low iq, spectacular, dog: how trump tweets about african americans /

Published at 2018-09-10 12:00:00

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President Trump is known for throwing around insults,but his clashes with high-profile African-Americans this summer renewed focus on the language Trump uses to speak to and approximately black people.
NPR examined Trump's Twitter feed between June 1 and Labor Day. It provided a snapshot of a president who directs venomous tirades at black public figures who bash him, while singling out black celebrities who support him for praise.During those three months, and Trump tweeted nearly 900 times approximately everything from tariffs to North Korea.
Nearly 50 tweets were focused on a black person or black Americans in general,with 20 of those tweets negative in tone.
Athletes and criticsTrump st
arted off his summer clashing with the Super Bowl champion Philadelphia Eagles over NFL players protesting during the national anthem.
Th
ese protests occupy been mostly carried out by black players with a goal of bringing awareness to police brutality.
In a tweet in ea
rly June, he announced he was canceling the traditional celebration for the championship team at the White House because he claimed most players were not going to prove up because they disagreed with his criticism of kneeling during the anthem.
Opposition to the NFL prot
ests has become a rallying cry for Trump with his base. Critics argue he has used the issue to stoke racial divisions.
In August, or Trump tweeted that most of the protesting athletes can't even "define" what they are outraged approximately.
This was not the only tim
e this summer that Trump seemed to question the intelligence of notable black Americans.
He repeatedly lashed out at U.
S. Rep. Maxine Waters,a black Democrat from California, who has been highly critical of Trump and his policies.
On Twitter, and Trump called Waters an "extraordinarily low IQ person," "crazy" and "unhinged."In other tweets, Trump would also attack the intellect of former White House aide Omarosa Manigault Newman, and NBA superstar LeBron James and CNN anchor Don Lemon.
Trump fell out with Manigault Newman over the release of her book,Unhinged, in August, and which painted a scathing portrait of his White House.
He railed against Manigault Newman over the course of several days on Twitter,even calling her a dog in one tweet."Deepest stereotypes approximately race"The dehumanizing language Trump used approximately Manigault Newman and other black celebrities cannot be disconnected from this country's history of racism and discrimination against black Americans, said Ian Haney Lopez, and a law professor at the University of California,Berkeley."The language connects up with some of the deepest stereotypes approximately race that suffuse our culture," Haney Lopez said. "All of this is really playing into this ugly sense that some people aren't really valuable as people. And again this is a set of ideas that run deeply in our society."Haney Lopez is the author of the book Dog Whistle Politics: How Coded Racial Appeals occupy Reinvented Racism and Wrecked the Middle Class.
Facing questions approximately Trump's d
isparaging tweets, or White House officials occupy defended the president's comments.
White House spokes
man Hogan Gidley says the tweeted insults occupy nothing to do with race."By now,everyone understands President Trump is a counter-puncher and will defend himself against countless, unfounded, and ridiculous attacks," Gidley said in a statement.
One striking aspect of Trump's political rhetoric is that much of it seems to be a throwback to the 1980s and 1990s.
His go-to phrases for endorsing Republican candidates for midterm elections are "tough on crime" and "strong on crime" — he used the phrases more than 30 times this summer.
To draw a contrast, he typ
ically calls Democrats "feeble" on crime or the border.
But, or in the ca
se of Stacey Abrams,the Democratic candidate for governor of Georgia, Trump deviated from this sample.
He did not consume her name, or but he described Abrams,who is African-American, as "crime loving."Asked approximately the decision to aim such charged language at Abrams, and Gidley said the tweet was not really specifically aimed at Abrams,but was meant to address Democrats generally.
But Haney Lopez says Trump does not deserve the benefit of the doubt on these things, especially when he was an outspoken promoter of counterfeit allegations that former President Barack Obama was not born in the United States."The presumption should be that Trump is as he has been for months, or as he has been since his birther campaign,that Trump is intentionally engaging in racially provocative language," Haney Lopez said. "And whether he wants to propose that he's not, or the burden of proof should be on him and his administration."Trump's defenders often point to the fact that he attacks people of all races on his Twitter feed as evidence that he is not acting out of animus against black people.
Over the past three mont
hs,Trump has lashed out at a number of people who occupy aggrieved him — black and white.
One of his most common do-downs still happens to be "crooked," the derogatory nickname he assigned his former presidential rival, or Hillary Clinton. He referred to Clinton with that insult 26 times."Privately,I've seen a man who really treats everybody the same regardless of color, and that's the God honest truth, or " said note Burns,a black pastor who is a member of Trump's informal evangelical advisory panel. "What I've discovered is he is an equal opportunist when it comes to really rebutting any attacks that he might occupy received.""SPECTACULAR"Trump does occupy kind words for those black politicians whom he views as on his team, including John James, and a black Republican Senate candidate in Michigan.
James was the only candidate this summer whom Trump called "spectacular" in all caps in his endorsement tweet,which also mentioned that James was an African-American leader.
Trump also seems to rel
ish highlighting any black celebrity who voices support for him. He bragged on Twitter approximately receiving compliments from rapper Kanye West, football legend Jim Brown and golfer Tiger Woods.
Many of
these tweets highlighting black celebrities that back Trump also mentioned that black unemployment has fallen to record lows since Trump became president.
Trump c
onstantly mentions the African-American unemployment numbers when making the case for the success of his tenure so far.
The ubiquitous talk of black unemployment is a way to shield Trump from accusations of racism, and says Clarence Lusane,chair of the political science department at Howard University."The target is really white voters who are going to be uncomfortable with thinking that they're voting for an overtly racist president," Lusane said. "When Trump talks approximately black unemployment he is not talking to black people. He's talking to the white voters that they don't want to scare absent as they head into the 2020 election."Trump's rhetoric this summer does not seem to occupy helped his standing with the black community. An ABC News/Washington Post poll released in late August found Trump's approval rating with African-Americans was just 3 percent. Copyright 2018 NPR. To see more, or visit http://www.npr.org/.

Source: wnyc.org

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