Yuma Sun

Trump and his dangerous ideas offer a mirror to too many

- BY ELWOOD WATSON Copyright 2024 Elwood Watson, distribute­d by Cagle Cartoons newspaper syndicate. elwood Watson is a professor of history, Black studies, and gender and sexuality studies at east Tennessee State university. He is also an author and public

Donald Trump is on track to once again secure the Republican presidenti­al nomination, as he did in 2016. No surprise here. Anxiety and weariness are ever-present in the run-up to the November 2024 election. There is intense speculatio­n on how Trump and his cult-like band of sycophanti­c followers will respond, whether in the face of victory or defeat.

The motivating factor for Trump’s reemergenc­e as a candidate is revenge. He has made it abundantly clear to his MAGA base he is their answer to retributio­n, and has promised to “completely annihilate” the deep stat. Whatever actions he takes – illegal or otherwise – would garner significan­t support from pluralitie­s of Republican voters and politician­s.

Polls continuall­y demonstrat­e that politicall­y right-of-center voters are increasing­ly shunning political decency. It began happening almost immediatel­y after Trump announced his initial candidacy in 2015. Instead of rejecting candidate Trump and his odious messages of racism, sexism and xenophobia, many right-wing Republican­s, including White evangelica­ls, saw an opportunit­y to regain executive power by coddling white supremacy and tapping into the regressive psyche of the nation’s most reactionar­y impulses.

Today, almost a decade later, we are still enduring the results of such reductive maladies.

This is not the only disturbing difference among Republican voters. An increasing segment is now considerin­g condoning political violence. A poll conducted in October 2023 indicated that a startling 33 percent of Republican­s agreed with the statement that “because things have gotten so far off track, true American patriots may have to resort to violence in order to save our country.”

Particular animosity has been directed toward Republican­s who have adhered to the rule of law. Republican lawmakers and election officials in Georgia, Arizona, and Wisconsin, as well as members of their families, have received death threats for following the law and rejecting Trump’s demands to overturn the 2020 presidenti­al election. More recent threats have been directed against political officials in the political, legal, and criminal justice system, who have tried to hold Trump accountabl­e for his actions.

Recently, Trump amplified his rhetoric, referring to his political opponents as “vermin” and declaring that immigrants entering America illegally are “poisoning the blood of our country.” In more politicall­y sane and sensible times, such remarks would be considered so offensive and reprehensi­ble that any politician would undoubtedl­y suffer backlash from colleagues and voters. Nonetheles­s, in the perverse political world of conservati­ve politics, a Des Moines Register/nbc News/mediacom Iowa Poll found that a 42 percent plurality of likely Iowa Republican caucus goers said such rhetoric would actually bolster their commitment to Trump.

This is hardly a new American phenomenon. To quote Black Panther H. Rap Brown, “Violence is as American as cherry pie.” Violence is deeply embedded in the fabric of the nation’s soil starting with the Revolution­ary War, when the nation aggressive­ly, defiantly, and skillfully defended itself against the tyrannical impulses of British imperialis­m. During the Civil War the nation was engaged in a fractious divide over the repugnant regime of slavery. Post-reconstruc­tion President Rutherford B. Hayes and his vice president, Samuel Tilden, with their infamous Hayes/tilden compromise of 1877, withdrew union troops from the South and returned the region to its segregatio­nist Dixiecrats, who were all too eager to exact their revenge on Black citizens through a variety of economic social and judicial indignitie­s – among them overt, wanton violence and political disenfranc­hisement.

Millions of workers waged courageous battles during the early to mid-decades of the 20th century as they remained steadfast and defiant against the physical and emotional violence directed toward them by sadistic corporate managers, wealthy stockholde­rs, and other business titans. Also consider the brave and heroic struggle so many clergy, students, and ordinary folk undertook during the modern civil rights movement. These men, women, and in a number of cases, children routinely managed to bravely persevere despite relentless opposition from hardcore segregatio­nist sheriffs with water hoses and cattle prods, foreclosur­es of land, violent prisons, and angry white segregatio­nist mobs.

Trump has been successful in sinisterly tapping into the socially-stunted psyche of more than a few white people who long for the days when people of color and non-christians were second-class citizens and members of the LGTB+ community were shunned.

Trump’s die-hard base longs for the day when America returns to the nation it unmistakab­ly resembled in the mid-19th century. The Jim Crow era of the mid-20th century is too benign for them. Their message is clear: either you are with them, or you are against them.

If you are a member of the latter category, they intend to deal with you by any violent means necessary.

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