A political firestorm was ignited last Friday night. At an LGBT
fundraiser in New York City, Democratic presidential candidate Hillary
Clinton remarked that “half of Trump’s supporters” could be put “into
what I call the basket of deplorables.” These people, she asserted, are
“racist, sexist, homophobic, xenophobic, and Islamophobic” and she
excoriated Donald Trump, the Republican Party’s presidential nominee,
for embracing and empowering them. The appetite of the mercurial and
sensationalistic press for conflict was whetted and reporters went to
work forthwith depicting the comment in the worst possible light.
Clinton’s frank words were soon circulated ad nauseam, accompanied by
professions of astonishment that a candidate for public office would
dare portray a segment of America as bigoted. Forgotten was the rest of
her speech, in which she went on to express empathy for those Trump
supporters who are motivated by economic and social distress. Ignored
was the fact that Clinton had used virtually the same words on at least
one prior occasion. Her opponents saw their chance and pounced
gleefully, declaring that Clinton had unfairly denigrated millions of
hard-working, patriotic Americans — at an exclusive fundraiser, no less.
This comment and the reactions it precipitated provide copious opportunities for deliberation and reflection. Consider, for instance, that when Donald Trump vilifies entire groups of American based upon their color or creed, it is often brushed off as mere showmanship and further evidence of an unconventional candidate’s authenticity. When Hillary Clinton makes a blunt assertion about a portion of Trump’s supporters, on the other hand, it is a scandalous indiscretion that reveals deep-seated disdain for the unpretentious, industrious inhabitants of Middle America. Consider that a few outspoken sentences uttered by Clinton have garnered hours of coverage on cable news and prominent placement in every newspaper and blog. In contrast, Trump’s plethora of scandals and disturbing pronouncements languished in relative obscurity. For instance, are Clinton’s remarks really more newsworthy than the Trump Foundation’s illegal gift to Florida’s Attorney General, who shortly thereafter dropped an investigation into Trump University? Should they really concern us more than Trump’s recent threat to fire upon Iranian patrol boats shadowing U.S. naval vessels in the Persian Gulf?
What I believe is most interesting to explore, however, is what the entire contretemps reveals about our collective inability to come to grips with the role bigotry plays in our politics. Almost immediately after Clinton inelegantly placed half of Trump’s supporters in “the basket of deplorables,” political journalists breathlessly began to opine upon what this slip portended for her political fortunes. Rarely, if ever, was there any discussion of the veracity of her comments. This is indeed unfortunate, for Clinton made the point the media and far too many voters have failed to grasp. Donald Trump, his platform, and some of his most ardent proponents are anything but mainstream. This has been disregarded by the press, which has overwhelmingly chosen to treat Donald Trump like a mainstream politician, albeit one with a colorful style. Alarmingly, voters have followed the media’s lead. While Trump’s favorability ratings may be the lowest of any major party presidential candidate in history, they are only slightly lower than those of Hillary Clinton. In another disturbing development, Republicans and a good deal of independents have lined up behind Trump as they would for any ordinary Republican nominee.
However inconvenient it may be for the prim and proper gatekeepers of political discourse to admit, Donald Trump’s campaign is based upon ethnic, religious, and racial animus of the vilest sort. Lest we forget, Trump owes his prominence within the Republican Party today to his active role in questioning the citizenship and legitimacy of the first African-American president. He launched his campaign by defaming Mexican-Americans as drug dealers, murderers, and rapists, and later pledged to ban all Muslims from the United States. Part of the movement that has sprung up around Trump is a motley crew of neo-fascists, Islamophobes, anti-Semites, and longstanding white supremacists who, eager for a rebrand, have collectively christened themselves the “alt-right.” At Trump’s rallies, the bigotry, racism, and xenophobia of the mogul’s diehard supporters are on full display. Numerous incidents of violence against protesters have occurred, and attendees habitually join in hateful chants encouraged by the nominee himself.
Read more: Confronting the deplorable: A look at media sensationalism | The Mac Weekly | Macalester's Independent Student Newspaper
This comment and the reactions it precipitated provide copious opportunities for deliberation and reflection. Consider, for instance, that when Donald Trump vilifies entire groups of American based upon their color or creed, it is often brushed off as mere showmanship and further evidence of an unconventional candidate’s authenticity. When Hillary Clinton makes a blunt assertion about a portion of Trump’s supporters, on the other hand, it is a scandalous indiscretion that reveals deep-seated disdain for the unpretentious, industrious inhabitants of Middle America. Consider that a few outspoken sentences uttered by Clinton have garnered hours of coverage on cable news and prominent placement in every newspaper and blog. In contrast, Trump’s plethora of scandals and disturbing pronouncements languished in relative obscurity. For instance, are Clinton’s remarks really more newsworthy than the Trump Foundation’s illegal gift to Florida’s Attorney General, who shortly thereafter dropped an investigation into Trump University? Should they really concern us more than Trump’s recent threat to fire upon Iranian patrol boats shadowing U.S. naval vessels in the Persian Gulf?
What I believe is most interesting to explore, however, is what the entire contretemps reveals about our collective inability to come to grips with the role bigotry plays in our politics. Almost immediately after Clinton inelegantly placed half of Trump’s supporters in “the basket of deplorables,” political journalists breathlessly began to opine upon what this slip portended for her political fortunes. Rarely, if ever, was there any discussion of the veracity of her comments. This is indeed unfortunate, for Clinton made the point the media and far too many voters have failed to grasp. Donald Trump, his platform, and some of his most ardent proponents are anything but mainstream. This has been disregarded by the press, which has overwhelmingly chosen to treat Donald Trump like a mainstream politician, albeit one with a colorful style. Alarmingly, voters have followed the media’s lead. While Trump’s favorability ratings may be the lowest of any major party presidential candidate in history, they are only slightly lower than those of Hillary Clinton. In another disturbing development, Republicans and a good deal of independents have lined up behind Trump as they would for any ordinary Republican nominee.
However inconvenient it may be for the prim and proper gatekeepers of political discourse to admit, Donald Trump’s campaign is based upon ethnic, religious, and racial animus of the vilest sort. Lest we forget, Trump owes his prominence within the Republican Party today to his active role in questioning the citizenship and legitimacy of the first African-American president. He launched his campaign by defaming Mexican-Americans as drug dealers, murderers, and rapists, and later pledged to ban all Muslims from the United States. Part of the movement that has sprung up around Trump is a motley crew of neo-fascists, Islamophobes, anti-Semites, and longstanding white supremacists who, eager for a rebrand, have collectively christened themselves the “alt-right.” At Trump’s rallies, the bigotry, racism, and xenophobia of the mogul’s diehard supporters are on full display. Numerous incidents of violence against protesters have occurred, and attendees habitually join in hateful chants encouraged by the nominee himself.
Read more: Confronting the deplorable: A look at media sensationalism | The Mac Weekly | Macalester's Independent Student Newspaper
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