Jennifer Rubin: 'Latest speech on gun carnage was infuriating in its insincerity'
Jennifer Rubin • 2 hours ago
After stoking white nationalism, accusing a federal judge of being unfair because of his Mexican heritage, declaring there were some "very fine" people marching with neo-Nazis in Charlottesville, demonising refugees as an "invasion" and "infestation", instigating a policy to rip migrant children from their parents' arms, telling four non-white members of Congress to "go back" where they came from, and cheering a burglary at the home of Democratic Representative Elijah Cummings - whose city he claimed was "rodent and rat-infested" - President Donald Trump finally appeared before the public to say: "In one voice, our nation must condemn racism, bigotry and white supremacy... Hate has no place in America."
It would be laughable if it were not so infuriating. He appeared to blame social media for a rise in hate. In one regard, he has a point: Twitter has been Trump's bullhorn for spreading vile bigotry and xenophobia.
He trotted out the trope about dealing with mental health. There was no promise - as suggested in his tweets - to address background checks. His call for the FBI to take action to prevent hate crimes rings hollow given his administration's cuts to efforts fighting domestic terrorism.
There was no sincere remorse for his own role in fanning racism. As a final insult and indication of abject insincerity, he ended with "and may God bless the people of Toledo" - the shooting was in Dayton.
A spokesman for former vice-president Joe Biden tweeted: "This all comes from a discredited man who has called white supremacists and neo-Nazis... 'very fine people', fomented hatred against immigrants from the day he announced his campaign in 2015 and just last month called for American citizens who are women of colour to 'go back'."
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Trump is uniquely unsuited to the moment not only because he lacks empathy and decency. If the US as a country truly wants to speak with one voice and condemn hate, we must collectively throw him out of office.
He's the largest, loudest megaphone for white nationalism and for anti-immigrant fervour. He's an implacable opponent of serious gun safety legislation. He is not merely in the way. He is the problem.
Perhaps Democratic presidential candidates can put differences aside and issue a joint condemnation of Trump's role in propagating hate and racism. They likewise should indict the Republican Party that coddles him, defends him and supports his re-election. A party unwilling to dump an open racist is just as unfit to serve as he is.
Trump is not merely a failure as the United States' leader but also a threat to its democracy, its moral fabric and its safety.
In the absence of a leader to unite the country, Democrats who seek to replace him can step into the void and show that without Trump at the helm, we can be a better, kinder and safer country. (© Washington Post)
Hope he sees Hillary's response and bursts a vein. Every other country has video games and mental illness. The difference is guns.
[thehill.com]
Posted by DruviusMake it make sense.
Posted by FrostyJim...what a sad situation.
Posted by ButtercupI doubt she said it buts it's cute.
Posted by Smurfing101
Posted by DruviusAh yes, modern America.
Posted by Tejas
Posted by SwitchcraftSandy Hook 13th sad anniversary - 12/14/12
Posted by SwitchcraftSandy Hook 13th sad anniversary - 12/14/12
Posted by MoravianSad but true.
Posted by DruviusAlways loved this one.
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Posted by Tejas
Posted by SeaGreenEyezThe most unaware "Awareness Day" in America was yesterday.
Posted by SeaGreenEyezThe most unaware "Awareness Day" in America was yesterday.
Posted by SeaGreenEyezThe most unaware "Awareness Day" in America was yesterday.