The First White President
The foundation of Donald Trump’s presidency is the negation of Barack Obama’s legacy. It is insufficient to state the
obvious of Donald Trump: that he is a white man who would not be
president were it not for this fact. With one immediate exception,
Trump’s predecessors made their way to high office through the passive
power of whiteness—that bloody heirloom which cannot ensure mastery of
all events but can conjure a tailwind for most of them. Land theft and
human plunder cleared the grounds for Trump’s forefathers and barred
others from it. Once upon the field, these men became soldiers,
statesmen, and scholars; held court in Paris; presided at Princeton;
advanced into the Wilderness and then into the White House. Their
individual triumphs made this exclusive party seem above America’s
founding sins, and it was forgotten that the former was in fact bound to
the latter, that all their victories had transpired on cleared grounds.
No such elegant detachment can be attributed to Donald Trump—a
president who, more than any other, has made the awful inheritance
explicit.
His political career began in advocacy of birtherism, that modern
recasting of the old American precept that black people are not fit to
be citizens of the country they built. But long before birtherism, Trump
had made his worldview clear. He fought to keep blacks out of his
buildings, according to the U.S. government; called for the death
penalty for the eventually exonerated Central Park Five; and railed
against “lazy” black employees. “Black guys counting my money! I hate
it,” Trump was once quoted as saying. “The only kind of people I want
counting my money are short guys that wear yarmulkes every day.” After
his cabal of conspiracy theorists forced Barack Obama to present his
birth certificate, Trump demanded the president’s college grades
(offering $5 million in exchange for them), insisting that Obama was not
intelligent enough to have gone to an Ivy League school, and that his
acclaimed memoir, Dreams From My Father, had been ghostwritten by a white man, Bill Ayers.
It is often said that Trump has no real ideology, which is not true—his
ideology is white supremacy, in all its truculent and sanctimonious
power. Trump inaugurated his campaign by casting himself as the defender
of white maidenhood against Mexican “rapists,” only to be later alleged
by multiple accusers, and by his own proud words, to be a sexual
violator himself. White supremacy has always had a perverse sexual tint.
Trump’s rise was shepherded by Steve Bannon, a man who mocks his white
male critics as “cucks.” The word, derived from cuckold, is
specifically meant to debase by fear and fantasy—the target is so weak
that he would submit to the humiliation of having his white wife lie
with black men. That the slur cuck casts white men as victims
aligns with the dicta of whiteness, which seek to alchemize one’s
profligate sins into virtue. So it was with Virginia slaveholders
claiming that Britain sought to make slaves of them. So it was with
marauding Klansmen organized against alleged rapes and other outrages.
So it was with a candidate who called for a foreign power to hack his
opponent’s email and who now, as president, is claiming to be the victim
of “the single greatest witch hunt of a politician in American
history.”
In Trump, white supremacists see one of their own. Only grudgingly did
Trump denounce the Ku Klux Klan and David Duke, one of its former grand
wizards—and after the clashes between white supremacists and
counterprotesters in Charlottesville, Virginia, in August, Duke in turn
praised Trump’s contentious claim that “both sides” were responsible for
the violence.
The First White President "Donald Trump"
Reviewed by Unknown
on
October 08, 2017
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