by digby
I wrote about Trump's love affair with the police today for Salon:
Donald Trump’s xenophobia, nativism and nationalism are well established by now. His rantings about Latino immigrants and Muslims and “China and Japan” have been discussed at great lengths on every television network and in the pages of all the major newspapers for months. When he says, “We’re going to make America great again,” we know he means to restore total American global dominance and white American privilege.
We tend to think of Trump’s authoritarianism in terms of his promises to “get rid of the bad people so fast your head will spin,” leaving the impression that he isn’t concerned with such impediments as due process. And he has made it clear that he plans to do everything in his power to ensure that torture and wanton extrajudicial killings are part of the program as a deterrent and as a punishment. There is no doubt that Trump unabashedly sees himself as a “strongman” leader.
But the violence that finally spilled over last week focused attention, at least briefly, on another aspect of his appeal that hasn’t received quite the same amount of coverage, even though it’s been a fundamental part of his appeal from the very beginning: his call for “law and order,” and the thinly veiled racism that phrase evokes.
Trump has pretty much stolen all of his slogans from previous presidential races. As everyone knows, his ubiquitous “Make America Great Again” is lifted directly from Ronald Reagan’s 1980 campaign:
His reference to the “silent majority” is from a famous speech by Richard Nixon. But his common use of “law and order” in the context he usually says it also brings to mind another candidate from the same era, Alabama Gov. George Wallace, when he ran for the White House in 1968.
Wallace’s use of the phrase was not explicitly racist in that it also applied to the dirty hippies who were protesting the Vietnam war at the time. But it was quite clearly aimed at unhappy whites who were angry about civil rights and were disturbed by the urban unrest of the period. It was a tumultuous time and both Wallace and Nixon exploited the unease of the “silent majority” with a coded call for a return to “law and order” — meaning a crackdown by the authorities.
The Vietnam war ended, Nixon resigned, and the world moved on from the radical politics and counter-cultures of the period. But the racialized dogwhistle of “law and order” continued for a couple of decades as the crime rate escalated during the ’80s and ’90s, with the famous Willie Horton ad being a prime example of its exploitation. It had, however, pretty much died out as a presidential campaign issue until Donald Trump decided to run as an authoritarian strong man using the slogans of his youth.
From the beginning of the campaign, he’s faced protesters at his rallies, many of them African Americans from the Black Lives Matter movement. His typical reaction ranges from moderately tolerant to massively irritated. As everyone has seen, he’s made threats, he’s offered to pay the legal fees of anyone who hits them, he’s lied about the protesters initiating violence, and he’s coined a catchphrase of his own for the occasion: “Get ’em out.”
When he’s been asked about the underlying issue to which the Black Lives Matter movement is trying to draw attention, Trump’s sympathy is clearly with the police, not the unarmed victims for whom the movement is advocating.
For instance, NBC’s Chuck Todd asked about Black Lives Matter and the police shooting of Walter Scott in Charleston, S.C., last August. Todd wondered if he thought this was a crisis, and Trump bizarrely replied that it was a “double crisis,” because horrible mistakes are made, “but at the same time we have to give the power back to the police because crime is rampant and I’m a big person that believes in very… we need police and we need protection.”
The conversation continued:
Trump: Look, I look at some of the cities you look at Baltimore, you look at certain areas of this country, Chicago, certain areas, they need strong police protection and those police can do the job but their jobs are being taken away from them. There is turmoil in our countryChuck Todd: Can you understand why African Americans don’t trust the police?Trump: Well I can see it when I see what’s going on but at the same time we have to give power back to the police because we have to have law and order.
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