Monday, April 15, 2019

Are all Trump supporters racists?



Do I believe all Trump supporters are racists?" 

I was asked that question awhile ago by a fellow who grew up in the same town where I came of age; a town that celebrates its' long history of racial diversity but resists shining a light on the dark places, and where few, if any, would ever admit to harboring racist sentiments despite the fact there are entrenched pockets of support for a man who actively and openly tries to divide US by race. 

I have given the question a great deal of thought - perhaps because I knew that the inevitable answer would only sadden me.

But when Trump's entire agenda is built on fueling and exploiting racial divides, there are only two possible conclusions one can draw about his supporters. They either share in and approve of that racism, or are willing to overlook it because they wrongly believe something else matters more. Either way, it's a distinction without a difference. 

My answer, then, to the question, is an unequivocal "Yes." 

If you support Donald Trump; if you do not actively and openly renounce his divisive, hateful tactics and policies, you are a racist. Wear it publicly or hide it privately, but it is to your eternal shame that you wear it at all.

- Harold Levine 11.4.18 

Sunday, April 14, 2019

William Barr is not Roy Cohn. He's worse.

William Barr is not Roy Cohn. He's far more dangerous. 

Roy Cohn was Joe McCarthy’s consigliere, a mob lawyer, a brass knuckled brawler, and overt hatemonger. Fred Trump may have pounded the compassion out of the young Don, but it was Cohn who taught him to kill. Roy Cohn's loyalty was to Trump and only Trump.

William Barr is a different matter; a legal and political sophisticate who earned his partisan bonafides shielding Bush the First from the stench of the Iran contra cabal. His loyalty is to The Party for which Trump is nothing more than a valuable tool.    
Barr did not write an unsolicited, 19 page, single-spaced legal memorandum to audition for an illiterate, self-absorbed man who doesn’t read in the blind hope that it would attract his attention.
He wrote it for The Heritage Foundation (and it''s adjunct, The Federalist Society.)
His purpose was to introduce the novel legal argument that a president cannot be guilty of obstruction of justice sans an underlying crime. That memo will be used as a weapon to protect, extend, and consolidate the right’s increasing stranglehold on power.
The Heritage Foundation is a neoconservative think tank and the intellectual arm of the far right. It first emerged in the 1970’s as the brain child of Joseph Coors, of Colorado beer fame, in reaction to the civil rights advances of The Warren Court (1953-1969), that began with Brown v. Board of Education in 1954.
The Foundation gained momentum during the Reagan and both Bush administrations and is now in full ascendancy. Its membership are comprised of free market, anti-regulation capitalists, foreign interventionists, (they strongly supported Bush’s wars in Iraq and Afghanistan), Catholics and Christian religious zealots, pro-gun advocates and, of course a disproportionate number of white males.
These forces helped engineer the Supreme Court appointments of all five conservative Republican Supreme Court justices, (Roberts, Thomas, Alito, Gorsuch and Kavanaugh as well as the deceased Scalia) with the anti-choice Catholic, Amy Coney Barrett, next in line.
Trump is merely an incidental beneficiary of The Foundation's muscle, useful as a front man for his corruptibility and Svengali sway over his base. The same efforts would be made if the president was Pence, Huckabee, Gingrich, or any other champion of right-wing ideology.
Their current henchman and policy executioner is not Donald Trump. It is Mitch McConnell.
Trump knew no one of political consequence when he descended on D.C. The Foundation filled the void with party apparatchiks. They are responsible for the 97 Federal judicial appointments made to date in the Trump regime now being rammed through by McConnell. A reported 66 foundation employees and alumni have received positions in the administration. They also recommended and secured cabinet appointments for Scott Pruitt, Betsy DeVos, Mick Mulvaney, Rick Perry, and Jeff Sessions, Mike Pompeo, John Bolton – and William Barr.
The Foundation will live long beyond Trump. It's impact will be with us for generations to come. It behooves US all to know them well.

- Harold Levine 4.13.19