The loss of
life in Charlottesville should sadden and concern every right thinking American. In terms of a response to Charlottesville, we
first, as we think the President should have, honor and mourn Heather Heyer, the
young woman killed in an act of domestic terrorism by an apparent misfit now
charged with second degree murder and other crimes for ramming a car into a
crowd, and Lt. H. Jay Cullen and Trooper Berke M. M. Bates, Virginia law
enforcement officers killed in the crash of a police helicopter patrolling the
area. None of them would have been where
they were but for the wretched, despicable acts of hate mongers who converged
on Charlottesville to protest that city’s effort to come to grips with
America’s original sin by removing a monument to Confederate General Robert E.
Lee.
It’s Not the Statues: After Charlottesville, no longer
should anyone entertain the fiction that opposing removal of confederate
monuments and statues merely reflects dedication to cultural heritage,
separate from its racist underpinnings. Nor should the argument fly that
removing the monuments represents a misguided attempt to rewrite history. The white supremacists demonstrated the monuments
constitute an integral part of their campaign to thwart the efforts of decent Americans
of all colors to recognize slavery’s stain on our nation’s history. The monuments aren’t recordings of history to
the white supremacists. They are essential tools in conveying their message
that this should remain a “white country” in which white people call the shots
and out groups – blacks, Jews, Muslims, immigrants -- remain just that.
Trump Speaks: It was the response of
Donald Trump that produced the real outrage and presents the test his
Republican Party must meet, along with the rest of the nation. Trump initially
appeared, uncomfortably, on camera, making a statement that (1) failed to
specifically and unequivocally call out the white supremacists whose presence
precipitated the Charlottesville tragedy and (2) made a disappointing try at
equating those who protested the white supremacists with the hate mongers
themselves. Trump said he condemned “this egregious display of hatred, bigotry,
and violence on many sides, on many sides.”
This attempt at equivalency made no moral sense to us. The fact he felt compelled to say it suggested
Trump believed he had to do so to avoid alienating white supremacists, many of whom
openly admit Trump’s election emboldened them and claim he’s on their side. Trump’s
tepid, misguided response to Charlottesville brings the country face to face
with a fundamental question: Having
elected Trump on a promise to make America great again, will America say to
him, “Mr. President, you aren’t great, you aren’t even good. In fact, you’re harmful to our national
aspirations?”
To their
credit, some Republicans called out their party’s leader. Utah Senator Orrin
Hatch’s Tweet seemed particularly appropriate.
He said, “My brother didn’t give his life fighting Hitler for Nazi ideas
to go unchallenged here at home.” That’s a good start, but the GOP has much
more work to do if it’s to avoid being tarred by the brush with which Trump and
his supporters in the white supremacist universe paint. Until Republicans, both the leadership in
Congress and the statehouses, and the rank and file, say out loud they will not
tolerate support for or from white supremacists, we have more difficult days
ahead. We’ve already seen that. Trump,
under pressure, Monday made a more Presidential sounding statement about the
evils of racism, but undid it all Tuesday by equating the counter protesters
with white supremacists. “There’s fault on both sides,” he claimed.
A Perfect Storm: Charlottesville may have been inevitable, given Trump’s election and the strength the
white supremacy movement claims it gave them.
A similar event was going to happen somewhere. The city’s decision to remove
the Robert E. Lee statue became an excuse for the white supremacists to gather
there. Charlottesville’s reputation as a
college town (home to the University of Virginia) and a relatively liberal
place (Hillary Clinton won 80% of the vote there in 2016) probably assured
pushback against the intrusion by a large group of outsiders spewing an
ideology at odds with the predominant community ethic.
But
Charlottesville didn’t have to become the tragedy it did, not if we had a President
who understands and appreciates the America so many of us long for – a place
that’s imperfect, that has many sins to atone for, but one brimming with
promise for becoming what it has always had the chance to become – a beacon of
hope and opportunity for anyone willing to help it achieve its highest
aspirations and, therefore, share in its bounty and blessings.
Sound off in the comments below to share your thoughts.
Sound off in the comments below to share your thoughts.