US President Trump and the extreme right


This video from the USA says about itself:

Exclusive: Stonewall Jackson’s Great-Great-Grandsons Call for Removal of Confederate Monuments

17 August 2017

As President Trump faces growing outrage over his response to the deadly white supremacist rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, we bring you an exclusive: an interview with the great-great-grandsons of Confederate General Stonewall Jackson. At least 1,500 symbols of the Confederacy can be found in public spaces across the country. But now a number of the monuments are coming down.

Calls for the removal of the statues are even coming from the descendants of the leaders of the Confederacy. We speak with two of the great-great-grandsons of Confederate General Stonewall Jackson. Jack and Warren Christian have just written an open letter to the mayor of Richmond calling for the removal of the Stonewall Jackson statue in Richmond. They write, “Our sense of justice leads us to believe that removing the Stonewall statue and other monuments should be part of a larger project of actively mending the racial disparities that hundreds of years of white supremacy have wrought.”

By CJ Atkins in the USA:

Trump‘s common cause with bigots

Thursday 17th August 2017

The president’s manipulative political rhetoric and reactionary policies have emboldened white supremacists, warns CJ ATKINS

USUALLY when David Duke opens his mouth, you can count on the words that come out to be a lie. The former KKK imperial wizard, Holocaust denier and white nationalist typically peddles trash about supposed white genocide or the benefits of racial segregation. But this weekend in Charlottesville, Duke did something unexpected: He told the truth.

Or, at least he told one little piece of truth. Speaking at the neonazi confab in Virginia, Duke proclaimed he and his fellow racists were there “to fulfil the promises of Donald Trump.”

Duke is right.

The fascist terror that took the life of one woman, Heather Heyer, and sent many more people to hospital is precisely the “promise” that has been latent in Trump’s rhetoric ever since the start of his campaign for the presidency.

When Trump said during the election last year that it was time “to take our country back,” he was speaking in words that Duke and his cohort understood perfectly. It wasn’t hard — the message was hardly concealed.

It started years ago, most infamously with the racist “birther” controversy aimed at undermining President Barack Obama. It ramped up dramatically once Trump started running for the White House himself.

There was of course the denunciation of Mexican immigrants as criminals, drug dealers and rapists in his very first speech of the campaign. That was followed up with candidate Trump’s pledge to build a wall along the southern border, sending the signal that certain people — brown-skinned people — were not welcome.

He closed out the election with an ad that was packed full of anti-semitic tropes about “global special interests,” bolstered by the faces of prominent Jewish personalities flashed across the screen. It was a work of television dog-whistling that would have made Jesse Helms proud.

Promptly announcing a ban on Muslims entering the US upon taking office, the president gave another nod to the racists and their notion of a war between civilisations.

In May this year, Trump dismissively responded to the concerns about police brutality raised by Black Lives Matter and other movements by saying that “our police have been subject to unfair defamation and vilification.”

At the beginning of this month, there was the roll-out of a new Republican immigration plan which has been roundly criticised as a project for a whiter US.

The pattern is plain to see for anyone who has been paying attention.

Many of the words and policies of Trump, both before and since taking office, have been a calculated effort to mobilise a hard-core base of supporters motivated by racial resentments and hatred.

His condemnation on Saturday of the “hatred, bigotry and violence from many sides” was another case of his pandering.

The truth is that the hatred, bigotry and violence that were on display in Charlottesville did not come from “many sides.” They came from one side.

But to only single out Trump for emboldening the neonazis that were on the march this weekend would be to deny the credit due to so many others in his administration.

There is Steve Bannon, the “alt-right” ideologue who brought white nationalism right into the Oval Office. Responsible for writing many of Trump’s most inflammatory speeches and sprinkling them with references to white nationalist vocabulary is Stephen Miller.

And of course, we can’t forget Trump adviser Sebastian Gorka, who has been linked to a nazi group in Hungary and just last Wednesday said on Breitbart Radio that white supremacists are not a problem.

