Analysis: The incredible racial overcompensation of Donald Trump - 5 minutes read
The incredible racial overcompensation of Donald Trump
"I am the least racist person there is anywhere in the world," Trump said. "What I've done for African-Americans in two and a half years, no president has been able to do anything like it."
In each episode of his weekly YouTube show, Chris Cillizza will delve a little deeper into the surreal world of politics. Click to subscribe!
The claim is, obviously, ridiculous. To state the obvious, there is no known measure that would allow us to quantify how racist or not a person is. And if that measure did exist, Donald Trump would not be the least racist person in the world -- or anything close to it.
From his early days as a businessman in which he and his father were charged with racial housing discrimination by the Justice Department (the case was eventually settled), to his 2016 campaign in which he aggressively trafficked in racial animus and stereotypes, to his presidency, which has been marked by his comments that both sides were to blame for the white supremacist violence in Charlottesville, Virginia, Trump's entire life has been a case study in racial dog whistles and worse.
his recent tweets Not to mention his recent tweets directed at freshman Democratic Reps. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York, Ilhan Omar of Minnesota, Rashida Tlaib of Michigan and Ayanna Pressley of Massachusetts -- in which he told the quartet, in essence, to go back to where they came from.
6% unemployment rate in the black communityrelatively steadily Then there is the claim that "no president has been able to do anything like" what Trump has done for African-Americans, a reference presumably to the low 6% unemployment rate in the black community . I can dispute that patently false claim in just two words: "Abraham Lincoln." Or two more: "Lyndon Johnson." Thank you, next. (Plus, the African-American unemployment rate has been falling relatively steadily for years).
Somewhere in the recesses of his brain, Trump knows his record on race is, uh, short of stellar. So to cover up for that, he overcompensates wildly. He's not just not a racist. He's the least racist person in the world. He hasn't just done some good things for the African-American community, he has done the best things ever.
Think about this sort of claim outside the world of politics. Let's say you go out to drinks with some new coworkers -- a sort of get-to-know you thing. And the conversation turned to where everyone went to college and whether they liked it. And you noticed a lot of people went to Ivy League schools -- and you didn't. If you interjected randomly into the conversation that your school was actually harder to get into than a lot of Ivies and that you graduated No. 1 in your class and that you turned down all the Ivies because you didn't care about the name and the prestige, what would your new colleagues think of you?
They would, of course, think you were drastically overcompensating. If you were totally cool and comfortable with where you went to college, what you learned there and the sort of person it helped mold you into, you wouldn't need to try to convince all of your new colleagues about it. Right? Right!
Smart people don't need to talk about how smart they are. Great athletes don't need to regale you with stories of their athletic achievements. And people who are not racists don't need to talk about how they are the least racist person in the world.
Trump's overcompensation on race speaks volumes. As does his seeming willingness to simply make up things about just how much support he has in the black community.
Really? "The African-American people" have just been randomly calling the White House? How did they get the number? Who did they speak to? How did the person they spoke to know they were black? And how did that person relay the information to the President of the United States?
This is all totally ridiculous of course. Not even the most ardent Trump supporter can, with a straight face, believe a) that Trump is the least racist person in the world b) that he has done more for black people in two and a half years than any past president or c) that the White House switchboard is overwhelmed with calls from black people telling the President how thrilled they are with him.
Source: CNN
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Keywords:
Donald Trump • Racism • What I've Done • African Americans • YouTube • Chris Cillizza • Racism • Donald Trump • Racism • George H. W. Bush • Racism • Housing discrimination • United States Department of Justice • United States presidential election, 2016 • Human trafficking • Race (human categorization) • Stereotype • Presidency of Barack Obama • White supremacy • Violence • Charlottesville, Virginia • Donald Trump • Democratic Party (United States) • Alexandria, Virginia • New York • Ilhan Omar • Minnesota • Rashida Tlaib • Michigan • Ayanna Pressley • Massachusetts • Unemployment in the United States • African Americans • President of the United States • Donald Trump • African Americans • African Americans • Abraham Lincoln • Lyndon B. Johnson • African Americans • Race (human categorization) • Racism • Racism • African Americans • Conversation • Ivy League • School • Racism • Racism • Race (human categorization) • African Americans • African Americans • Executive Office of the President • Person • African Americans • President of the United States • Donald Trump • Racism • Black people • President of the United States • White House • Black people •
"I am the least racist person there is anywhere in the world," Trump said. "What I've done for African-Americans in two and a half years, no president has been able to do anything like it."
