Politicians Seeing Evil, Hearing Evil, Speaking Evil
Politicians
Seeing Evil, Hearing Evil, Speaking Evil
"As we enter into the age of the dangerous politician and the useful idiots..."
Erreh Svaia
By: Thomas L. Friedman
Taken From: The New York Times
There is a
movie I’m looking forward to seeing when it comes to Washington. It seems quite
relevant to America today. It’s about what can happen in a democratic society
when politicians go too far, when they not only stand mute when hateful words
that cross civilized redlines suddenly become part of the public discourse,
but, worse, start to wink at and dabble in this hate speech for their
advantage.
Later, they
all say that they never heard the words, never saw the signs, or claim that
their own words were misunderstood. But they heard and they saw and they meant.
Actually, I don’t need to see the movie, because I lived it. And I know how it
ends. Somebody gets hurt.
The movie
is called “Rabin: The Last Day.” Agence France-Presse said the movie, by the
renowned Israeli director Amos Gitai, is about “the incitement campaign before
the 1995 assassination of Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin” and “revisits a form of
Jewish radicalism that still poses major risks.” This is the 20th anniversary
of Rabin’s assassination by Yigal Amir, a right-wing Jewish radical.
“My goal
wasn’t to create a personality cult around Rabin,” Gitai told A.F.P. “My focus
was on the incitement campaign that led to his murder.” Sure, the official
investigating commission focused on the breakdowns in Rabin’s security detail,
but, Gitai added, “They didn’t investigate what were the underlying forces that
wanted to kill Rabin. His murder came at the end of a hate campaign led by
hallucinating rabbis, settlers who were against the withdrawal from territories
and the parliamentary right, led by the Likud (party), already then headed by
Benjamin Netanyahu, who wanted to destabilize Rabin’s Labor government.”
The film,
A.F.P. said, “relied on documents, photos and videos, particularly from the
months before Rabin’s assassination, including those showing speeches from
politicians such as Netanyahu at rallies against the Oslo accords, where Rabin
was depicted in a Nazi uniform.”
I hope a
lot of Americans see this film — for the warning it offers to those who ignore
or rationalize the divisive, bigoted campaigns of Donald Trump and Ben Carson
and how they’re dragging their whole party across civic redlines, with
candidates saying, rationalizing or ignoring more and more crazy, ill-informed
stuff each week.
Trump
actually launched his campaign on June 16 with a message of polarization,
saying: “When Mexico sends its people, they’re not sending their best. …
They’re sending people that have lots of problems, and they’re bringing those
problems with us. They’re bringing drugs. They’re bringing crime. They’re
rapists. And some, I assume, are good people.”
The
Washington Post’s Fact Checker column gave him four Pinocchios, its highest
rating for not telling the truth, noting: “Trump’s repeated statements about
immigrants and crime underscore a common public perception that crime is
correlated with immigration, especially illegal immigration. But that is a
misperception; no solid data support it, and the data that do exist negate it.”
And then
Trump insulted John McCain, saying he was only a war hero because he got
captured, adding, “I like people that weren’t captured, O.K.?” McCain spent
five and a half years as a P.O.W. in Vietnam and was repeatedly tortured and
had his bones broken. As CNN reported, “Trump, meanwhile, received four student
deferments and one medical deferment to avoid serving in the Vietnam War.”
What does
it mean to impugn a man who has sacrificed so much for his country? It means
you can smear anyone.
Last week
another redline was crossed. At a Trump town hall event, the first questioner
began: “We got a problem in this country. It’s called Muslims. We know our
current president is one. We know he’s not even an American. But anyway. We
have training camps brewing where they want to kill us. That’s my question.
When can we get rid of them?”
Trump
responded: “A lot of people are saying that bad things are happening out there.
We’re going to be looking into that and plenty of other things.”
Trump could
have let the man ask his question and then correct his racist nonsense, without
blocking his free speech, which is exactly what McCain did in a similar situation.
Instead, he later said it was not his place to defend Obama. As someone who
aspires to be president it is his place to defend the truth, but since Trump
himself has been the source of so much birther nonsense about Obama, I guess
that would be hard. Instead he tweeted: “Christians need support in our country
(and around the world), their religious liberty is at stake! Obama has been
horrible, I will be great.”
And then,
like clockwork, Ben Carson saw Trump blurring another civic redline and leapfrogged
him. Carson stated, “I would not advocate that we put a Muslim in charge of
this nation.”
So a whole
faith community gets delegitimized and another opportunity for someone to
courageously stand up for what’s decent is squandered. But it will play well
with certain voters. And that is all that matters — until something really bad
happens. And then, all of it — the words, tweets, signs and boasts — will be
footage for another documentary that ends badly.
Comments
Post a Comment