Afrasianet - What can the president of his campaign build on a hate speech and seek to stir up racial strife and ethnic hatred and awaken it from the ashes of memory still suffused with wounds? Perhaps the best comment that can be said of the extreme right and advocates of hatred is the common saying, "Whoever sows thorns reap wounds."
Does US President Donald Trump think that he is immune to criticism, reactions and counter-trends just because he is in the White House and presiding over the rule of the world's most influential, powerful, and most powerful nation in its domestic and foreign policies?
Recent violence in Charlottesville, Virginia, killed a 32-year-old woman when she was hit by a crowd of protesters opposed to a far-right rally in Charlottesville, including members of the Ku Klux Klan Racist Group, and 19 people Others were injured and others injured as a result of the confrontations.
The events of Charlottesville, a city of 50,000 people, overwhelmingly voted by the democrats and known for their openness and proud of their 1819 founding President Thomas Jefferson, called for the fundamental question: Did Trump's anti-foreign language encourage right-wing extremists and facilitated their transition to Move? All the indications are that these bloody disturbances, and the candidate for escalation, were met by Trump from the golf club where he passed a pale word. He tried to hold the stick from the middle, only to hold the opposing sides accountable and to stand up to the "masses" Freedoms and freedoms.
The White House has disappointed many Americans who have been waiting for a clear condemnation of these extremist organizations, which believe in the superiority of the white race and other racial disrespect in a clear racist veil that is reminiscent of the fangs of extremism and an incident that brings to mind the darkest and most bloody pages of American history.
Donald Trump's way of condemning a drop of a drop does not absolve him of the consequences of a policy he has set for himself since the beginning of his campaign
"We condemn in the strongest possible terms this massive demonstration of hatred, blind fanaticism and violence from any side," said Trump of Damenster, New Jersey, last Saturday, in a soft language reminiscent of false witnesses.
Thus, the lamb with the wolf, the victim with the criminal in the mind of a head of state, should have been faithful to the principles of the American Constitution, the founding men, and remain at one distance and close to all Americans regardless of their race and diversity.
Trump returned last Sunday and tried to correct his position when a White House spokesman said the US president denounced "all forms of violence," including "certainly" that practiced by white supremacists and neo-Nazis.
"The president said strongly yesterday that he condemns all forms of violence, intolerance and hatred. This certainly includes advocates of white supremacy, the Ku Klux Klan group, neo-Nazis and all extremist groups. "
It was necessary, as a matter of face-saving, to declare his daughter and adviser Ivanka Trump, condemning them as "racism and white supremacists and neo-Nazis," saying in a series of tweets that "there is no place in American society" for such ideas.
In any case, this exaggerated increase in the convictions of convictions does not make Trump in the position of the wolf's innocence of the blood of the son of Jacob, and does not absolve him of the policy he has set for himself since the beginning of his campaign preparation through a network of loyalties, alliances and masculine symbols of the right and the poles of racism blatant or disguised.
No one is born of hatred and hatred, but many listen and learn and feed on racist speech inflammatory, addressing the instincts
Many observers, analysts, politicians and even some of his Republican allies do not hesitate to link Trump's lukewarm stance to the events of Charlottesville and the ambiguity surrounding his position on the extreme right since his previous election campaign. It is also clear to everyone that a good portion of the The right-wing alternative to "TRIGHT" supported Trump during the previous presidential election, which has repeatedly avoided distancing himself from some of these groups and those who are historically hostile to Muslims, Jews and Negroes.
As a result, Trump has been criticized even by the heart of his Republican team, as did Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, who said he hoped "to hear the president describe the reality of what happened in Charlottesville, which is only a terrorist attack by those who believe in white supremacy."
"If I were president of the United States and those people sympathized with my personal and program, it would have been a problem," said Republican Senator Lindsey Graham, who is increasingly going to increase his criticism of the president.
The above-mentioned increases in the tone of condemnation of this racist wave, and criticism of the US president's policy of pouring oil on fire, do not call for excessive optimism about the future of coexistence and civil peace in the United States and does not even exculpate some of those who have committed the duty of condemnation if we consider That we are talking about "old democracy" and not "emerging", and that the state in which these events occur is the most democratic and condemning what is happening in other countries of human rights violations and practices
Racism and then the word "America" in all parts of the world since its inception has been associated with the name of the land of achieving dreams away from all racial and other anxieties.
The other dilemma is how to deal with these events in the American way is to dwarf the issue and turn into a criminal case suffering from the psychological disorders may occur in any industrial society developed, and include the file in secret in the event of the decline of events and not aggravated. Trump and his supporters then go on to launch racist statements and threats that inflame hatred and hatred. This is likely to happen after the federal police are looking into the motives of the 20-year-old James Fields, who has been charged with murder and violence by the anti-racist demonstrators in the city and will appear before a judge next Monday.
Perhaps former President Barack Obama's departure from silence, citing the words of the late leader Nelson Mandela, symbolizes the struggle against apartheid in South Africa rather than the meaning of "no one is born and he hates another because of the color of his skin, his origins or his religion."
Yes, no one is born of hatred and hatred, but many listen and drink and feed on racist speech inflammatory, addressing the instincts and entangled interests as happened and occurs among the American right.