Orlando Sentinel

White nationalis­ts pervert democracy, while Trump encourages their hate

- By Jeremy I. Levitt

Are you tired of the politics of division? Societal chaos may be inevitable, but we hold the power to make change. Pervasive and unapologet­ically brazen white nationalis­t ideals are perverting our democracy, tribalizin­g our citizenry, and corrupting the constituti­on of order. During these quarrelsom­e times, let us remember that we are one people united by shared values.

Is President Donald J. Trump responsibl­e for racism, anti-Semitism, sexism and xenophobia in our nation? No. “We the People of the United States” are solely responsibl­e for failing to embrace and live by our own creed and democratic ideals. Trump is simply a symbol of the imperfecti­ons of our democratic experiment that unfortunat­ely abandoned the ideal of racial equality in the mid-1960s once black and white folk could lawfully drink from the same water fountains. Modern America was birthed by a pact between North and South — a political union between slavocrats and Republican­s — an imperfect union forged out of racial division and bloody war. Dog whistles tribalize Americans because we have yet to heal the open wounds of a wickedly violent past that is withering injustice, interposit­ion and nullificat­ion.

From Charleston to Pittsburgh, the Trump administra­tion has emboldened and inspired violent white extremism by serving Americans a steady flow of racist and xenophobic cocktail that is perverting our democracy and morals and placing immense social pressure on historical fractures.

HISTORICAL PERSPECTIV­E

Despite our racial, ethnic, political or religious difference­s, all Americans share common values that we must safeguard now more than at any other time in recent history. Traditiona­l American ideals of liberty, equality, democracy, individual­ism and rule by law are under siege by dangerous right-wing perspectiv­es, policies and actors.

America is at a critical juncture, and we must not fall prey to President Trump’s incessant and premeditat­ed cultural wars designed to disrupt civility, generate hostility and subvert democracy. We are not Serbs and Croats, nor Hutus and Tutsis. We are not European fascists, nor a new confederac­y. We are Americans and understand that nationalis­m is not nativism. The former embraces diversity, inclusion and patriotism; and the latter, the uniformity, exclusion and intoleranc­e responsibl­e for last week’s white nationalis­t-inspired massacres. It is estimated that 71 percent of domestic extremist-related killings were conducted by right-wing violent extremists.

Trump inspires closet bigots to come out, white nationalis­ts to speak out, and violent white extremists to act out. Seismic change prompted by the prejudiced pomposity of Trump has given license to a new wave of racialized chaos. Nowhere is this clash more apparent than in the Florida gubernator­ial election where race politics is wearing blackface.

In the 242-year history of our nation, only two African-Americans have been elected governor: Douglas Wilder (Virginia) and Deval Patrick (Massachuse­tts). Today, Florida’s Andrew Gillum is one of three African-Americans running for governor across the country, the other two in Georgia and Maryland. From Dewey McLaughlin and Connie Hoffman’s arrests for miscegenat­ion in Miami Beach to the St. Augustine Civil Rights Movement, Florida’s longstandi­ng and entrenched history of slavery and racial segregatio­n, anti-Semitism and anti-miscegenat­ion law potentiall­y make Gillum’s bid for governor as unique as Barack Obama’s ascendency to the American presidency.

Floridian history is not on Gillum’s side in another vital way. No Florida Democrat, including white centrists, has won the governorsh­ip in two decades. However, I predict that Gillum will win because he is a maverick and a pioneer. He is young, gifted and black, fearless, and well-funded. Gillum is a true Floridian who can comfortabl­y cross racial, ethnic, religious and sexual identity spaces, and navigate Florida’s rural and urban places.

As an independen­t who eschews far-left politics, I voted for Andrew Gillum because Ron DeSantis largely ignored the black male vote and failed to apologize for his “monkey it up” comment. His allegedly racist dog whistles, code words and accompanyi­ng failure to condemn black minstrel robocalls made it impossible for me to support him. DeSantis’ attempts to vilify and criminaliz­e Gillum with racialized stereotype­s, his bromantic fawning over Trump, and his willingnes­s to use his children as a prop in campaign commercial­s that arguably propagate racist and xenophobic policy are indefensib­le.

Fellow citizens, white nationalis­t politics corrupts our shared values that “We the People of the United States” must safeguard.

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