journey, he mentioned a “Hispanic invasion” in his manifesto that is now circulating on the internet.
The link between the attacks and racism are so glaring that two days later even Trump has been forced to
openly denounce his most trusted tool: white supremacy. But these attacks were no coincidence. Trump has
tweeted about Latino migrants invading the country before. At a rally in May, Trump laughed when – in
response to his question to the audience “how do we get rid of them?” – someone in the audience yelled:
“Shoot them!”
The shooter may have been a white supremacist since before Trump was president, but it is undeniable that
his presidency has legitimised white nationalist violence. The US has had a problem with mass public
shootings since the 1990s, but the violence in El Paso is a function of Trump’s long history of anti-
immigrant, racist rhetoric dating back to his “birther” days when Barack Obama was running for president.
It is also a function of the GOP’s historic resistance to gun control and their unwavering support of a
president who inspires and legitimises racism.
When asked about party opposition to gun regulation, the GOP talking point has long been that the
Republican Party is against government meddling in American lives. But GOP legislators have been quick
to push for laws that regulate women’s bodies and withdraw funds from organisations like Planned
Parenthood, which help women gain autonomy. Clearly, Trump and the GOP are mocking Americans.
The link between the attacks and racism are so glaring that two days later even Trump has been forced to
openly denounce his most trusted tool: white supremacy
Trump’s presidency has been leading up to this; a moment when the racial hatred and pandemonium stoked
by his rhetoric became both terrifyingly deadly and commonplace. Trump voters must take a hard look at
the man they elected to the Oval Office, as should the GOP members of congress that support him and have
done nothing to make America safe from gun violence or white supremacy.
We have a president who openly trolls minorities and calls Mexicans “rapists and murderers”; tells US
congresswomen to “go back to where they came from”; tries to ban Muslims from entering the country and,
when a white supremacist barrelled through a crowd of protestors killing a woman at a white nationalist
rally in Virginia, famously said: “There were very fine people on both sides.” But there are no good,
murderous racists. There are, however, enablers.
Republican members of congress have rarely called out Trump for his racist comments and policies. The
reason? At best, while they may not agree with his views, they’re worried about re-election and isolating
voters who support Trump’s racist world vision. At worst, they don’t say anything because they are letting
Trump do the dirty work for them. Either way, it’s unacceptable.
Republicans are worried about winning elections, not protecting their constituents. If they cared about
American lives, they would have done something about gun control long before Trump came to office.
Today’s self-professed Christian GOP legislators worship at the altar of the god of government contracts
and lobbyists; Jesus Christ and his message to “love thy neighbour” have nothing to do with it. The GOP is
no longer the party of Lincoln – it is now the party of hypocrites and hate-mongers who have anything but
the best interests of average Americans at heart. It is time we voted them out.
Trump and his GOP acolytes are Big Brother, looking down upon us and laughing cynically as we are
massacred in our cities, ridiculed in the international community for our handling of the gun violence crisis,
and more and more divided with every waking day.