'The truth is his language is dangerous,' say critics
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On Tuesday, Trump defended his
fascist plan for a "total and complete shutdown of Muslims entering the
United States" by comparing it with President Franklin Roosevelt's
decision to inter Japanese Americans during World War II.
"This is a president who was highly respected by all,"
Trump said in morning TV interviews on Tuesday. "If you look at what he
was doing, it was far worse."
But those who oppose Trump's controversial platform dispute his
interpretation of both history and current events.
Flanked by members of Congress and civil rights leaders at a
Virginia press conference earlier on Monday, Awad declared: "Donald Trump
is using his platform to create a division within America. Leadership is about
uniting Americans, not exploiting division based on race and religion. I know
it is helping Donald Trump and others to stay high in the polls, but they are
low in the minds of those who think and reflect upon our history."
Still, Awad and others warned that to write off Trump's bombast
would be dangerous.
"Whatever else you want to say about him, Trump is a
skillful entertainer, and good entertainers—like good fascist demagogues—know
their audience."
—Glenn Greenwald, The Intercept
"[I]t's important not to treat Trump as some radical
aberration," The Intercept's Glenn Greenwald wrote on
Tuesday. "He's essentially the American id, simply channeling pervasive
sentiments unadorned with the typical diplomatic and PR niceties designed
to prettify the prevailing mentality.
"He didn't propose banning all Muslims
from entering the U.S. because it’s grounded in some fringe,
out-of-the-mainstream ideas. He proposed it in part to commandeer media
attention so as to distract attention away from his rivals and from
that latest Iowa poll, but he also proposed it because he knows there is
widespread anti-Muslim fear and hatred in the U.S."
He continued:
"Whatever else you want to say about him, Trump is a skillful entertainer,
and good entertainers—like good fascist demagogues—know
their audience."
Noting that "cultural, religious, ideological, financial
and tribalistic motives for isolating and demonizing Muslims" preexist
Trump's candidacy, Greenwald warned: "Trump is not an outlier, and it’s
dangerous to treat him as one."
White House hopeful Bernie Sanders, whom recent polls have shown would beat Trump in a general election match-up, added his censure
to the mix in an email to supporters late Monday night.
"It's fun for the political media to treat Donald Trump
like he's the lead character in a soap opera or the star player on a baseball
team," Sanders said. "But the truth is his language is dangerous,
especially as it empowers his supporters to act out against Muslims, Latinos,
and African-Americans."
Other presidential contenders blasted Trump's comments as
"unhinged," "fascist" and "downright dangerous."
And the watchdog group Media Matters revealed Monday
that Trump's proposal leans on a misleading poll from a group led by "one
of America's most notorious Islamophobes," Frank Gaffney, president of the
conservative thinktank Center for Security Policy.
Members of New York City's Arab, Muslim, and human rights
communities are planning to gather at Columbus Circle near the International Trump Tower on
Thursday in solidarity with refugees and in protest of harmful racism,
Islamophobia, and xenophobia.