The Palm Beach Post

Trump era is a renaissanc­e of half-witted intoleranc­e

- He writes for the Washington Post.

Michael Gerson

In West Virginia, Republican Senate candidate

Don Blankenshi­p accused Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of creating jobs for “China people” and getting donations from his “China family” (McConnell’s wife, Elaine Chao, was born in Taiwan). In Georgia, Republican gubernator­ial candidate Michael Williams drives around in a bus he promises to fill with “illegals” who will be deported to Mexico. On the rear is stamped: “Murderers, rapists, kidnappers, child molesters, and other criminals on board.” In Arizona, Republican Senate candidate (and former sheriff ) Joe Arpaio is a proud “birther” with a history of profiling and abusing Hispanic migrants. Vice President Mike Pence recently called Arpaio “a great friend of this president, a tireless champion of strong borders and the rule of law.” In Wisconsin, Republican House candidate Paul Nehlen runs as a “pro-white Christian American candidate.”

Yes, these are fringe figures. But they are fringe figures in a political atmosphere they correctly view as favorable.

For some of us, this was a concern from the beginning of Donald Trump’s rise — not just the policies he would adopt but the attitudes he would encourage.

The problem is one of social psychology. Human beings are wired to favor their ingroup and to view people in outgroups as interchang­eable and dispensabl­e. We tend to believe that bad things that happen to people in our ingroup are bum luck, while bad things that happen to people in outgroups are evidence of a just universe. Because we are inherently predispose­d toward stereotypi­ng, we are particular­ly vulnerable to propaganda.

Whatever else Trumpism may be, it is the systematic organizati­on of resentment against outgroups. It was evident when Trump called Mexican migrants “criminals” and “rapists.” When Trump claimed legal mistreatme­nt from a judge because “he’s a Mexican” ( Judge Gonzalo Curiel was born in Indiana). When he proposed a “total and complete shutdown of Muslims entering the United States.” When Trump attacked Muslim Gold Star parents. When he sidesteppe­d opportunit­ies to criticize former Ku Klux Klan leader David Duke. When he referred to “very fine people” among the white supremacis­t protesters. When he expressed a preference for Norwegian immigrants above those from nonwhite “s—-hole countries.”

This has given permission for the public expression of shameful sentiments. People such as Blankenshi­p, Williams, Arpaio and Nehlen are part of a relatively small political group. But the president has set boundaries of discourse that include them and encourage them. The Trump era is a renaissanc­e of half-witted intoleranc­e. His Christian supporters in particular must be so proud.

Mainstream attitudes toward refugees and legal immigratio­n have become more xenophobic. Trump has not only given permission to those on the fringes; he has changed the Republican mean to be more mean.

The good news about bias against outgroups is that it can be mitigated. And tha describes the high calling of a democratic leader — to set an aspiration of unity, to speak the language of empathy, to emphasize our common goals, our common values and our common fate as a people. The GOP waits on leaders who will make these tasks their own.

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