Los Angeles Times

Donald Trump is a textbook racist

- By Jay A. Pearson Jay A. Pearson is an assistant professor in the Sanford School of Public Policy at Duke University.

Civil rights advocates, social scientists and regular citizens have all called out President Trump as a racist in recent weeks. The president’s supporters have countered with stories about the blacks and Latinos he has hired or befriended, and with personal testimonie­s: “I’ve known Donald Trump for many years. He doesn’t have a racist bone in his body.”

As a professor who researches and teaches courses on the health effects of race, racism and inequality, I can assure you that the president’s defenders are wrong. Trump is a racist. What he says and does meets the scholarly definition of the term.

Broadly speaking, a racist combines negative prejudicia­l biases with sufficient power to leverage action against targeted groups. Trump’s words and behaviors demonstrat­e considerab­le prejudicia­l bias, and, as president of the United States — arguably the most powerful office in the contempora­ry world — he has indeed leveraged action against various groups.

Racism is predicated on belief in the scientific­ally discredite­d concept of biological race. Skin color simply has no correlatio­n with significan­t inherent distinctio­ns among human beings. However, “race” in the past and now has led to notions of a natural hierarchy among various population­s. In the United States, it was used to justify stealing labor from black Africans through slavery and stealing land from red Native Americans through forced relocation and genocide.

As far back as Colonial days, northweste­rn European immigrants placed themselves at the pinnacle of the pecking order while relegating population­s of color and other ethnic groups to inferior positions. False perception­s of inherent difference­s in traits, such as intelligen­ce or work ethic, have been systematic­ally associated with geographic origin, ancestry, skin color or some combinatio­n of all three.

Those supposed difference­s have justified restrictin­g some groups’ access to resources and exposing them to all manner of risks in every sphere of life — cultural, educationa­l, political and economic.

Scholars break racism into multiple categories:

Structural racism: Assigning social value to human population­s contingent on mispercept­ions of inherent difference­s.

Symbolic racism: Rhetoric that delegitimi­zes others.

Institutio­nal racism: Incorporat­ing and formalizin­g mispercept­ions of difference­s into society through public policy.

Interperso­nal racism: Acting on such mispercept­ions in direct or face-to-face interactio­ns.

Insidious racism: Unconsciou­s belief in and perpetuati­on of these phenomena.

Internaliz­ed racism: Among victimized population­s, accepting and manifestin­g negative portrayals.

Systemic racism: The influence of these phenomena at multiple levels and across multiple dimensions of society.

Trump’s insensitiv­e, disrespect­ful and mean-spirited statements and actions demonstrat­e or cause all these variations.

Throughout last year’s campaign and his first eight months in office, the president has expressed his bias through government orders and the presidenti­al bully pulpit (systemic racism).

Trump argued that as a “Mexican,” U.S. District Court Judge Gonzalo Curiel, who was born and raised in the United States, could not fairly arbitrate lawsuits related to Trump University (structural racism). For years, Trump protested, falsely, that Barack Obama was not born in the U.S. and was consequent­ly elected illegitima­tely (symbolic racism).

The Trump administra­tion cut funds for Department of Homeland Security programs to combat right-wing fascism and white supremacy and it slow-walked Hurricane Maria aid to Puerto Ricans who “want everything done for them,” in the president’s words (institutio­nal racism).

Trump’s actions, according to a growing number of mental health profession­als, reveal deep-seated and possibly unconsciou­s prejudices (insidious racism). He blatantly and directly disrespect­ed Gold Star parents of South Asian origin (interperso­nal racism).

In response to the Trump travel ban, his threat to “deport them all” and his promise to build a wall on the border, many targeted immigrant population­s report increased levels of social insecurity, anxiety and distress. Research demonstrat­es that among children, the result of such stress is compromise­d academic performanc­e (internaliz­ed racism).

Trump and his supporters seem to believe that simple protestati­ons to the contrary are sufficient to refute and erase his actions. Despite these claims, some in the Republican Party recognize the truth. Rep. Will Hurd of Texas and Sens. Lindsey Graham, Jeff Flake, John McCain and Mitch McConnell have all specifical­ly spoken out against Trump’s worst behavior.

Perhaps House Speaker Paul D. Ryan said it best when he responded to Trump’s statement about Curiel. “Isn’t that the textbook definition of racism?” Ryan asked.

The answer is simple: Yes, it is.

 ?? Andrew Harnik Associated Press ??
Andrew Harnik Associated Press

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States