In each episode of his weekly YouTube show, Chris Cillizza will delve a little deeper into the surreal world of politics. Click to subscribe!
The claim is, obviously, ridiculous. To state the obvious, there is no known measure that would allow us to quantify how racist or not a person is. And if that measure did exist, Donald Trump would not be the least racist person in the world -- or anything close to it.
From his early days as a businessman in which he and his father were charged with racial housing discrimination by the Justice Department (the case was eventually settled), to his 2016 campaign in which he aggressively trafficked in racial animus and stereotypes, to his presidency, which has been marked by his comments that both sides were to blame for the white supremacist violence in Charlottesville, Virginia, Trump's entire life has been a case study in racial dog whistles and worse.
his recent tweets Not to mention his recent tweets directed at freshman Democratic Reps. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York, Ilhan Omar of Minnesota, Rashida Tlaib of Michigan and Ayanna Pressley of Massachusetts -- in which he told the quartet, in essence, to go back to where they came from.
6% unemployment rate in the black communityrelatively steadily Then there is the claim that "no president has been able to do anything like" what Trump has done for African-Americans, a reference presumably to the low 6% unemployment rate in the black community . I can dispute that patently false claim in just two words: "Abraham Lincoln." Or two more: "Lyndon Johnson." Thank you, next. (Plus, the African-American unemployment rate has been falling relatively steadily for years).
Somewhere in the recesses of his brain, Trump knows his record on race is, uh, short of stellar. So to cover up for that, he overcompensates wildly. He's not just not a racist. He's the least racist person in the world. He hasn't just done some good things for the African-American community, he has done the best things ever.
Think about this sort of claim outside the world of politics. Let's say you go out to drinks with some new coworkers -- a sort of get-to-know you thing. And the conversation turned to where everyone went to college and whether they liked it. And you noticed a lot of people went to Ivy League schools -- and you didn't. If you interjected randomly into the conversation that your school was actually harder to get into than a lot of Ivies and that you graduated No. 1 in your class and that you turned down all the Ivies because you didn't care about the name and the prestige, what would your new colleagues think of you?
They would, of course, think you were drastically overcompensating. If you were totally cool and comfortable with where you went to college, what you learned there and the sort of person it helped mold you into, you wouldn't need to try to convince all of your new colleagues about it. Right? Right!
Smart people don't need to talk about how smart they are. Great athletes don't need to regale you with stories of their athletic achievements. And people who are not racists don't need to talk about how they are the least racist person in the world.
Trump's overcompensation on race speaks volumes. As does his seeming willingness to simply make up things about just how much support he has in the black community.
Really? "The African-American people" have just been randomly calling the White House? How did they get the number? Who did they speak to? How did the person they spoke to know they were black? And how did that person relay the information to the President of the United States?
This is all totally ridiculous of course. Not even the most ardent Trump supporter can, with a straight face, believe a) that Trump is the least racist person in the world b) that he has done more for black people in two and a half years than any past president or c) that the White House switchboard is overwhelmed with calls from black people telling the President how thrilled they are with him.
Source: CNN
Powered by NewsAPI.org
Keywords:
Donald Trump • Racism • What I've Done • African Americans • YouTube • Chris Cillizza • Racism • Donald Trump • Racism • George H. W. Bush • Racism • Housing discrimination • United States Department of Justice • United States presidential election, 2016 • Human trafficking • Race (human categorization) • Stereotype • Presidency of Barack Obama • White supremacy • Violence • Charlottesville, Virginia • Donald Trump • Democratic Party (United States) • Alexandria, Virginia • New York • Ilhan Omar • Minnesota • Rashida Tlaib • Michigan • Ayanna Pressley • Massachusetts • Unemployment in the United States • African Americans • President of the United States • Donald Trump • African Americans • African Americans • Abraham Lincoln • Lyndon B. Johnson • African Americans • Race (human categorization) • Racism • Racism • African Americans • Conversation • Ivy League • School • Racism • Racism • Race (human categorization) • African Americans • African Americans • Executive Office of the President • Person • African Americans • President of the United States • Donald Trump • Racism • Black people • President of the United States • White House • Black people •