“On many sides.”
Those three words show the lengths our supposedly “straight-talking” president will go to avoid alienating his racist base.
Does “two” count as “many?” I always thought “many” meant “a lot.” But I can only count two sides in the Charlottesville atrocity.
On one side, you have a thousand white nationalists, Klansmen, and garden-variety racists, carrying torches, bats, clubs, guns, and wearing armor. On the other side you have a couple hundred people with signs.
Yeah, it’s those hippy sign-wavers who are the troublemakers…
Fuck off…
Trump had one chance to get it right and condemn the hateful attitudes that created this mess. But no, he had to appease the dirtbags who put him in office… the people whose support he actively courted before being forced to disavow them. But he didn’t really disavow anything, did he? He kept right on spewing the nonsense that attracted the racist right in the first place. They understood it was just lip service.
Just like this weekend’s mealy-mouthed condemnation. Immediately after he uttered those three cop-out words, the alt-right websites (which I refuse to name or recognize) lit up with comments about how he didn’t condemn them, and that he supported what they were doing.
Grand Wizard David Duke himself reminded Trump that he’d best stay on the idiots’ good side:
I would recommend you take a good look in the mirror & remember it was White Americans who put you in the presidency, not radical leftists. https://t.co/Rkfs7O2Ykr— David Duke (@DrDavidDuke) August 12, 2017
At least some of these self-important dicks are starting to feel the consequences. As pictures surface online and on Twitter, people are attaching names to the protesting white faces, who are then getting fired. No, it doesn’t really change anything. It’s doubtful any of these dipshits will reflect on what they’re doing and change their beliefs. More likely, they’ll just blame it all on radical liberals and the media. Like that’s something new…
And if you think Trump made weak excuses, he’s got nothing on the people getting named. I’ve heard more convincing rationalizations from grade-schoolers.
It’s funny how they keep repeating the bullshit about not wanting to lose “white culture.”
What the fuck is “white culture” anyway? Peanut butter sandwiches on Wonder Bread and small dicks?
And to think, all it took to bring blatant racism bubbling to the surface in 21st century America is a black guy getting elected president. And then having a TV show huckster with sufficient lack of shame to cozy up to the poor threatened white males and promise he’d fix it all by sticking it to non-white people.
The bottom line is that the Republicans now own this. They recruited this faction, they promised them everything on the racist wish list, from building walls to killing government aid. They blew dog-whistles for two years before the election and the dogs came running.
To say that they don’t represent Republicans or conservatives is disingenuous. In 2017, racists define the GOP.
That’s a fact that everyone who voted for Trump has to face. No matter what alibi they tell themselves, they got in bed with a man proposing racist solutions to exaggerated ills.
Maybe they were so laced with greed that they sought to lower their taxes even further, despite knowing millions of others would lose their insurance. Or maybe they came from Republican-ingrained military careers. Or maybe they just couldn’t stand Hillary Clinton for whatever reason, while giving Trump a pass on the same charges, (like being loud, abrasive, corrupt, immoral or mean).
It doesn’t matter. For whatever the reason, people who voted for Trump prioritized these alibis higher than the result of what blatantly racist policies would do to fellow Americans.
That makes them no better than the racist, torch-waving alt-right pinheads.
Republicans, this is what you wrought on America.
You bought it, own it, you fix it.
This is me, not holding my breath.
4 comments:
The 2018 election should be interesting. I hope the Democrats aren't stupid enough to blow this incredible opportunity. Then again, getting more than half of the eligible voters out would be a good thing, too.
By next November, I'm sure the Republicans will have conjured up some other "outrage" to rile up the base and disenfranchise opposition voters. Why stop now, when it works?
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Looking forward to meeting you!
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