The Donald Trump campaign just can’t help itself. Throughout this election season, as an unpopular and hapless Democratic Party threatened to hand him a victory virtually by default, we’ve gotten hints that a more disciplined, politically smarter Trump might show up — only for the candidate and his allies to sabotage themselves with off-putting, oddball behavior in a fit of overconfidence.
It’s too early to say if a piece of arrogance-driven self-sabotage is what the campaign’s incendiary, racist rally at Madison Square Garden last night is going to end up being. But it certainly fits the bill.
Trump and the GOP, who are supremely confident of a big victory and already measuring the White House drapes, decided to use the major, widely covered Manhattan rally a week before voting as an opportunity to remind the country of everything people find alienating and scary about the candidate and his movement. Trump’s reported intention to strike a mood of conciliation and unity after his near death this summer — an intention that lasted roughly a single day — is long gone, as speaker after speaker got up on stage to say unhinged, often vile things, including the candidate himself.
Trump’s opponent, Kamala Harris, is “the devil,” “the antichrist,” and “on the side of the terrorists,” and was trying to become “the first Samoan-Malaysian low-IQ former California prosecutor” president whose “pimp handlers will destroy our country.” Hillary Clinton is “some sick bastard” and a “sick son of a bitch,” and “the whole fucking [Democratic] party, a bunch of degenerates, lowlives, Jew haters.”
“America is for Americans and Americans only,” said Trump adviser Stephen Miller, in a night that saw billionaire Elon Musk, an immigrant who once worked illegally in the country, attend and speak from the stage. Trump himself once more talked about the “enemy within” — specifically, a “massive, crooked,…
La suite est à lire sur: jacobin.com
Auteur: Branko Marcetic

