The Mercury News

Trump needs to take Parks’ name out of his lying mouth

- By Leonard Pitts Jr Leonard Pitts is a Miami Herald columnist.

Here comes the most meaningles­s sentence you’ll read today: Last week, Donald Trump paid tribute to Rosa Parks.

It’s meaningles­s because Trump obviously has no real idea what Parks did or what it meant. If he did, he could never have cursed Colin Kaepernick.

Oh, sure, he can mouth the words, as he did in the slick video posted online Saturday. To the accompanim­ent of swelling music and historical images, Trump narrated Parks’ famous act of defiance 62 Decembers ago, her refusal to give up her seat on a Montgomery, Alabama, bus to a white man after the “white” section of the bus became full.

Her arrest ignited the 381-day Montgomery Bus Boycott, the first act of the Civil Rights Movement, and brought to prominence a 26-year-old preacher named Martin Luther King, Jr. And yes, Trump spoke truthfully when he lauded Parks for bravery and a legacy that inspires. But given the source, that praise could not have been emptier.

You cannot truly understand Parks’ legacy or appreciate her bravery and still declare, as he did in September, that NFL owners should say “Get that son of a b—h off the field” if a player follows Kaepernick’s lead and kneels during the national anthem. This is not to equate the athlete and the seamstress; her impact obviously dwarfs his — at least, thus far. But it is to say that, in terms of motive, method and reaction, there is little substantiv­e difference between the two.

It’s important to remember that it wasn’t just the indignity of being told to surrender her seat that made Parks say no that day. Rather, it was also decades of living with white people’s abuse, exploitati­on and violence under a system that assumed, as a matter of policy, that she was filthy, ignorant and unworthy. Which is not fundamenta­lly different from Kaepernick’s frustratio­n with police brutality that kills and wounds African Americans while the courts do nothing.

Yes, his protest is often called unpatrioti­c and offensive. The same was said of Parks’ protest. Not incidental­ly, she broke the law; he didn’t. And as Kaepernick is called names and threatened by outraged white people, so was she.

Sixty-two years later, we can all easily see the things that fatigued her and other black people back then. We marvel that there was ever a time some of us could not. And Parks, 12 years dead, is unthreaten­ing enough to be “honored” by a Donald Trump.

Well, this is the same Trump who has led the metaphoric­al lynch mob against black athletes for doing essentiall­y what Parks and her generation did. Moreover, he’s the same Trump who retweets white supremacis­ts and Islamophob­es, the one who found moral equivalenc­e between neo-Nazis and those who protested them.

So this “honor” is cynical, hypocritic­al and deeply insulting to the memory of a great woman. Trump needs to take Rosa Parks’ name out of his lying mouth. He sullies it by speaking it.

Meantime, that football player Trump loathes risked his livelihood because he got tired of “taking” the brutalizat­ion of black people. He has faced condemnati­on and threat for demanding that all of us see what some of us refuse to. Like the seamstress on the bus six decades ago, Colin Kaepernick has ignited a generation because he decided he literally would not stand for it anymore.

He honors Rosa Parks more meaningful­ly than Donald Trump ever could.

 ?? STAFF FILE PHOTO ?? The protest of Colin Kaepernick, center, is often called unpatrioti­c and offensive. The same was said of Rosa Parks’ refusal to give up her seat on a bus.
STAFF FILE PHOTO The protest of Colin Kaepernick, center, is often called unpatrioti­c and offensive. The same was said of Rosa Parks’ refusal to give up her seat on a bus.

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