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Outstanding editorial in today's Times. Donald Trump is a GOP creation. The establishment has for years nurtured this.
The Trump Effect, and How It Spreads
Go ahead, deplore Donald Trump. Despise his message. Reject his appeals to exclusion and hatred. But do not make the mistake of treating him as a solitary phenomenon, a singular celebrity narcissist who has somehow, all alone, brought his party and its politics to the brink of fascism.
He is the leading Republican candidate for president. He has been for months. The things he says are outrageous, by design, but they were not spawned, nor have they flourished, in isolation.
The Republican rivals rushing to distance themselves from his latest inflammatory proposal — a faith-based wall around the country — have been peddling their own nativist policies for months or years. They have been harshening their campaign speeches and immigration proposals in response to the Trump effect. Ted Cruz and Jeb Bush want to allow only Christian refugees from Syria to enter the country, and Mr. Cruz has introduced legislation to allow states to opt out of refugee resettlement.
And party officials around the country, attuned to the power of fear, have developed homegrown versions of the Trump approach. In 31 states, governors — most but not all Republicans — have formed an axis of ignorance, declaring their borders closed to refugees fleeing the Islamic State in Syria. In Texas, Gov. Greg Abbott has sued the federal government and a nonprofit relief agency to keep refugees out. Indiana’s refusal forced one family to seek refuge in Connecticut. Georgia is seeking to deny displaced Syrians federal benefits, like food stamps, and keep their children out of school.
Civil rights organizations — the American Civil Liberties Union, the National Immigration Law Center and the Southern Poverty Law Center — are defending the displaced against blatant discrimination. That it is even necessary to protect the victims of Islamic extremism from being victimized again, in the United States, is a national disgrace.
This is the force that Mr. Trump feeds on and that propels him. It is bigger than he is, and toxic. Not a vote has been cast in the 2016 presidential race. But serious damage is already being done to the country, to its reputation overseas, by a man who is seen as speaking for America and twisting its message of tolerance and welcome, and by the candidates who trail him and are competing for his voters.
Mr. Trump has not deported anyone, nor locked up or otherwise brutalized any Muslims, immigrants or others. The danger next year, of course, is giving him the power to do so. And the danger right now is allowing him to legitimize the hatred that he so skillfully exploits, and to revive the old American tendency, in frightening times, toward vicious treatment of the weak and outsiders.
The internment of Japanese-Americans in World War II, as some Republicans have either forgotten or never understood, was a dark episode in American history. It is remembered today with regret, as something the nation struggled with, learned from, and moved beyond. But there are millions of Muslims who have good reason to fear that the darkness is falling again.
The time to renounce Mr. Trump’s views was the day he entered the race, calling Mexico an exporter of criminals and rapists. He played to the politics of nativism and fear that was evident last year, when a wave of Central American mothers and children, fleeing gang-and-drug warfare to the Texas border, presented themselves upon the mercy of the United States, and were met with derision and hysteria.
The racism behind the agenda of the right wing on immigrants and foreigners has long been plain as day. Mr. Trump makes it even plainer. After his remarks on Muslims, how many of Mr. Trump’s rivals have said they would reject his candidacy if he won the nomination? As of Wednesday, none.
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Good piece. May I suggest viewing the program, "The Rise of the Third Reich", and keeping an open mind, see if you can draw some parallels. It's eerie.
The program has been aired a few times on tv .............. I'm not sure of the channel, but I'll find it and get back.
It's been airing on the History Channel.
Last edited by Just Fred (12/10/2015 7:50 am)
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Trumpitis spreads kind of like the gastrointestinal distress at Chipotle.. The offering looks kind of good, smells OK, so you decide to have a little taste. Once you swallow the stuff they're selling, the problems begin. The next thing you know, you're blowing out that crap from both ends of your body. You just can't help yourself, and this highly contagious disease spreads like wildfire. Just like media manure fertilizer is spread over the fertile fields of shallow minds.
As of this writing, there appears to be no cure.
Last edited by Rongone (12/10/2015 8:22 am)
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I have watched the trajectory of the Republican party for quite some time, and with increasing distress.
In fact,up until 2007 I was a republican. I was always in the mold of the establishment, Rockefeller, country club republican.
I watched as first political Christianity seized an outsized influence in the party.
Then there came the rise of talk radio. People like Limbaugh said outrageous, hateful things. I was told, "Nobody takes it seriously. He's just an entertainer".
The rise of Ann Coulter, saying and writing hateful, outrageous things. "Don't worry, she's just a kook selling books".
An entire cable network mixing news and ideology till one can't tell the difference. "Don't worry, it just balances out the mainstream media".
Now we have Trump. "he's just a kook saying outrageous things to get attention".
No he isn't. Trump is the Republican front runner. And every outrageous thing he says makes him even more popular with the party. His poll numbers in South Carolina have gone up 5 points in a week.
It may not be politically correct to state this, but I will. Trump is the leader of an emerging neo-fascist movement
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Trump is the leader of an emerging neo-fascist movement.
That is my take, too. I used to wonder how a nation as educated and intelligent as 20th century Germany could get sucked into the mess created by the Nazi party. But, we know they did, and we should remember the guy that was the leader of the movement was elected by the populace of that nation.
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What is that, and why did you post it?
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Excerpt:
"We live in an era of political news that is, all too often, shocking but not surprising. The rise of Donald Trump definitely falls into that category. And so does the electoral earthquake that struck France in Sunday’s regional elections, with the right-wing National Front winning more votes than either of the major mainstream parties.
What do these events have in common? Both involved political figures tapping into the resentments of a bloc of xenophobic and/or racist voters who have been there all along. The good news is that such voters are a minority; the bad news is that it’s a pretty big minority, on both sides of the Atlantic. If you are wondering where the support for Mr. Trump or Marine Le Pen, the head of the National Front, is coming from, you just haven’t been paying attention.
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The story is quite different in America, because the Republican Party hasn’t tried to freeze out the kind of people who vote National Front in France. Instead, it has tried to exploit them, mobilizing their resentment via dog whistles to win elections. This was the essence of Richard Nixon’s “southern strategy,” and explains why the G.O.P. gets the overwhelming majority of Southern white votes.
But there is a strong element of bait-and-switch to this strategy. Whatever dog whistles get sent during the campaign, once in power the G.O.P. has made serving the interests of a small, wealthy economic elite, especially through big tax cuts, its main priority — a priority that remains intact, as you can see if you look at the tax plans of the establishment presidential candidates this cycle.
Sooner or later the angry whites who make up a large fraction, maybe even a majority, of the G.O.P. base were bound to rebel — especially because these days much of the party’s leadership seems inbred and out of touch. They seem, for example, to imagine that the base supports cuts to Social Security and Medicare, an elite priority that has nothing to do with the reasons working-class whites vote Republican.
So along comes Donald Trump, saying bluntly the things establishment candidates try to convey in coded, deniable hints, and sounding as if he really means them. And he shoots to the top of the polls. Shocking, yes, but hardly surprising."
Empowering the Ugliness
Paul Krugman