How Trump’s South Africa ‘White Genocide’ Lie Fuels His Long, Dangerous Anti-Black Narrative

Using South Africa's "White Genocide" myth, Trump continues to takes up the mantle of the aggrieved white man, who believes he's losing power.

White grievance and straight up racism are the animating features of Trumpism. Donald Trumpโ€™s rise and rule canโ€™t be understood without accepting that reality.

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Stefon Diggs and Cardi B Viral Boat Video Prompts Response from Patriots Coach
Stefon Diggs and Cardi B Viral Boat Video Prompts Response from Patriots Coach

Thatโ€™s why it was utterly predictable that the president would use Wednesdayโ€™s White House meeting with South Africaโ€™s president to aggressively push the fiction that white farmers are the victims of a genocide being carried out by Black South Africans.

โ€œWeโ€™ve had tremendous complaints about Africa, about other countries, too, from people,โ€ said Trump, who showed the South African president a video clip of a fringe leader there calling for white-owned land to be given to Black residents. โ€œThey say thereโ€™s a lot of bad things going on in Africa. And thatโ€™s what weโ€™re going to be discussing today.โ€

The video included what Trump described as the burial sites of โ€œover a thousandโ€ murdered white South Africans. None of it was true. Not the burial sites, which The New York Times reported was for a funeral procession for a single white couple that was killed. And not the โ€œgenocide,โ€ which no credible agency has confirmed.

The โ€œgenocideโ€ is a lie of breathtaking scope, one no president briefed by the worldโ€™s most sophisticated intelligence communities could espouse without understanding that he was lying.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fizA899TAVI

Trump, however, misses no opportunity to take up the mantle of the aggrieved white man, who somehow believes himself to be at imminent risk of losing status and power. Despite being born to extraordinary wealth and privilege, Trump embraces that sense of victimhood, that belief that โ€œothersโ€ - namely, Black people - are given unfair advantages and still complain about their lot.

This was the future president on NBCโ€™s โ€œMeet the Pressโ€ 1989: โ€œA well-educated Black has a tremendous advantage over a well-educated white in terms of the job market. If I were starting off today, I would love to be a well-educated Black because I really do believe they have an actual advantage today.โ€

Why wouldnโ€™t a man who embraces that lunacy NOT want to return to an earlier time in America when white men dominated everything everywhere and had no reason to sweat any โ€œBlack,โ€ well-educated or not? Most political movements are forward-looking, but Trumpโ€™s is a sepia-shrouded look back to when white men were omnipotent and America was great.

The crowds who packed venues to hear candidate Trump speak didnโ€™t do so in spite of that mindset. They did so because of it. And Trump, a truly gifted avatar, understands that pleasing his masses - and himself - means pointing out all of the instances when a white man was denied his due or made to feel bad for flexing his power.

So Trump makes a show of firing the Black Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and replacing him with a white man. Trump launches a sustained assault on diversity, equity and inclusion policies, believing they are a threat to white male dominance. His administration withdraws from reform agreements its predecessor made with police departments in Louisville and Minneapolis, both of which were the site of high-profile instances of Black people being killed by law enforcement. (No weak-kneed โ€œreformโ€ is needed if a police department routinely abuses the Black people itโ€™s supposed to protect! White men can flex; itโ€™s for others to fear.)

There are horrific scenes of mass violence actually taking place in this world. Trump reached for a fictional one in South Africa because it fits with the story he and many other white men tell themselves, one that has them as vulnerable victims. After all, if the focus is on that fiction, there would be no need, no justification, for programs and policies that lift up, protect and advance other people.

Straight From The Root

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