Normally I wouldn’t post such a disgusting, racist image that originated on Elon’s social media sewer, but it’s important for the historical record for Americans to see what the President of the United States reposted last night on his own site — as your and my representative — for the entire world to see. (Screengrab / Truth Social, per Raw Story)
I’ve been talking into microphones since I did the
morning news on WITL in Lansing Michigan in the late 1960s, and I’ve seen a lot
of ugly moments in American politics. But every so often something happens that
still takes your breath away, not because it’s surprising, but because it’s so
painfully revealing.
This latest racist stunt by Donald Trump — reposting
a meme on his Nazi-infested social media site in
which the Obamas’ faces are superimposed onto the bodies of primates in the
jungle set to the 1961 song “The Lion Sleeps Tonight” by The Tokens — is
one of those moments.
That a popular pro-Trump account on X created this video
and it has lived on that platform without consequence is disgusting in and of
itself. But Trump — as our president, speaking in our voice —
made it infinitely worse last night by promoting it to millions
around the world.
Promoting a video that depicts Barack and Michelle Obama
as non-human primates isn’t a joke. It isn’t satire or an accident. It’s the
oldest racist smear in the book, dressed up in a cheap meme and now blasted out
by a man who once swore an oath to preserve, protect, and defend the
Constitution of the United States.
When the president of the United States does something
like this, it doesn’t just insult two people. It tells a story about who,
according to the most powerful man in the world, belongs in America and who
doesn’t.
For centuries, racism in this country has relied on the
lie that some people are less than human. That lie has been used to justify
slavery, Jim Crow, lynchings, and mass incarceration.
It’s the lie that made it easier for people to look away
while their neighbors were brutalized. It’s the lie that justifies ICE’s
brutal, racist behavior. When Trump shares imagery that taps directly into that
history, he’s not being edgy: he’s reopening wounds that never fully healed.
When the President of the United States signals that this
kind of racism is acceptable, it gives permission to others. It tells the kid
being harassed at school, the family being targeted by a hate group, and the
voter being pushed out of the polling line that the cruelty they’re
experiencing is justified. That it’s their own fault.
It tells the bullies and thugs of ICE as they do their
“Kavanaugh Stops” — targeting people based on their race — that they’re on the
right side of power. This isn’t just about harm to minorities, although that
harm is real and immediate.
It’s about what happens to democracy itself when the
presidency becomes a megaphone for dehumanization. Democracy depends on the
idea that we’re all political equals. Once you start suggesting that some
Americans are animals, that idea collapses. It becomes easier to justify taking
away voting rights, ignore court rulings, or shrug when violence follows hateful
rhetoric.
I remember a time, during the era of Eisenhower and
Kennedy, when the presidency stood as a kind of moral North Star. Even when
presidents like Nixon and Clinton failed to live up to it, there was at least a
shared understanding that the office itself mattered. That it should pull us
together, not rip us apart.
Trump has spent years doing the opposite, from the 1970s
when he was busted along with his father for refusing to rent to Black people
to his recent use of words like “vermin” and “shitholes” to describe Hispanic
and Black people and majority-Black countries. Last night’s post is
another brutally clear example of Trump’s deep, lifelong racism.
What’s even more chilling is the silence from Republican
leaders and elected officials. If you can’t bring yourself to condemn something
this overtly racist, where exactly is your line? Silence in moments like this
isn’t neutrality: it’s complicity. It tells people of color in America, already
dealing with the burden of centuries of institutional racism, that their pain
is irrelevant and their dignity a plaything in the hands of white people.
I know some people will say we should ignore it, that
reacting “just feeds the outrage machine.” Trump’s propaganda princess,
Karoline Leavitt, tried to downplay it by telling reporters this morning: “This is from an
internet meme video depicting President Trump as the King of the Jungle and
Democrats as characters from the Lion King. Please stop the fake outrage and
report on something today that actually matters to the American
public.”
But pretending this doesn’t matter is how we normalize it
and weaken our shared sense of humanity. And the end point of that is always disaster.
As California Governor Gavin Newsome just posted: “Disgusting behavior by the President. Every single
Republican must denounce this. Now.” “Denounce” is a bare minimum. This country
can do better. We’ve done better before, often after terrible struggle and
sacrifice.
But we won’t get there by minimizing moments like this or
waving them off as “just another Trump post.” We get there by calling it what
it is, by standing up for one another as equals in our humanity, and by
insisting that the presidency must reflect our highest ideals, not our ugliest
instincts.
If this doesn’t provoke the 13 white billionaires in
Trump’s cabinet — who would all instantly fire anybody in any of their
companies who posted such an image on their company’s servers — to start 25th
Amendment proceedings or endorse impeachment, it’ll tell us everything about
who they are, too. America is stronger when we recognize each other as fully
human. The moment we let that slip; we all lose something precious.
-Thom Hartmann


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