Orlando Sentinel

‘President of law and order’ can’t thrive on so much chaos

- Jamelle Bouie

Everything has hit at once.

The coronaviru­s pandemic has killed more than 100,000 people in the United States and put the stark inequality of American life on full display. The economic fallout has put millions of Americans out of work. And the brutal, on-camera killing of George Floyd, an African-American man, by a Minneapoli­s police officer has sparked mass protests in cities across the country.

Tens of thousands of Americans have marched, and are marching, against police brutality and the political system that allows it to thrive.

Everywhere there are scenes of a society at the breaking point: of angry protesters and destructiv­e demonstrat­ions; of police forces that have unleashed nearly unrestrain­ed violence on those in the streets, in an apparent effort to prove the point of their most militant critics; of governors calling the National Guard to try to regain control of their cities.

The sheer scale and reach of the unrest — the extent to which it seems to represent a crisis of legitimacy as much as a reaction to police violence — has invited comparison­s to 1968, the year in which much of America was rocked by protests and riots of even greater scale and destructio­n.

And as The New York Times reports, President Donald Trump’s advisers are among those making the comparison:

Some in the president’s circle see the escalation­s as a political boon, much in the way Richard M. Nixon won the presidency on a law-and-order platform after the 1968 riots. One adviser to Mr. Trump, who insisted on anonymity to describe private conversati­ons, said images of widespread destructio­n could be helpful to the lawand-order message that Mr. Trump has projected since his 2016 campaign.

The immediate reason to discount a political analogy between then and now — between Nixon and Trump — is that Trump isn’t a challenger to the incumbent president; he is the incumbent.

And whereas Nixon’s “law and order” was a contrast with and rebuke to Lyndon Johnson and the Democratic Party, a Trump attempt to play the hits and recapitula­te that campaign would only be an attack on his own tenure. You can’t promise “law and order” when disorder is happening on your watch.

There are other unavoidabl­e problems with any attempt by Trump to adopt Nixon’s 1968 campaign for his own purposes.

As former vice president to Dwight Eisenhower — who led the nation at a time when the white American majority felt culturally and economical­ly secure — Nixon could credibly claim to represent stability in the face of chaos, a steady hand in an uncertain time.

Trump can do no such thing. He built his entire political persona around discord and disruption.

When he did attempt to speak to the nation, through Twitter of course, it was to promise violent retributio­n against protesters. “These THUGS are dishonorin­g the memory of George Floyd, and I won’t let that happen,” he said, adding that “when the looting starts, the shooting starts,” a phrase first used in 1967 by Walter Headley, the chief of police in Miami, also in reference to stopping protests and civil unrest.

A “law-and-order” campaign just isn’t available to Trump. If there is anyone who occupies a similar position to Nixon in this campaign, it’s Joe Biden, the vice president to a still-popular former president who is running as the candidate of normalcy and stability.

The simple truth is that comparison­s to 1968 should be made sparingly. Yes, we have mass civil unrest, but it’s impossible at this stage to say how it will play out in November and you can’t simply plot the circumstan­ces of a half-century ago onto the present. There are too many difference­s. The protests are different too, encompassi­ng a large, diverse cross-section of America. In turn, there appears to be greater sympathy for the protesters and their grievances.

All of this gets to a larger point. History can be incredibly useful for analyzing and understand­ing the present — that is, in fact, the aim of much of my writing. But we shouldn’t forget that our circumstan­ces are not theirs, and our future cannot be divined from the events of the past.

We simply do not know what comes next, nor can we predict the events that — as we have seen with the pandemic and the killing of George Floyd — can move an entire nation from one path to the other.

As we try to understand the forces at work in this country, we should do so with profound humility about the limits of what we can know and what we can foresee.

We should remember that the past, like the present, was contingent; that events that seem inevitable could have gone a different way; that those who lived through them were, like us, unable to see how things would unfold.

We should be aware of the past — we should understand the processes that produced our world — but it shouldn’t be a substitute for thinking. We are not them, and now is not then.

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