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Home Front: Culture Wars
How segregated America made Trump inevitable
2017-09-13
[Al Jazeera] Donald Earl Collins is an Associate Professor of History with University of Maryland University College.
Yeah, buddy! A scholar of the first rank. Howard Zinn is smiling in his grave.
Let there be no doubt. US President Donald Trump is a mercurial, inept, me-first racist. In recent weeks, Trump has thrown in with Charlottesville's white supremacists and pardoned known anti-immigrant xenophobe Joe Arpaio. Trump has pursued an agenda of rescinding more and more of President Barack Obama's executive orders, including the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA), potentially leading to the deportation of undocumented immigrants who were children when they came to the US.

Trump's behaviour isn't unprecedented. His racist, incompetent, and callously narcissistic performance as president shares similarities with that of Andrew Jackson, Andrew Johnson, James Buchanan, Woodrow Wilson, and Richard Nixon. And although he continues to follow the lead of some of America's most racist and inept presidents, he continues to retain many of his supporters.

Millions of supposedly non-racist Americans - people who say they wouldn't align themselves with Neo-Nazis - continue to support Trump. Why?

Subconscious hatred or fear alone cannot fully explain why they tacitly support the Trump administration's racist and xenophobic policies, and Trump's racist and xenophobic words and deeds along with them.

The answer to this question lies in understanding the power of racial advantage and narcissistic self-gratification, the combination of which has made the Trump presidency possible. All that power is embodied in the reality of segregation in the US. Its diffusion in all aspects of American culture and life reinforces the idea of white superiority over Americans of colour and of America as a perpetually great and righteous nation, even as it isolates whole social and racial groups of Americans.

Racial and social segregation and the dominant white narrative
Residential segregation is the root cause of all other forms of segregation in the United States. Its immediate effect is that white children tend to go to school isolated from interaction with children of colour. As education expert Diane Ravitch wrote in her 2013 bestseller Reign of Error, "Today, racial segregation remains a pervasive fact of life for millions of black [and equally impoverished Hispanic] children, primarily as a result of residential segregation." Working-class and poor whites are residentially segregated not only from all social classes of Americans of colour, but also from affluent whites.

At the same time, white children tend to be almost exclusively taught by white teachers. Currently, nearly five out of six teachers in the US (82 percent) are white, and the majority of teachers of colour teach in school districts where students of colour are predominant.
Posted by:Fred

#7  Subconscious hatred or fear

Oh my, they sound...irredeemable.
Posted by: swksvolFF   2017-09-13 18:16  

#6  What a load of sh*t. It might have been that voters were just fed up with the corruption in Washington of which Hillary was the spearhead.
Posted by: JohnQC   2017-09-13 11:40  

#5  Ah, I should've looked at his pix, Glen.
Posted by: g(r)omgoru   2017-09-13 11:24  

#4  grom, this looks like just the kind of thing Collins needs to say to get tenure.
Posted by: Glenmore   2017-09-13 09:52  

#3  So I guess this isn't arguing for the removal of "affirmative apartheid" and reparations to whites affected by it?
Posted by: Bright Pebbles   2017-09-13 09:52  

#2  Donny was never around in the 50s.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2017-09-13 07:37  

#1  Donny, you'll never be a tenured prof.
Posted by: g(r)omgoru   2017-09-13 02:21  

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