Donald Trump reminds me a lot of Blue Collar guys on Construction jobs in the 1950s and 1960s. They spoke in similar ways to him. Often contractors talked like this too. And we all laughed a lot of the time with our opinionated friends who were builders and contractors. However, never would I elect any of them to the Presidency because they wouldn't know how to behave without starting a war or something. And the same thing goes with Donald Trump.
Why Latinos — and Other Americans — Are Fearful of Donald Trump's Crazy Talk
His coarse talk is empowering his supporters to speak their minds. ... The keynote speaker was Donald Trump, which was of little interest to me.
TIME - 2 days ago
Why Latinos — and Other Americans — Are Fearful of Donald Trump’s Crazy Talk
His coarse talk is empowering his supporters to speak their minds
A few years ago, I attended the North
Carolina Republican Party’s annual dinner in Greensboro–the first stop
on one of my road trips. The keynote speaker was Donald Trump, which was
of little interest to me. He was in his toxic birther phase; I assumed
it was a ploy to gin up interest in his reality-TV show. Anyway, I was
there to find out what North Carolina Republicans thought about things
that actually mattered. So I didn’t attend the press availability after
Trump’s speech, and that did not go unnoticed. Trump sent a minion out
to the lobby, where I was engaged in a really interesting conversation
with local tech entrepreneurs. “Mr. Trump noticed that you didn’t attend
the press avail,” he said, “but he’s willing to give you a one-on-one.”
No thanks, I said. And that was how I hoped
to handle Trump’s presidential campaign. It seems clear now that I’ve
made a mistake. I still don’t take Trump seriously as a candidate–he is
an incurious boor; it would be like electing an 8-year-old President–but
he has had two significant impacts on the campaign and the country, one
possibly positive and one dangerously negative.
He has blasted through the niceties of
American politics. He is rude, crude and ugly–and a significant wedge of
the public, mostly white men with a high school education, love it. He
has pulled back the curtain on our corroded political system, which has
been rendered inchoate–bland public performances accompanied by vicious
television ads–after 40 years of cynical massage by consultants and
pollsters. The dueling, dated dynastic candidacies, Clinton and Bush,
unwittingly demonstrate how blah it has all become. When Clinton
staffers leak to the press that she’s about to become “more human” and
Bush repeatedly describes himself as “passionate,” the smell of gooses
being cooked fills the air. When you need to say it, you ain’t doing it.
Trump has also blasted through the
ideological sclerosis of the two parties, combining some elements of
left-populism–higher taxes on the wealthy–with a very dangerous, barely
concealed racial hate mongering. He comes at a very dicey moment for the
American people–a moment of transformation from a white,
Christian-dominated nation into a gloriously mongrel polyglot. I’ve long
assumed that the diminution of white demographic power would be
accompanied by an increase in anger and frustration. That is the scab
Trump is picking. I’ve also assumed that this sort of nativist
xenophobia was a losing proposition: a new urban generation–not
color-blind but at ease with diversity of all sorts–would be a potent
countervailing force.
I still believe that, but I’ve also been
reminded that a lot of innocent lives are going to be Trumped along the
way. A few weeks ago, the New York Times reported on a Trump rally at a
football stadium in Alabama. A man named Jim Sherota, 53, who works for a
landscaping company, was quoted: “Hopefully, [Trump’s] going to … say,
‘When I become elected president, what we’re going to do is we’re going
to make the border a vacation spot, it’s going to cost you $25 for a
permit, and then you get $50 for every confirmed kill.'”
The blithe barbarity of the sentiment was
stunning. My first thought was of my daughter-in-law-to-be, a Latina
immigrant who is here legally, who is terrific at what she does, who is
admirable in every way. And then–lo and behold–a week later, my son told
me that she’d awakened in the middle of the night, terrified, and said,
“I’m scared of Trump.”
No doubt, Trump doesn’t want to establish a
human-hunting preserve at the border, but his coarse talk is empowering
his supporters to speak their minds; a delicate demographic transition
is being made more combustible. He is playing with nitroglycerin, which
is why Trump now has to be taken seriously and taken down.
People say to me, You must be having fun this
year. The ultimate theater has found its ultimate charlatan. Who knows
what’s going to happen next? Politics is interesting again, finally.
But that’s not how I feel. I watched Jeb Bush
do a solid, substantive town meeting in New Hampshire on Sept. 3–and
afterward, all the questions from the press were about Trump, who had
questioned Bush’s willingness to speak Spanish in public. There are real
issues to be discussed–including illegal immigration–but they are
crushed by Trumpery. And other candidates–Ted Cruz, Scott Walker–debase
themselves, and double down on the crudeness, by angling to snare
Trump’s constituency should he falter.
So this really isn’t much fun. I’m with mi hija latina: Tengo miedo también. I’m scared of Trump too.
This appears in the September 21, 2015 issue of TIME.
TIME Ideas hosts the world's leading voices, providing commentary
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