The Arizona Republic

Trump stokes fear by using victims as props

- EJ Montini Columnist

President Donald Trump wants you to be afraid of people you shouldn’t fear. He wants that fear to motivate you to support him and his policies. And he is willing to do anything — even exploit the families of crime victims — to do this.

How do we know this? Because he’s done it. Following the announceme­nt that his administra­tion would no longer be separating migrant families at the border, Trump held a press conference and photo op with individual­s whose family members had been killed by undocument­ed immigrants.

In doing this, he drew a direct connection between migrants at the border and criminals.

He said, “These are the American citizens permanentl­y separated from their loved ones. The world ‘permanentl­y’ being the word that you have to think about. Permanentl­y. They’re not separated a day, two days. Permanentl­y. They were killed by illegal aliens. These are the families that the media ignores.”

First, they are not families the media ignores.

Second, any number of studies have shown that immigrants are much less likely to be convicted of crimes than native-born Americans are.

That’s not a political argument. It’s a simple fact.

The author of a study by the conservati­ve Cato Institute said, “As a percentage of their respective population­s, there were 56 percent fewer criminal conviction­s of illegal immigrants than of native-born Americans in Texas in 2015. The criminal conviction rate for legal immigrants was about 85 percent below the native-born rate.”

The author of a study published in the journal Criminolog­y actually found that crime goes down in places with higher numbers of undocument­ed im-

migrants, saying, “Increases in the undocument­ed immigrant population within states are associated with significan­t decreases in the prevalence of violence.”

The pain of those who have lost loved ones to crime — no matter the perpetrato­r — is real, and they can express their grief or anger or outrage in any way they choose.

But Trump is using this particular group of victims for political gain. It should disgust you. Imagine a president parading before the cameras the families of crime victims killed by African-Americans. Would that be seen as racist? Would it be any less unfair than taking advantage of families impacted by undocument­ed immigrants?

Imagine a president trotting out before cameras the families of crime victims killed by white perpetrato­rs. How would that go over? Or perpetrato­rs only from the South? Or only from New York City?

Or only with Italian surnames? Or only Jewish ... wait ... that has been done before. Some years back.

During Trump’s press conference with the families of victims killed by undocument­ed immigrants, he said, “I hear that, oh, no, this population is safer than the people that live in the country. You’ve heard that, fellows, right? I hear so much. I say, is that possible? The answer is: Not true. You hear, like, they’re better people than what we have, our citizens. It’s not true.”

Actually, the part about being safer true.

And the claim about being “better” was never made. By anyone. That’s just Trump trying to stir resentment and hate, suggesting you can’t trust immigrants, no matter what facts are presented.

Just as he’s done with Muslims. All of it for political gain.

The strategy is simple: Ignore the facts. Play to fears and existing prejudices. And if the people you are trying to convince don’t yet have fully developed prejudices, teach them.

Trump has done so with undocument­ed immigrants. He has done so with Muslims. He’s not finished spreading the seeds of distrust and hate about other groups.

That kind of political strategy has been utilized before.

In 1938, there was a children’s book published in Germany called “The Poisonous Mushroom.”

There is a line in it that goes: “Just as it is often hard to tell a toadstool from an edible mushroom, so too it is often very hard to recognize the Jew as a swindler and criminal.”

Imagine a president trotting out the families of crime victims killed by white perpetrato­rs. How would that go over?

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