Several Republican senators — such as Orrin Hatch of Utah, Marco Rubio of Florida, Chuck Grassley of Iowa and others — took strong positions calling out this weekend’s racist terror for what it was. Some of them even urged President Trump to do so as well.

But where will these same senators be when Trump starts pushing another effort to repeal the Affordable Care Act? Where will they stand when an anti-immigrant Bill comes up for a vote? Will they denounce the racism behind the next iteration of Trump’s Muslim ban?

Trump, the white nationalists around him in the White House and the nazis in Charlottesville are all attempting to sell the whites in US, especially the working-class whites, a false bill of goods.

As the reverend William Barber said on Saturday: “White nationalists don’t care about white US. They don’t support living wages for the working poor. They don’t support healthcare for the poor and the working poor… They support the kind of policies that would take those things from people.”

Barber’s call for a non-violent mass movement of all people to challenge the ideologies that foster racism and the wedge attacks that are used to divide working people points the way forward.

From the start, Trump and his promises to “Make America great again” have been backward-looking. They have encouraged racist sentimentality for a segregationist past when minorities knew their place and multiculturalism was unheard of. His manipulative political rhetoric and reactionary policies have emboldened white supremacist forces and led us to this moment.

If his efforts to strip millions of healthcare, his bombing of Syria and Iraq, his demonisation of an entire religion, his plans to build a border wall or his threat of nuclear war did not make clear how dangerous the continuation of this presidency is, perhaps Charlottesville will.

It was already obvious, but now perhaps more so. It’s time for President Trump to go.

Sebastian Gorka, the former aide to President Trump whose ties to a Nazi-linked group the Forward exposed last year, has joined the far-right Canadian news outlet The Rebel, LobeLog reported. The Rebel, often referred to as “Breitbart North,” has been accused of publishing anti-Semitic content. The website last year published a video titled “Ten Things I Hate About Jews”: here.

9 thoughts on “US President Trump and the extreme right

  1. Yesterday, dozens of Donald Trump’s business councils resigned after he took to national TV to defend the neo-Nazis that marched in Charlottesville. Rather than apologize, he fired all of them.1

    But two big corporations–Nike and Starbucks–are not just standing by him, but also lining his pockets with millions in rent for their Trump Tower locations.

    Yesterday was bad for his business ties and money, but it’s not enough. Both Starbucks and Nike seek to profit off of a progressive and inclusive brand. Nike alone will pay $580 million in rent to Trump over time–money that has given him a platform to spew hate for years.2

    This is a national emergency and accountability is critical–the President of the United States is defending white supremacists and neo-Nazis. Will you sign the petition to Starbucks and Nike now?

    To Starbucks and Nike: Reject Donald Trump and his embrace of white supremacists. End your leases at Trump Tower.
    Sign the petition

    Even after this embarrassing exodus of his CEO buddies, Trump is still standing by his remarks from early this week, in which he called last weekend’s white supremacist demonstrators “very fine people.”3 But for every big-name company that rejects Trump’s white supremacist-backed agenda, political power is taken away from Trump’s alt-right, neo-Nazi supporters.

    It was major backlash that caused these CEOs to quit and bruise Trump’s administration–if we redirect that outrage to Starbucks and Nike before it peters out, we can make his business pay as well.

    Will you sign the petition now?

    –Nita, Shaunna, Kat, Karin, Adam, Holly, Kathy, Onyi, Susan, Anathea, Audine, Shannon, Emma, Pilar, Natalie, Melody, Pam, Lindsay, and Ryan, the UltraViolet team

    Sources:

    1. Trump’s Business Councils Dissolve After CEOs Turn Against Him, Bloomberg News, August 16, 2017

    2. We visited Trump Tower two weeks before Election Day — here’s what it was like, Business Insider, October 25, 2016

    Trump’s Net Worth Slips to $2.9 Billion as Towers Underperform, Bloomberg, June 21, 2017

    3. GOP lawmakers react to Trump: “very fine people” don’t participate in rallies with racist chants, Vox, August 15, 2017

    Like

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