The Mercury News

Ideas, bad or good, can’t ever be killed with bullet

- By Leonard Pitts Leonard Pitts is a columnist for the Miami Herald.

On Saturday, someone tried to kill Donald Trump.

You may not have heard about it. The story didn’t get much play, the attempt wasn’t well planned and the candidate was never in jeopardy.

Still, authoritie­s arrested one Michael Steven Sandford, 19, after he allegedly tried to grab a gun from the holster of a Las Vegas police officer with the idea of using it to kill Trump at a campaign rally. Authoritie­s say Sandford, who carried a UK driver’s license but who had been living in New Jersey for about a year and a half, had visited a nearby gun range to learn how to handle a firearm. They say he has wanted to kill Trump for a year.

Let us be thankful he was unsuccessf­ul. The assassinat­ion of Donald Trump would have been a new low for a political season that is already the most dispiritin­g in memory. It would have deprived a family of its father and husband. It would have traumatize­d a nation where political murder has been a too-frequent tragedy. And it would have imparted the moral authority of martyrdom to Trump’s ideas. That would be a disaster in its own right.

Like most would-be assassins, what Sandford apparently did not understand is that you cannot kill an idea with a bullet. Even bad ideas are impervious to gunfire.

Trump, of course, has been a veritable Vesuvius of bad ideas. From banning Muslim immigrants to building a wall on the southern border to punishing women who have abortions to advocating guns in nightclubs to judging judicial fitness based on heritage, to killing the wives and children of terror suspects, if there has been a hideous, unserious or flat-out stupid thought floated in this political season, odds are, it carried the Trump logo.

It is understand­able, then, that even people who wish Trump no bodily harm might feel as Sandford presumably did: that if he were somehow just ... gone, the stench of his ideas might somehow waft away like trash-fire smoke in a breeze.

But it doesn’t work that way. Martin Luther King’s dream of racial equality did not die on the balcony of the Lorraine Motel. Nor did Adolf Hitler’s dream of racial exterminat­ion perish with him in that bunker beneath Berlin. Ideas, both transcende­nt and repugnant, are far hardier than the fragile lives of the men and women who give them voice.

So, any hope that Trump’s disappeara­nce would somehow fix America is naive. America’s problem has nothing to do with him.

No, America’s problem is fear. Fear of economic stagnation, yes, and fear of terrorism. But those are proxies for the bigger and more fundamenta­l fear: fear of demographi­c diminution, of losing the privileges and prerogativ­es that have always come with being straight, white, male and/or Christian in America. It was the holy quadfecta of entitlemen­t, but that entitlemen­t is under siege in a nation that grows more sexually, racially and religiousl­y diverse with every sunrise.

Trumpism is only the loudest and most obvious response to that, and it will not disappear when he does. Indeed, there is no instant cure for what has America unsettled.

In a sense, we are bringing forth a new nation, conceived in liberty and dedicated to the propositio­n that all men and women really are created equal. If for some of us, that fires the imaginatio­n, it is hardly mysterious that for others, it kindles a sense of displaceme­nt and loss. The good news is that their Trumpism cannot survive in the new nation.

In the end, you see, only one thing can kill a bad idea.

And that’s a better one.

 ?? JOHN LOCHER/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Police remove Michael Steven Sandford as Republican presidenti­al candidate Donald Trump speaks at the Treasure Island hotel and casino in Las Vegas.
JOHN LOCHER/ASSOCIATED PRESS Police remove Michael Steven Sandford as Republican presidenti­al candidate Donald Trump speaks at the Treasure Island hotel and casino in Las Vegas.

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