• Subhuman White Trash Elitist Republicans See Themselves As A Pathetic O

    From a425couple@21:1/5 to All on Fri Feb 7 21:51:04 2025
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh

    White Republicans see themselves as oppressed.

    Even Rafael Ted Cruz agrees and he's as brown as a dog's stool


    Led by Trump, GOP increasingly casts White people as racism�s victims




    Early barbs for President Joe Biden�s Supreme Court selection process
    have helped crystallize a rising Republican line of attack against
    Democrats.

    �He�s saying, �If you�re a White guy, tough luck,� � complained Sen. Ted
    Cruz of Texas.

    Cruz was referring to Biden�s vow to name a Black woman to the Supreme
    Court for the first time in American history. But that same sense of
    grievance propels the drive by Republican state and local officials to
    shield the psyches of White students through constraints on what schools
    teach about slavery and modern-day discrimination against non-White
    people

    It finds its starkest expression, characteristically, from the top
    Republican of all. In recent days former President Donald Trump has
    falsely accused Democrats of putting White people at �the back of the
    line� for coronavirus medical care and has blasted prosecutorial
    �racists� � a jibe at Black women in New York and Atlanta who are probing
    his conduct.




    Appeals to bigotry are nothing new for Trump. The modern Republican
    Party itself has been shaped in crucial ways by racial division long
    before he entered politics.

    But what�s striking now, nine months before midterm elections, is how explicitly Trump and his GOP followers have embraced a theme that inverts
    the onus of racism in America. Whatever history shows, they insist, White people today represent its victims at least as much as Blacks and other minorities.

    The theme�s effectiveness is uncertain. Unlike Barack Obama, the first
    African American President, who preceded him in the White House, Trump
    lost his reelection bid. But it has become second nature to the twice- impeached former President and a large swath of the GOP.

    �The message,� as Democratic pollster Cornell Belcher puts it, �is to
    pour as much gasoline on the fire of White grievance and victimhood as
    possible to energize and mobilize their vote.�

    Trump�s rise has been both cause and effect of that swelling grievance.
    The so-called �Southern strategy,� from which Republicans harvested
    support from racial conservatives after Democrats nationally embraced the
    civil rights movement in the mid-1960s, proved a formative event in the
    party�s evolution.

    Race-driven wedge issues, from school busing to welfare to criminal
    justice, subsequently gained increasing prominence in Republican
    politics. In deference to the sensibilities of more socially liberal
    voters, as the late strategist Lee Atwater once explained, GOP candidates
    over time stripped overt racial references from discussion of those
    issues.

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