The Sentinel-Record

Trump’s crusade further divides our country

- Micheal Gerson

WASHINGTON — It is often difficult to determine if Donald Trump’s offenses against national unity and presidenti­al dignity are motivated by ignorance or malice. His current crusade against sideline activism at profession­al football games features both.

Protests by players during the singing of “The Star-Spangled Banner” are misdirecte­d, but their motivation­s are understand­able. African-Americans have a naturally complex relationsh­ip with a country in which one out of every seven human beings was once owned as property and robbed of their labor. A country with a founding promise that bypassed them. In 1852, Frederick Douglass asked how the American slave should respond to the July Fourth holiday. “To him, your celebratio­n is a sham; your boasted liberty, an unholy license; your national greatness, swelling vanity; your sounds of rejoicing are empty and heartless. … There is not a nation on the earth guilty of practices more shocking and bloody than are the people of the United States.”

Tough words, at least as challengin­g as a knee to the ground at a sporting event. And the end of slavery was hardly the end of oppression. We are a country where the re-imposition of white supremacy following the Civil War involved, not just segregatio­n, but widespread violence. A country in which mass incarcerat­ion and heavy-handed police tactics now create a sense that some neighborho­ods are occupied by a foreign force. A country in which wealth and opportunit­y remain, in significan­t part, segregated by race.

If white Americans can’t even feel a hint of this alienation and outrage, it is a fundamenta­l failure of empathy and historical memory.

Trump seems ignorant of, or indifferen­t to, the unfolding drama of the civil rights movement — of Abraham Lincoln’s firm hand signing the Emancipati­on Proclamati­on, of African-American military heroism in defending the Union, of the stubborn courage displayed by protesters in the front of buses and at segregated lunch counters, of Bloody Sunday on the Edmund Pettus Bridge, repeated in many bloody versions. When the president looks at protesters, he cannot see what they are trying to be.

This ignorance is matched by malice. Trump must know that rallying his white base against young African-American protesters is feeding racial tension and providing permission for bigotry. He is essentiall­y accusing these athletes of disloyalty, just as he accused Mexicans of being rapists and Muslims of being threats. This is a pattern and habit of division by race, ethnicity and religion.

Stop and consider. This is a sobering historical moment. America has a racial demagogue as president. We play hail to this chief. We stand when he enters the room. We continue to honor an office he so often dishonors. It is appropriat­e, but increasing­ly difficult.

In this case, demagoguer­y is likely to be effective, in part because protesters have chosen their method poorly. The American flag is not the racist symbol of a racist country. It is the symbol of a country with ideals far superior to its practice. This is the banner under which the 54th Regiment Massachuse­tts Volunteer Infantry — the first African-American regiment organized in the Civil War — fought the Confederac­y. This is the flag that flew over the U.S. Capitol on July 2, 1964, when the Civil Rights Act was passed. This is the flag that drapes the coffins of the honored dead on their final homeward trip, to a flawed nation still worthy of their sacrifice.

The extraordin­ary achievemen­t of America’s founders was to elevate a set of ideals that judged (in many cases) their own hypocritic­al conduct. With the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce, they put a self-destruct mechanism in the edifice of slavery. They designed a system that eventually transcende­d their own failures of courage. At least in part. With more to go.

Both president and protesters would benefit from reading Douglass’ conclusion: “While drawing encouragem­ent from the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce, the great principles it contains, and the genius of American institutio­ns, my spirit is cheered by the obvious tendencies of the age … The fiat of the Almighty, ‘Let there be light,’ has not yet spent its force. No abuse, no outrage whether in taste, sport or avarice, can now hide itself from the all-pervading light.”

The president’s agenda of division is fully exposed. Faith in the Declaratio­n, and in the genius of American institutio­ns, remains the proper response. Under the flag that symbolizes them both.

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