USA TODAY US Edition

THE DARKNESS OF HATE AND TERROR

Trump had to be begged to name the culprits. If he can’t or won’t be a leader, he should resign

- Montel Williams Montel Williams, a 22-year veteran of the Marine Corps and Navy who served primarily as a special duty intelligen­ce officer, went on to start the Emmy-awardwinni­ng Montel Williams Show that ran for 17 seasons.

We face an existentia­l threat from within in the form of the socalled alt-right, which in reality is a loose confederat­ion of Nazis, racists, bigots and anti- Semites. We ought to call them what they are: the American Taliban.

The ominous nature of what happened in Charlottes­ville, Va., on Saturday cannot be understate­d or ignored. Some have said that there aren’t words, but there are words, some that can’t be printed in the newspaper. These events should shock our national conscience and lead us all to pause in sober reflection.

Few things unite Americans these days. I’m increasing­ly convinced the survival of democracy depends on a collective meditation on how we got to a place where our president seems to calculate his response to an act of terrorism so as to not alienate the alt-right and its allies, and must be begged to finally name the culprits. We should remember that his self-described counterter­rorism adviser, Sebastian Gorka, went on right-wing radio last week to argue that white nationalis­ts aren’t a threat in order to justify a policy that pretends the only terrorist threat this country faces comes from jihadism.

FACTS OVER EMOTION

At times like these, it’s important to tell the truth. The truth is that we didn’t get to a place where white supremacis­ts laid siege to an American city and carried out an ISIS-style vehicular attack because of President Trump. This segment of society has always existed, but only on the margins.

What Trump has to own is that he won the election by elevating white nationalis­ts off the margins and treating the alt-right as if it were a legitimate political movement. Similarly, I think those who voted for Trump have to reflect on the fact that they’ve backed a candidate who can’t afford to lose the support of neo-Nazis, white supremacis­ts and anti-Semites.

Again, in times of crisis, facts must win out over emotion. As a black American who grew up dur- ing Jim Crow, I understand the anger and the fear that so many are experienci­ng today. And as a Reagan conservati­ve, I think it’s important to hold up Republican­s who got it right last weekend and showed political courage.

ATTACK ON HATE

Sen. Ben Sasse of Nebraska called the alt-right utterly revolting. House Speaker Paul Ryan called white supremacy a scourge and called for its terrorism to be confronted. Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, whom I’ve often criticized, wrote a must-read Facebook post that is both a devastatin­g rebuke of hate and bigotry and a powerful affirmatio­n of the principle of equality, possibly soft-launching a 2020 presidenti­al run. Not surprising­ly, the most devastatin­g rebuke came from Arizona Sen. John McCain, who called out the alt-right as traitors.

This is a dark time in our history. Nearly a half-million brave Americans died as a direct result of the global fight against fascism in World War II. I’d encourage my fellow Americans to reflect on that. The alt-right and its propaganda arms such as Breitbart, the Daily Stormer and others cannot be allowed to take us back to the kind of ideology that cost on the order of 60 million lives in World War II. Let us remember the terrible pictures of the concentrat­ion camps, let us all remember the horrors of apartheid South Africa — those are the end results of differing degrees of this kind of bigoted thinking, full stop.

Surely, the country I so proudly served for 22 years can do better than this in 2017. This was a chance for Trump to have a presidenti­al moment and rally the country and with that, ironically, a chance to bolster the low poll numbers that clearly bother him.

When President Reagan faced this issue, albeit much smaller in scale, he launched a devastatin­g attack on hate. Speaking to the NAACP in 1981, Reagan called the ideas held by white supremacis­ts “perverted,” and in a famous speech accepting the nomination in 1984, he made it clear that there was no room for bigots in the party of Lincoln.

Reagan understood that an American president must have the courage to fight homegrown hate with the fury of God’s own thunder. If Trump cannot or will not provide that type of leadership, he should resign.

If there’s one lesson we have to learn from what has happened, it’s that a large number of people hear “Make America Great Again” as “it’s OK to hate publicly and commit hate crimes again.” We’ve gotten to a point where it’s politicall­y inexpedien­t for a U.S. president to call out neo-Nazism, white supremacy and bigotry as perverted ideologies whose adherents represent the very worst this country has to offer.

We saw in stark terms how dangerous our current political reality is. Perhaps it’s time we get about the business of the inevitable? Together we can eradicate this kind of extremism and its enablers from our national dialogue and forever brand them as traitors to the American ideals we hold to be self-evident.

 ?? ROBERT DEUTSCH, USA TODAY ?? Protest in front of the Trump Tower in New York on Monday.
ROBERT DEUTSCH, USA TODAY Protest in front of the Trump Tower in New York on Monday.

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