Trump, a
racist or not?
E. Ablorh-Odjidja
November 01, 2015
This is not to defend Donald Trump, the aspirant
Republican presidential candidate, but it is
to question how we, as Africans, think about
political issues.
A statement said to have been made by Trump found
itself on my Facebook wall.
The import of the statement was that
Trump was insulting Africans.
The piece, written by Christine Mendoza for a web
magazine called Politica, not to be confused
with the Politico web magazine published in
the US, has since provoked intense outrage
on the web among Africans.
It said, "Once again, US business magnate Donald
Trump has expressed his deep disgust for
Africans by referring to them as lazy fools
only good at eating, lovemaking, and
thuggery. Speaking in Indianapolis, Trump
who is also the republican Presidential
torch bearer reiterated his promise to
deport Africans especially those of Kenyan
origin including their son Barrack Obama."
To start with, Trump is not the "torch bearer" yet
because the primaries are not yet over.
Thus, a
presidential
candidate has not been chosen for the
Republican party.
And another lie by Ms. Mendoza is that,
constitutionally, no one can deport Obama.
The above two statements are just technical points
but are worth making to clear the confusion.
From a journalistic point of view,
Ms. Mendoza’s entire article, from beginning
to end, is a shoddy piece of reportage
intended as a hit piece; but not even a
clever one at that.
The article, as made up, has no attribution, lacks
a specific date, event, and time when this
statement was made by Trump. Could this
illogical piece was written for the Politica
readers, hoping they will be dumb enough to
believe it?
The biggest problem in all this is the article’s
unspoken assumptions.
That Trump is dumb enough to insult all Blacks,
after having insulted all women (whites
included), Hispanics, and Muslims. Who else
is left to give him the majority vote he
needs to win the primaries or the general
election?
I am not overlooking the fact that during a US
presidential election season, all things
heinous and dumb do show up in the media
about candidates, especially those on the
conservatives or Republican side.
But this purported statement by Trump, cited by
Politica (possible of East African origin),
a magazine few have heard of until the
publication of the slanderous article, has
yet to show up in any American media as
news.
And here comes the gist of the problem.
Unfortunately, the "truth" for a
sizeable segment of our community, of which
the Politica readership is part, is that all
Republicans or conservatives are homophobes
and racists.
They dislike the aged, all minorities (Africans
especially), love war, starve babies, and
are opposed to women; and do deny all within
this group their civil and birthrights.
The visceral reaction to this kind of spiel is
what drives many of us to the polling booth,
with hatred for Republicans or
conservatives.
Now back to the main story about Trump.
Whoever wrote this story or sent it to my wall
must have first hoped that I was a simpleton
to have sent it.
But, let's assume the news about Trump might be
true and take the time to give it a prism
test for reasonableness.
Democrats and liberal candidates in The US, who
are decidedly not on the side of
Republicans, haven't made this report by
Politica part of their campaign's talking
points; unless we can agree that their
silence is a confirmation or approval of the
sentiment attributed falsely to Trump.
The DNC chair, Debbie Wasserman Schultz, is silent
on this issue even though she has proven to
be a highly vocal basher of Republicans.
Imagine what damage her silence does
to a propaganda bonanza for Democrats in the
2016 race.
Harry Reid, the Senate minority leader, a
Democrat, and a shy-less opponent of
Republicans, who many times has used
constitutional protection of the Senate
floor to launch slanderous materials against
conservatives and Republicans hasn't said a
word condemning Trump on this issue.
A few samples of Reid deeds on the senate floor
can demonstrate how unscrupulous he is when
performing against Republicans:
" Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid took to the
floor on Tuesday to denounce the spending --
now up to $14.5 million -- by Charles and
David Koch on Senate races, the latest
attempt by Democrats to raise the profile of
the free-spending conservative brothers in
advance of the November election."
Washington Post
From Breitbart Publication, " During the 2012
election cycle Romney released tax returns
for 2010 and 2011. Democrats hoping to
embarrass Romney and to emphasize his wealth
demanded he release additional returns. It
was in the midst of this constant media
drumbeat that Sen. Reid claimed a former
investor in Romney’s company, Bain Capital,
had told him Romney paid no taxes for 10
years.”
In Reid's words, " "[Romney has] refused to
release his tax returns, as we know. If a
person coming before this body wanted to be
a cabinet officer, he couldn't be if he did
the same refusal Mitt Romney does about tax
returns.... So the word's out that he hasn't
paid any taxes for 10 years. Let him prove
that he has paid taxes because he hasn't "
Then Romney released his taxes to cover all years
in question and, indeed, they showed he had
paid his taxes.
After the 2012 election, the Free Beacon said Reid
refused to apologize to Romney:
"Harry Reid Justifies Lying About
Romney’s Taxes from Senate Floor: ‘He Didn’t
Win, Did He?’
Reid didn't stop with Romney.
And would have picked up the cudgel
against Trump for his supposed racist rant
before Politica would have needed to publish
it.
Please note that the absence of comment on Reid's
part (or on all the Democrats) is not an act
of sympathy for Trump.
For, there is no love lost between
the two; especially when Trump is riding so
high in the polls now.
Reid's feelings about Republicans are explicit and
highly pronounced:
" In 2012, as the Senate debated a bill that would
extend the payroll tax and do away with an
EPA pollution regulation regarding drinking
water, Reid accused Republican lawmakers of
trying to poison American
citizens...Republicans would extend the tax
cut, but only if Democrats "will let us
(Republicans) continue to put things like
arsenic and mercury in the water of the
American people," Reid said from the floor
of the senate."
But since all this started with Trump being
accused as racist, let’s take a glimpse at
Reid's attitude on the race issue.
" But the depth of Reid's own love for people of
color came into question in 2010, when he
had to apologize after Bloomberg News' Mark
Halperin and John Heilemann wrote in "Game
Change" that the senator was "wowed by
Obama's oratorical gifts and believed that
the country was ready to embrace a Black
presidential candidate, especially one such
as Obama – a 'light-skinned'
African-American 'with no Negro dialect,
unless he wanted to have one." (Washington
Examniner}
Of course, this racist remark went astonishingly
unnoticed within the African Diaspora
community.
The funny part was it had been
documented.
The only problem was it was not
spoken by a conservative or a Republican
like Trump.
Though Reid's effusing is well documented,
Politica would never print such
infamy about a man like him, a liberal.
But the remarks purported to be
Trump’s, a conservative, although patently
false, was good enough to print.
Some of us have no qualm about who others vote
for.
But this automatic reaction to
classify Republicans as racist has to stop.
We must go past the seeing of all things
advanced by Republicans as hurtful to our
race.
E. Ablorh-Odjidja, Publisher www.ghanadot.com,
Washington, DC, November 01, 2015.
Permission to publish: Please feel free to
publish or reproduce, with credits,
unedited. If posted at a website, email a
copy of the web page to
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