Posted on Aug 1, 2019
"Have We No Decency?": National Cathedral questions Americans’ silence over Trump’s racism
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In a scorching letter condemning President Donald Trump’s recent racist attacks, the Washington National Cathedral questioned all those who continued to remain silent.
On Tuesday, the capital’s Episcopal cathedral released a letter titled “Have We No Decency? A response to President Trump,” which was signed by the church’s top leadership.
“This week, President Trump crossed another threshold,” wrote the Right Rev. Mariann Edgar Budde, bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Washington; the Very Rev. Randolph Marshall Hollerith, dean of Washington National Cathedral; and the Rev. Canon Kelly Brown Douglas, canon theologian of Washington National Cathedral, about Trump’s attacks on the city of Baltimore and its congressional representative, Elijah Cummings (D-MD).
“Not only did he insult a leader in the fight for racial justice and equality for all persons,” they continued, “not only did he savage the nations from which immigrants to this country have come; but now he has condemned the residents of an entire American city. Where will he go from here?”
The letter comes after Trump attacked Cummings on Twitter and called his Baltimore district a “rat and rodent infested mess,” and a “dangerous & filthy place.” As chair of the House Oversight Committee, Cummings has long been at odds with Trump. As Vox’s P.R. Lockhart points out, the president used old and racist tropes of black communities as being dirty and unhygienic in retaliation.
Earlier this month, Trump also launched racist Twitter attacks against four Democratic congresswomen of color — Reps. Ayanna Pressley, Ilhan Omar, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, and Rashida Tlaib — by telling them to “go back” to the “corrupt” countries he said they are from. The letter warned that Trump’s rhetoric would empower white supremacists and could eventually lead to violence.
The group made their message clear: “Words matter. And Mr. Trump’s words are dangerous.”
On Tuesday, the capital’s Episcopal cathedral released a letter titled “Have We No Decency? A response to President Trump,” which was signed by the church’s top leadership.
“This week, President Trump crossed another threshold,” wrote the Right Rev. Mariann Edgar Budde, bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Washington; the Very Rev. Randolph Marshall Hollerith, dean of Washington National Cathedral; and the Rev. Canon Kelly Brown Douglas, canon theologian of Washington National Cathedral, about Trump’s attacks on the city of Baltimore and its congressional representative, Elijah Cummings (D-MD).
“Not only did he insult a leader in the fight for racial justice and equality for all persons,” they continued, “not only did he savage the nations from which immigrants to this country have come; but now he has condemned the residents of an entire American city. Where will he go from here?”
The letter comes after Trump attacked Cummings on Twitter and called his Baltimore district a “rat and rodent infested mess,” and a “dangerous & filthy place.” As chair of the House Oversight Committee, Cummings has long been at odds with Trump. As Vox’s P.R. Lockhart points out, the president used old and racist tropes of black communities as being dirty and unhygienic in retaliation.
Earlier this month, Trump also launched racist Twitter attacks against four Democratic congresswomen of color — Reps. Ayanna Pressley, Ilhan Omar, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, and Rashida Tlaib — by telling them to “go back” to the “corrupt” countries he said they are from. The letter warned that Trump’s rhetoric would empower white supremacists and could eventually lead to violence.
The group made their message clear: “Words matter. And Mr. Trump’s words are dangerous.”
"Have We No Decency?": National Cathedral questions Americans’ silence over Trump’s racism
Posted from vox.com
Posted >1 y ago
Responses: 5
Posted >1 y ago
I wonder how it feels to have someone living rent free in your head.
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Posted >1 y ago
The Myth
If you tell a lie often enough, long enough and loudly enough the myth becomes accepted as a fact. Repetition, volume and longevity can twist and turn any myth or any lie into a commonly accepted way of doing things. Entire populations have been lulled into the approval of ghastly deeds and even participation in them by gradually moving from the truth to a lie. Throughout history, twisted logic, rationalization and incremental changes have allowed normally intelligent people to be party to ridiculous things. And when we participate in what the crowd identifies as normal, even if it is stupid, we gain acceptance into the club. Sometimes we don't even realize that what we are doing is stupid because we have been taught it is just "the way you do it", and so we never ask why. As we participate in the myth, we learn to spout the principles of the myth. After the years go by and we have invested more money and more time into the myth we become great disciples and can preach the points of the myth with great fervor and volume. We become such experts on the myth that we can sell others on joining the lie. And by the time someone comes along with the truth, we believe the truth is the myth.
