Columnists

Tweets only a symptom

We get worked up about a lot of silly stuff in presidential campaigns, micro-controversies driven by faux outrage that are inevitably forgotten in a couple of days once the next micro-controversy comes along. On first glance, that's what the kerfuffle over Donald Trump's latest Twitter hijinks--once again, passing on something from white supremacists--looks like. After all, should we really care what's in Trump's Twitter feed, when we're talking about our country's future? The answer is that we should care, but it's not about the tweet. The tweet isn't the problem. The tweet is the result of the problem.

In case you haven't heard, here's what we're talking about, from the Post's David Weigel:

"It was so close to the message that Republicans say they want from Donald Trump: a tweet describing Hillary Clinton as 'crooked' and the 'most corrupt candidate ever,' on the morning that the likely Democratic presidential nominee met with the FBI.

"But the image that Trump chose to illustrate his point, which portrayed a red Star of David shape slapped onto a bed of $100 bills, had origins in the online white-supremacist movement. For at least the fifth time, Trump's Twitter account had shared a meme from the racist 'alt-right' and offered no explanation why."

Trump's campaign later did some quick photoshopping, replacing the Star of David with a circle. I assume that, as with the other times Trump has retweeted something from the alt-right, he was unaware of its origin; one of his followers tweeted it to him, he liked what he saw and passed it on.

It's just a tweet, and in and of itself it doesn't make Trump a racist or an anti-Semite. To be honest, it doesn't even make the top 20 most bigoted things Trump has said or done in this campaign. But it should leave Republicans with even more questions about how to square the ideals they claim to hold with the man their party has chosen to lead the United States of America.

We have to understand that this is about both rhetoric and substance. There's a stylistic element, the way Trump gives people permission to let their ugliest feelings and beliefs out for display under the guise of not being "politically correct."

But there are also meaningful consequences for the course we would take in the future. Trump tells voters to hate and fear people who don't look like them, but he also tells them to take action.

In my analysis of American politics I try as often as possible to put myself in the shoes of people I disagree with, to take their arguments seriously and understand where they're coming from even when I'm convinced they're wrong. And I've argued that there are perfectly rational reasons why committed Republicans would grit their teeth and support Trump even if they found him to be an ignoramus and a buffoon.

But there comes a point at which one would have to say: Even if a Trump presidency would deliver much more of what I would want out of government policy, from the Supreme Court to domestic policy to foreign policy, I simply cannot be a part of this.

Donald Trump's appeal to Americans is so rancid, so toxic, so foul that my conscience will not allow me to stand behind him, even with the occasional protest that I don't agree with the latest vile thing he said, or the insistence that my fellow Republicans and I will do our best to restrain his ugliest impulses.

Donald Trump isn't hoping that he can keep his bigotry a secret; he's running on it and promising to enshrine it in federal government policy. He may not be responsible for all the things his fans say, and you might even excuse him for passing on some of their hate by mistake. What he is responsible for is all the reasons those people became his fans in the first place. It isn't because of economic anxiety, or because he's an outsider, or because he tells it like it is. It's because Donald Trump appeals directly to the worst in us, and the worst of us.

And every Republican who stands with him, no matter how uncomfortable it makes them or how much they wish he would change, will have that stench on them for a long time to come.

Editorial on 07/06/2016

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