You know, sometimes humor can be a good way to both cover up pain and to soften poignant messages. And sometimes it can be sharp. Sometimes it needs to be.
Four years ago, even though I opposed Trump, I did not consider him to be a racist. My thinking had changed.
He has revealed himself to be the most racist President since Woodrow Wilson. And his administration has constantly soft peddled on any type of resistance to white supremacists. If anything, he’s sent positive signals to them. And he uses racial intolerance as political fuel.
Racism is a strange thing because some people’s threshold for it is way too high and others’ threshold is way too low.
Some people are dull to the idea of racism because some people are too quick to call everything racist
Other people wouldn’t recognize it if it bit them.
Being racially prejudiced does not necessarily mean that you hate the people you’re prejudiced against. A lot of racists don’t actively hate people.
It’s believing that a group of people are inherently lesser.
There are certainly pictures of Donald Trump hanging out with black folks. But the same was true of Richard Nixon, who was revealed to be deeply racist in his White House tapes. President Nixon even delivered the eulogy for Whitney Young, the Director of the Urban League.
Woodrow Wilson, universally understood to have been deeply racist, campaigned for support from black voters in 1912 and got more support from black voters than any Democrat before him. But he resegregated the federal government and watched Birth Of A Nation in the White House.
Watching him and paying close attention over the past four years, my opinion is firmly settled.
But some people don’t consider someone to be racist unless they’re burning a cross right this minute. And for some folks, not even that would do it.
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@scott_m_coley Some of the problems with the Church in America now:
- We’ve commingled faith and politics to the extent that people give equal weight to God’s Word and secular talking points.
- People justify breaking God’s Word (for example, lying) as a means to achieving a worldly goal.
@scott_m_coley And when I’ve thought about all the people who work for Trump, call themselves Christians but lie as much as he does, I think about something that too many of us are taught.
A lot of Christians seem to think professing faith in Christ means there are no consequences for sin.
@scott_m_coley Some think that once we claim to have accepted Christ, sin just doesn’t matter anymore and we’re free to do whatever we want to do.
There are a lot of passages in Scripture that should give pause to that line of thinking.
If you want to unnerve Trump’s campaign and supporters, don’t call him names or start insulting hashtags.
What freaks these people out the most is showing facts that prove that he’s a total fraud and explained in a way that most people can understand.
THAT bothers them.
The fairy tale of almost everything Trump and his supporters taut as accomplishments rests upon a shaky foundation that is quickly unraveled when you dig into the details. As long as people hear his claims, repeat them and don’t analyze them, it’s all good.
But when you scrutinize his record and look at the actual facts, you generally find that he’s selling the public the political equivalent of another one of those Trump University degrees.
Long before the COVID pandemic wrecked the economy, President Trump broke the record for the shortest time it took for a single US President to raise the national debt to the next trillion dollar mark.
We went from owing $20 trillion to $21 trillion in just 188 days in 2017.
When Trump became President, our national debt was just shy of $20 trillion dollars.
We hit the $20 trillion mark less than eight months into Trump’s term, on 9/8/2017.
We hit $21 trillion on 3/15/2018. 188 days later.
Since COVID hit, Trump has broken the all-time record three more times. By a lot.
It took 28 days for the debt to go from $24 to $25 trillion.
35 days for the debt to go from 25 to $26 trillion.
152 days for the debt to go from $23 to $24 trillion.
There are 435 Congressional Districts in the US House of Representatives.
43 of the 50 Districts with the highest percentage of residents with Bachelor’s Degrees or higher went blue in the 2018 midterms.
I dug further. Of the 101 Congressional Districts with the highest percentage of residents with degrees (The top 101 instead of the top 100 because two districts were tied), guess how many contests Republicans won in the 2018 House races?
Only 18 of them.
Out of the TOP 101!!
I emphasize this because I look at relationships between a lot of demographic categories and how they vote. And this one is just glaring. It’s astounding.
The more education you have, at least in the Trump era, the less likely you are to vote Republican.