Before I share today’s post, I wanted to remind you all that you can only comment on the current post. You won’t see a reply option on any other posting. If you don’t even see “leave a comment” or “reply” on the current day’s posting – I suggest clicking the title of the post – that takes you “inside” the post, where you can see and make comments. Remember, you can also use the “most recent comments” section to click on a link and it will also take you “inside the post.”
I know this template is still problematic for many of you. I’ll be looking to make a change again soon that will hopefully make things easier. I do appreciate your patience. Now, for today…..
This is sad, but very true:
John Blake (CNN):
President Trump’s critics may not like to admit it, but there’s an element of truth in the racist tweets he sent this weekend.Trump told four nonwhite Democratic congresswomen that they should “go back” to the “crime infested places” where they came from, even though three of the four were born in the US and the fourth is a naturalized citizen.Critics pounced. But in some ways those four lawmakers — Democratic Reps. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez , Ilhan Omar, Rashida Tlaib and Ayanna Pressley — really do belong to another country.In one America, people react with shock when a President issues vile racist tweets against women lawmakers. In the other America, people say nothing.In one America, people speak out in protest after a President claims that African, Haitian, and Salvadoran immigrants come from “sh**hole” countries. In the other America, people nod in agreement.In one America, people become outraged when administration officials snatch migrant children from their mothers’ arms and detain them for weeks in filthy conditions with no repercussions. In the other America, people remain silent.And in one America, people condemn a President for describing protestors alongside neo-Nazis as “very fine people.” In the other America, people shrug.
Trump’s tweets show a keen understanding of America
It’s been said that Trump’s comments about immigrants reveal that he really doesn’t understand America. The US was built on the concept of a melting pot, and immigrants are making the nation stronger, some say.
But Trump’s recent tweets could show that he understands America better than his critics realize.These two Americas have long co-existed.One is the country represented by the Statue of Liberty, and its invitation to poor and tired immigrants “yearning to breathe free.”The other is the one that virtually wiped out Native Americans, enslaved Africans, excluded Chinese immigrants in the late 19th century and put Japanese Americans in concentration camps.From the rarified perch of the White House, Trump’s racist tweets tap into the id of this other America.And here’s what’s so frightening about this: It is not a big stretch to say that when a leader uses the kind of language that Trump uses against minorities, it may increase the chances of violence being used against them.I recall what Mark Naison, a historian at Fordham University, told me after the Charlottesville violence in 2017 when talking about Trump’s racial rhetoric.He says most Americans don’t realize how dangerous it is for a leader to talk about fellow citizens as if they’re the enemy. But some people from other countries know.
The United States must become one thing or the other
Historical analogies, of course, are tricky. I’ve heard commentators say we’re on the verge of a second Civil War. That makes a mockery of the carnage of that war, where at least 600,000 Americans were killed.Yet there is another 19th-century parallel that resonates. One commentator recently said we’re on the brink of a “political civil war.”That comment evoked another era that reminds me of this one — the decades running up to the Civil War.
Then, as now, we were splitting into two different countries. Political compromise was impossible on another issue that revolved around American identity — slavery. Congressional lawmakers carried pistols on the House and Senate floors.The impending Civil War was described as “irrepressible conflict” — the nation would become either a slave-holding nation or a free-labor country. There was no middle ground.That period also saw the rise of the nation’s first anti-immigration party. They were called the “The American Party,” otherwise known as the “Know-Nothings.” They blamed Irish and German immigrants for rising crime and poverty rates, and riots erupted across America in the 1840s and ’50s.”Party members tended to come from the working classes and had a strong anti-elitist bent,” Amy Briggs wrote in National Geographic. “Their platform sought to limit immigration and the influence of Catholicism, and they used ugly ethnic stereotypes to stir up hatred against the recent German and Irish arrivals.”
Trump’s tweets show we are now in the middle of another “irrepressible conflict.” We can’t forever be a country that prides itself for welcoming immigrants and religious diversity while also being one that puts immigrant children in cages and shrugs when our President makes racist statements.To paraphrase another President — Abraham Lincoln — we eventually “will become all one thing or all the other.”We can become what one scholar called a “compassionate, multi religious, multiracial democracy.”Or we can become what another called a “hollowed out” democracy, where one ethnic group rules the rest.The outrage over Trump’s tweets will eventually fade. But the choice his racial rhetoric presents to America will be with us for years to come.
Are we the “hollowed out” democracy?


Thank you for reading today's post. Have an InterStellar Day! ~PrP






Oakland is still on the damn table! This is no bueno!! And I need a ride to the airport. Reach out please
I read an article yesterday about how Nancy Pelosi “has the numbers” and is “teaching these Freshman Congresswomen a lesson in numbers”. It is the type of article you seen written in every news media that curries favor with power. What it failed to recognize is that these 4 women represent the face of the new political renaissance that is powerfully pushing our systems into the next phase. Pelosi and her “numbers” may own the present, but the future has already turned towards the minority Women of Color, who will be surely leading the next iteration of politics in the US. See the writing on the wall….
“No man is an Island, intire of it selfe; every man is a peece of the Continent, a part of the maine; if a Clod bee washed away by the Sea, Europe is the lesse, as well as if a Promontorie were, as well as if a Mannor of thy friends or of thine owne were; any mans death diminishes me, because I am involved in Mankinde; And therefore never send to know for whom the bell tolls; It tolls for thee.”
John Donne.
I wish it was easier to post a comment here. I always have to fish around to locate the comment box.
I’m still trying to find the reply button to Li3’s comment.
Read the first paragraph of today’s post. Might help u w the commenting. You can’t reply to a post on an older date FYI