This blog was published in the Huffington Post: http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/tess-finchlees/fascism-must-never-trump-_b_13135302.html
Yesterday, Barack Obama asked world leaders to give Donald Trump a chance. To do what exactly? Create a Muslim data base? Build a wall to keep Mexicans (some of whom are nice, the rest are thieving rapists) out? Appoint a white supremacist to his cabinet, signalling that black lives don’t matter? Or, Replace workplace equality laws with a “grab a p***y” day?
Yesterday, Barack Obama asked world leaders to give Donald Trump a chance. To do what exactly? Create a Muslim data base? Build a wall to keep Mexicans (some of whom are nice, the rest are thieving rapists) out? Appoint a white supremacist to his cabinet, signalling that black lives don’t matter? Or, Replace workplace equality laws with a “grab a p***y” day?
If it’s possible to become the president of the United
(now Divided) States of America by
detonating a dirty bomb of bigotry, inciting hatred and civil unrest, we either
accept that fanning the flames of fascism is a legitimate means by which to obtain
power, or we reject it. There’s no middle ground.
I stand with the principled people of America and
internationally who reject the legitimacy of Trump’s presidency. In a growing
movement of conscientious objectors to the normalisation of fascism, one of the
most powerful admonitions came from a fellow Dubliner, Senator Aodhan O’Riordain.
In a speech which has gone viral, he lambasts Trump as “ a monster” and
describes what’s happening in Britain as “appalling”.
Post Brexit, a UN report criticised the EU referendum campaign for using
divisive, anti-immigrant and xenophobic rhetoric. It read, “Many prominent political
figures not only failed to condemn it but also created and entrenched
prejudices, thereby emboldening individuals to carry out acts of intimidation
and hate towards minority communities”. An
EU referendum leaflet was found in the bag of the man accused of Jo Cox’s
brutal murder. A man described as a white supremacist obsessed with far right
extremism.
Donald Trump’s campaign
bore all the hallmarks of Nazi propaganda. The slogan “Make America great
again” and the proposed Muslim database, are straight out of Hitler’s handbook.
Appointing Steve Bannon, a man accused of misogyny and endorsed by the Ku Klux Klan,
as chief strategist, was a gratuitous act of provocation.
Fascism thrived in the wake
of the economic depression of the 30’s, preying on fears and pitting
communities against each other, competing for dwindling resources. In the wake
of a global economic crash now, the far right is invoking the same dangerous
tactics.
Capitalism, the illegitimate child of corporate greed
and de-regulation, has made a mockery of democracy. There is nothing free about
the markets. Corporate giants, with their ubiquitous lobbies buy government
policies favourable to their survival. Eroding competition, democracy, human
rights and environmental protections in the process.
Rather than admit that unrestrained capitalism has
failed, and unable to extol any discernible benefits for the masses, Trump,
like neoliberal proponents in the UK and elsewhere, seek instead to divert
public rage against those they perceive to be “other”. Lack of jobs, school
places and affordable housing is blamed on immigrants, rather than a bankrupt
ideology that starves public services of investment and siphons public funds
into the pockets of the rich.
Bernie Saunders’ authentic socialist convictions would,
I believe, have spoken to the 15 million disaffected families living in poverty
in the US and inspired more people to vote for him. There can be no doubt
however that, of the two presidential candidates, only one was qualified for
the job. Instead, the richest man, bereft of any credentials, snatched it from the
abundantly more qualified woman, Hilary Clinton.
One thing is clear, the electorate is fed up of “centrists”
who sit on the fence, hedging their bets. People are angry and demand change.
Fielding insipid candidates and policies that fail to get people off their
sofas to vote is a losing formula.
We need a strong left, unashamed in its defence of immigration,
for example. Instead of pandering to the far right, the left should be
expounding the virtues of immigration and the fact that an increase of
immigrants by just 3% in the workforce of wealthy countries would boost world
GDP by $356 billion by 2025. Immigrants didn’t cause the financial crash but we
need them (of whom I’m one) to recover from it.
In the UK at least, there’s a vibrant resurgence of
the left underway, driven by grass roots movements, like Momentum, inspired by Jeremy Corbyn’s socialist policies.
Predicated on fairness, social justice, redistribution of wealth and equality,
as opposed to self-aggrandisement, hate and fear.
But, for democracy to function and for the left to
succeed in providing a healthy alternative narrative, we need a progressive,
responsible media. Where are the regular forthright left wing commentators to
counter the ubiquitous right wing goaders such as Katie Hopkins and Toby Young?
Last Friday I watched the BBCs Have I Got News For You. A
misogynist, xenophobic, racist had just been elected president of America. Yet,
the most senior, accomplished, black female politician in Britain, Diane Abbott,
was mocked for the way she speaks.
Trump and Brexit have dragged political debate into the gutter. The wounds
inflicted will linger long after the stench of flatulent rhetoric has
dissipated into the choke damp ether.
Now is not the time to
hide in a bunker. If something’s worth fighting for, be it the NHS, libraries,
equality, or multi-culturalism, get out and fight for it. It’ll take more than
armchair activism to salvage any hope from this wreckage.
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