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New York Times | Opinion: The Trump Guide to Civil Discourse

September 23, 2024

The classic example of chutzpah is that of the child who murders his parents and then pleads for mercy as an orphan. With the 2024 presidential election, we have a new way to illustrate the point: the candidate who condones violence, dehumanizes his opponents and whips his supporters into a frenzy, then turns around to condemn the harsh rhetoric of his opponents and call for peaceful discourse.

Following the second attempt on his life in two months, Trump blamed Democrats for casting him as a threat to American democracy.

“Look,” his running mate, JD Vance, said on Monday(link is external), “we can disagree with one another, we can debate one another, but we cannot tell the American people that one candidate is a fascist and if he’s elected, it is going to be the end of American democracy.” (It should be noted that Vance has said(link is external) repeatedly(link is external) that he would have helped the former president in his attempt to overturn the results of the 2020 election.)

Trump himself was more direct. “Their rhetoric is causing me to be shot at, when I am the one who is going to save the country,” he said in an interview(link is external) with Fox News.

The obvious problem here is that Trump is infamous, going back to his first campaign for president, for condoning, encouraging and even inciting violence among his supporters.

When told in 2015 that two Boston brothers invoked him in an assault on a homeless Hispanic man, Trump said that the people who followed him were “passionate(link is external).”

“They love this country,” he said. “They want this country to be great again. But they are very passionate. I will say that.”

When faced with a protester at a rally in Alabama, he shouted for attendees to remove him. “Get him the hell out of here!” Trump said, as rallygoers appeared to kick and punch the protester. “Get him out of here! Throw him out!”

“Maybe he should have been roughed up,” Trump said the next day(link is external), “because it was absolutely disgusting what he was doing.”

As president, Trump urged(link is external) the police to be violent when handling suspects (“When you see these thugs being thrown into the back of a paddy wagon, you just see them thrown in, rough, and I said, please don’t be too nice”); praised(link is external) Representative Greg Gianforte, Republican of Montana, for assaulting a reporter; and threatened to shoot “thugs” during the 2020 George Floyd protests. “When the looting starts, the shooting starts,” he wrote on Twitter(link is external).

Trump used social media and the platform of the presidency to flood American life with a steady stream of dehumanizing anti-immigrant and anti-Muslim rhetoric. He attacked the four congresswomen known as the Squad by telling them to “go back” to the “crime-infested places from which they came(link is external).”

Perhaps it was a coincidence that in 2016, reported hate crimes jumped by 226 percent(link is external) in counties that hosted Trump campaign rallies. Perhaps it was a coincidence that hate crimes reached a 16-year high(link is external) during Trump’s time in office, with a significant increase of violence against Latinos. Perhaps it was a coincidence that the Tree of Life shooter, who killed 11 Jewish worshipers in the worst incident of antisemitic violence in American history, ranted about the same migrant “caravan” that Trump hyped as a threat to the nation(link is external) in the run-up to the 2018 midterm elections. And perhaps it was a coincidence that the young man who traveled 10 hours to target Mexican Americans in El Paso, killing 23 people, also echoed Trump’s constant warnings of an immigrant “invasion(link is external)” from Latin America.

Responding to violence orchestrated against his political opponents, like the attack on Paul Pelosi that was originally intended for Nancy Pelosi, Trump laughed and joked(link is external). And then there is the grand finale of the former president’s inducements to violence during his term in office, the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol. Trump told an angry crowd of his supporters that they must “fight like hell(link is external)” to keep him in the White House because if they didn’t, they weren’t “going to have a country anymore.”

In the three years since, an emboldened Trump — free of any serious accountability thanks to the cowardice of the Republican Party and the supine compliance of the conservative members of the Supreme Court — has increased his use of dehumanizing rhetoric.

His political opponents, Trump says, are “vermin(link is external).” And undocumented immigrants accused of crimes, he says, are subhuman(link is external): “The Democrats say, ‘Please don’t call them animals. They’re humans.’ I said, ‘No, they’re not humans, they’re not humans, they’re animals.’” And as we’ve seen in recent weeks, he will not hesitate to spread lies(link is external) about people whose only offense was to come to this country in search of a better life.

For nearly a decade, Trump has fomented an atmosphere of political violence. Much of his appeal rests on the promise that he will dominate his enemies — who, through him, become the people’s enemies — and remove them from the body politic.

Political violence has always been part of American public life. But to the extent that it is today an acute problem, it is impossible to separate from the terrible influence of Donald Trump.

On Monday, Trump blamed Democrats for political violence(link is external). “Because of this Communist Left Rhetoric, the bullets are flying, and it will only get worse,” he wrote.

But there is only one politician who has placed violence at the center of his movement. Only one politician who is running for president on a promise of “retribution.” Only one politician who has promised that if he is elected again, he will unleash the state against a wide array of disfavored groups.

Of course, Trump is not responsible for the attempts on his life, but if American politics is more violent than it has been, it’s hard not to notice that he tilled the soil that helped make it so.