I once joined the myth, but no more. The truth sits in this arena. I fully believe that. You learn how to become a free thinker. Not just a freedom fighter; a freedom vigilante! You take it into your own hands. And at the end of the day you take the blue pill or the red pill, because you take the blue pill Neo, and the story ends. And you wake up and believe what ever you want to believe. But you take the red pill and you stay in wonder land. And your own independent research shows you just how deep the rabbit hole goes.
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Now that the Russia Collusion is dead it is time to attack Trump on another front - racism. Guess he's the Grand Pu-bah of the KKK now. Any day now he will descend on Baltimore with burning crosses and vigilante crowds and the trees will be full of hangings.
You've drunk the (blue) kool-aid for so long now that your own background and training are failing you.
If you tell a lie often enough, long enough and loudly enough the myth becomes accepted as a fact. Repetition, volume and longevity can twist and turn any myth or any lie into a commonly accepted way of doing things. Entire populations have been lulled into the approval of ghastly deeds and even participation in them by gradually moving from the truth to a lie. Throughout history, twisted logic, rationalization and incremental changes have allowed normally intelligent people to be party to ridiculous things. And when we participate in what the crowd identifies as normal, even if it is stupid, we gain acceptance into the club. Sometimes we don't even realize that what we are doing is stupid because we have been taught it is just "the way you do it", and so we never ask why. As we participate in the myth, we learn to spout the principles of the myth. After the years go by and we have invested more money and more time into the myth we become great disciples and can preach the points of the myth with great fervor and volume. We become such experts on the myth that we can sell others on joining the lie. And by the time someone comes along with the truth, we believe the truth is the myth.
I once joined the myth, but no more. The truth sits in this arena. I fully believe that. You learn how to become a free thinker. Not just a freedom fighter; a freedom vigilante! You take it into your own hands. And at the end of the day you take the blue pill or the red pill, because you take the blue pill Neo, and the story ends. And you wake up and believe what ever you want to believe. But you take the red pill and you stay in wonder land. And your own independent research shows you just how deep the rabbit hole goes.
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Now that the Russia Collusion is dead it is time to attack Trump on another front - racism. Guess he's the Grand Pu-bah of the KKK now. Any day now he will descend on Baltimore with burning crosses and vigilante crowds and the trees will be full of hangings.
You've drunk the (blue) kool-aid for so long now that your own background and training are failing you.
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Col Joseph Lenertz
>1 y
Well said. Independent, rational, critical-thinking is needed now, as much as ever, in this great nation of ours. The words, "racism" and "Racist" have become so over-used and improperly used that they have lost all tie to the Meriam Webster definition. And soon even Meriam-Webster will have to modify the definition to reflect the myth-definition. Let us never distinguish again, the differences in meaning between bigotry, stereotyping, rudeness, crudeness, fact-based critique, and racism. All of them are now "racism".
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SGT (Join to see)
>1 y
The President has always struck me more as an elitist. I’m sure he’d rather have dinner with rich black folks than poor white folks. But allegations of racism towards The President aren’t new, and they particularly aren’t new since Russian Collusion became a buzz phrase.
These allegations and lawsuits go back nearly half a century. See below just a few of the more notable examples.
https://www.nytimes.com/times-insider/2015/07/30/1973-meet-donald-trump/?smid=tw-share&_r=0
https://www.upi.com/Archives/1992/10/19/Trump-Plaza-loses-appeal-of-discrimination-penalty/ [login to see] 00/
These allegations and lawsuits go back nearly half a century. See below just a few of the more notable examples.
https://www.nytimes.com/times-insider/2015/07/30/1973-meet-donald-trump/?smid=tw-share&_r=0
https://www.upi.com/Archives/1992/10/19/Trump-Plaza-loses-appeal-of-discrimination-penalty/ [login to see] 00/
David W. Dunlap looks back at some of the first Times mentions of Donald Trump.
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Posted >1 y ago
Ironic how no one thought Trump was racist until he ran against Democrats.
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