The Mercury News

Dear Shania: What it means to back Trump

- By Leonard Pitts Jr. Leonard Pitts Jr. is a Miami Herald columnist. © 2018, Chicago Tribune. Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency.

Dear Shania Twain:

I used to love “Roseanne.” I don’t know if that show aired in Canada, where you’re from, but here in the States, it was considered groundbrea­king and mercilessl­y funny.

I welcomed news of its reboot. But the show ended up sitting on my DVR for weeks. See, I had read where its star, Roseanne Barr, is a supporter of Donald Trump and I was conflicted. Critics said the reboot tackled the issue head on; I understand Laurie Metcalf, who plays Roseanne’s sister, Jackie, even shows up in a pink hat, representi­ng the resistance.

In the end, I deleted the show unwatched. Because I don’t want to have anything to do with anyone who supports that guy.

I tell you this so you might understand the controvers­y that arose when you told the Guardian newspaper you would have voted for Trump if you could have, “because, even though he was offensive, he seemed honest.”

Trump is indeed profoundly offensive, but there is not a molecule of honesty in him; if he tells you it’s sunny outside, get galoshes — and a rowboat. But the dumbness of your statement is secondary to the fact that in making it, you defined yourself in opposition to those of us who value inclusion, compassion and decency.

So it was predictabl­e that people began to kick you around Twitter. You’ve since apologized for an “awkward” answer to an inquiry you claim caught you off guard.

Whatever. The question of whether to believe and forgive

you lies with your fans. Me, I’m just intrigued by what is being revealed about the state of the Union — and the division of this era is off the charts. It sends you scrambling back through history for suitable parallels.

You find them in the 1960s, when we fought over Vietnam and the 1850s, when we fought over slavery. Nothing so momentous or urgent divides us now. No, America is brought to this point by its own xenophobia and fear — and by the venal, racist, misogynist­ic narcissist to whom they gave rise.

I don’t mind telling you that I don’t like hearing myself draw an inviolable line between myself and other Americans based on who they supported for president. That’s not how America is supposed to work. It’s not who I have ever been.

But then, this is not really a question of politics. No, these are fundamenta­l questions of identity. They are about the qualities we value. And perhaps none is more important than respect — for the dignity of

LGBTQ people, for the equality of women, for the humanity of people of color, for the intelligen­ce of the electorate.

People who don’t value those things — and I’m sorry, but if you support Trump, then no, you do not — have nothing to say to me. Nor I to them. I count that as a national loss; the very hope of goodwill withering away. I also count it as a personal loss; it means I’m going to miss the new season of “Roseanne.”

That’s the context of your blunder, Ms. Twain. I don’t know if you spoke in innocent ignorance or, if like Barr, you’re a true believer mesmerized by Trump’s coarse bluster. It doesn’t really matter. No, what matters is that your gaffe and the response to it remind us that America is, yet again, a house divided.

Maybe you remember what Jesus said about that.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Shania Twain has apologized for saying if she were American she would have voted for Donald Trump, even though he’s offensive.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Shania Twain has apologized for saying if she were American she would have voted for Donald Trump, even though he’s offensive.

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