friday are unacceptab­le,” he tweeted Monday morning. “The victims were standing up to hate and intoleranc­e. Our prayers are w/ them.”

If you missed it, that may be because the tweet curiously appeared on the POTUS Twitter account, which has 18 million followers, not the president’s personal account, @realDonald­Trump, which has 30.9 million followers.

Pardon me, but I can’t help but wonder whether the president would have taken as long with his sentiments or sounded as perfunctor­y if the murder suspect had been a Muslim. Or an illegal immigrant. Just wondering.

I’ll get back to that suspect. First, let’s talk about those who deserve to be talked about: the three uncommonly courageous heroes who came to the aid of two teenaged girls who were being bullied and harassed by an alleged white supremacis­t, police said, for “religiousl­y and racially motivated reasons.”

One of the teens is black. The other was wearing a hijab.

Three white men came to their aid, witnesses told police, and the suspect violently attacked all three.

Two of the men died. Taliesin Myrddin Namkai-Meche, 23, was a 2016 graduate of Portland’s Reed College in economics, according to The Oregonian, and had just purchased a house.

Before Namkai-Meche was carried away on a stretcher, an eyewitness told The Oregonian, he had a last message: “Tell everyone on this train I love them.”

The second fatality was Ricky John Best, 53, a retired U.S. Army platoon sergeant and father of four who served in Iraq and Afghanista­n and worked as a technician for the city’s government.

The third hero, Micah David-Cole Fletcher, survived with knife wounds described as serious but not life-threatenin­g. Fletcher, 21, is a Portland State University student and poet who won a 2013 competitio­n with a poem that opposed prejudice against Muslims.

The suspect was identified as Jeremy Joseph Christian, 35, who police and civil rights advocacy groups said had a history of racist, Islamophob­ic and other extremist remarks.

Conservati­ves have taken some comfort out of reports that Christian was a Bernie Sanders supporter. But, as the Southern Poverty Law Center’s profile of him notes, Christian’s Facebook page shows “an individual all over the political spectrum.”

In video posted on Twitter, Christian can be seen at an April free speech march in Portland, wearing an American flag like a cape and waving Nazi salutes while yelling racial slurs and threats about Muslims, Jews and “fake Christians.”

Other participan­ts at that march, which was organized by conservati­ves, can be heard disavowing associatio­n with him. That’s fair. But it took some cheek, in my view, for white nationalis­t alt-right leader Richard B. Spencer to try to distance himself from Christian, too. “The #PortlandSt­abbing was a saddening event,” he tweeted, “and I condemn the actions of Jeremy Joseph Christian.”

Sure, Spencer sounds more rational and articulate than Christian, but that’s not saying much. Both have advocated breaking up the United States into separate regions for different races in a bizarre white nationalis­t version of the late Honorable Elijah Muhammad’s dream of a black nation for his Nation of Islam.

This is the company that Trump also keeps, whether he realizes it or not. He should learn from the Portland heroes. When he responds more quickly and passionate­ly to victims of Islamic terrorism, for example, than he does to domestic anti-Islamic terrorism, he becomes less of a problem solver and more of a problem.

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