Call & Times

Exploitati­on of murder a potent political tool

- By FRANCIS WILKINSON Wilkinson writes editorials on politics and U.S. domestic policy for Bloomberg Opinion.

More than 1,600 women were murdered by men in the U.S. in 2015. That’s more than four each day. More than half died by gunshot. Almost every state with a high homicide rate for women has a stack of gun-lobby pamphlets in the place where its gun laws should be. But let’s not talk about those 1,600 lives. Let’s talk about one.

Mollie Tibbetts, a 20-year-old student, was murdered last month in Iowa. If the police got it right, her killer is an undocument­ed immigrant from Mexico. The reason we’re engaged in a national discussion about Tibbetts is the same reason we talked so much about Kate Steinle, a young woman who was murdered by an undocument­ed immigrant in San Francisco in 2015.

We talk about them because Donald Trump wants to.

Neither murder was typical. In 2015, women were 14 times more likely to be killed by a man they knew than by a stranger. It’s far more common for a woman to be shot dead by a current or former romantic partner than to be killed in any manner by an undocument­ed immigrant.

Both Steinle and Tibbetts were young and white and, yes, pretty. Those facts are not incidental to Trump, who maintains a strict ranking system for races and women (“Sadly, she’s no longer a 10”), and has a well-known fondness for youth. Trump called Steinle “that wonderful, that beautiful, woman in San Francisco.” Speaking in West Virginia last week, he called Tibbetts “that incredible, beautiful, young woman.”

Steinle’s brother, Brad Steinle, said he found Trump’s attention unwarrante­d. “If you’re going to use somebody’s name and you’re going to sensationa­lize the death of a beautiful young lady, maybe you should call and talk to the family first and see what their views are,” he told CNN in 2015. Members of the Tibbetts family appear no more eager to have their personal anguish turned into political cannon fodder.

But grief-stricken families, dealing with the horrible reality of murder, are little deterrent to the crude exploitati­on of their pain. And if you’re disgusted by the oily insincerit­y of it all, the demagogues will greedily exploit your revulsion, too.

Here’s how Fox News propagandi­st Tucker Carlson introduced immigratio­n expert Alex Nowrasteh for a segment on Tibbetts’s death. “Why is it the instinct of ... people like you,” Carlson said to Nowrasteh, “to minimize crimes like this, to attack people who are bothered by them or fearful when they see a crime like this?”

Of course, the foundation of this ugly game is racial aggression. The defilement of white women by non-white men is as old a racial trope as we’ve got in this country. Yet it still motivates: “You rape our women, and you’re taking over our country, and you have to go,” the white racist Dylann Roof said to black churchgoer­s before he murdered nine of them in 2015 in Charleston, South Carolina.

It’s hard to relegate such tropes to the dustbin of history if large numbers of people prefer not to. It’s even harder when the president of the United States, and much of his party, go dumpster diving there for political issues.

Earlier this month, Fox News per- sonality Laura Ingraham lamented that “massive demographi­c changes have been foisted upon the American people, and they’re changes that none of us ever voted for and most of us don’t like.”

It’s true that voters never took a vote on changing the demographi­cs of the nation, and making the U.S. proportion­ately less white. A series of immigratio­n laws, beginning in 1965, contribute­d to that largely unintended effect.

But the racial panic that pervades much of conservati­ve politics shows how little faith such conservati­ves have in American democracy. After her remarks caused a stir, Ingraham insisted that they “had nothing to do with race or ethnicity, but rather a shared goal of keeping America safe, and her citizens safe and prosperous.”

But why would changes in demographi­cs, in a country where demographi­cs have undergone repeated waves of change, alter such goals? The obvious conclusion to draw is that for Ingraham and other Trumpists, it’s not the system of democratic ideals, constituti­onal constraint­s, rule of law and capitalist enterprise that keeps America humming. It’s the white people.

Tibbetts and Steinle were victims of horrible crimes. A decent society should honor and remember them and severely punish their killers. It should also shun the fear-mongers, demagogues and profiteers who exploit their deaths. And if such miscreants are in political office, it should expeditiou­sly drive them from power.

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