Starkville Daily News

Unfit to lead

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“When bad men combine, the good must associate; else they will fall, one by one, an unpitied sacrifice in a contemptib­le struggle.” — Edmund

Burke, “Thoughts on the

Cause of the Present Discontent­s”

Edmund Burke’s admonition in 1770 should be taken as a warning to us today. The president of the United States this week came to the defense of torch-carrying white-shirts, neo-Nazis and Ku Klux Klan members who marched last weekend on the campus of the University of Virginia. There were two white supremacis­t marches in Charlottes­ville — one at a park on Saturday, which ended in the killing of one woman and the injury of 19 others, and one Friday night at UVA, the one the president referred to when he said at a Trump Tower news conference, “You take a look, the night before, they were there to protest the taking down of the statue of Robert E. Lee.” The president babbled on at length, referring repeatedly to the “fine people” who marched on the UVA campus: “I looked the night before. If you look, they were people protesting very quietly the taking down of the statue.”

No, Mr. President, there were hundreds of whites, overwhelmi­ngly men, carrying torches, many giving the Nazi salute and screaming “Jews will not replace us” and “blood and soil,” a Nazi slogan, among other hideous chants. Called on to bring moral clarity, the president created moral confusion.

We have come to expect Donald Trump to say things that are untruthful, ignorant, crude and, yes, racist. Those among his supporters who share his bigoted views — and unfortunat­ely, there are more of them than anyone wants to admit — thrill to his statements. David Duke commended Trump after his news conference, tweeting, “Thank you President Trump for your honesty & courage to tell the truth about Charlottes­ville & condemn the leftist terrorists in BLM/Antifa.” But most of Trump’s supporters took another route: They looked away or tried to recast Trump’s words and obvious passion.

These Trump apologists will fall, along with him, in Burke’s words, “an unpitied sacrifice in a contemptib­le struggle.” Those within the administra­tion and White House and Republican­s on Capitol Hill and in state legislatur­es and governor’s offices need to rebuke the president’s words in clear language. Silence is not an option — and those who choose to pretend Trump didn’t say what he did or mean what he said when he spoke off-prompter are complicit in the president’s disgrace. A few

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LINDA CHAVEZ SYNDICATED COLUMNIST

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