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What a
bunch of spineless cowards they are.
A
year ago, just about every senior US Republican was calling Donald Trump unhinged,
dangerous and unfit to be president. Now they either look the other way or make
lame excuses as he demonstrates daily how right they were.
Backbones?
Who needs 'em? They know they were right all along, yet they stay silent. With
a few, heroic exceptions, they are demonstrating a disgraceful lack of any
sense that they owe it to their country to bring the Trump disaster to a speedy
end.
(Section 4 of the 25th amendment to the US
constitution reads: 'Whenever the Vice
President and a majority of either the principal officers of the executive
departments, or of such other body as Congress may by law provide, transmit to
the President pro tempore of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of
Representatives their written declaration that the President is unable to
discharge the powers and duties of his office, the Vice President shall
immediately assume the powers and duties of the office as Acting President.')
For
now, Washington watches in horror as the president, ostensibly marking Black
History Month, pays tribute to Frederick Douglass, who, he said, 'is an example
of somebody who’s done an amazing job and is getting recognised more and more,
I notice.'
Er,
what? Frederick Douglass died in 1895 and just happens to be probably the
best-known African-American social reformer of the nineteenth century, a former
slave who played a massively influential role in the abolitionist movement.
President Trump, it seems, has never heard of him.
His
ignorance, like his arrogance, is terrifying. He says that the countries from
which he has now banned all immigrants -- at least temporarily for now -- pose
a major threat to the security of the US.
Evidence?
None. Not a single citizen of Libya, Iran, Iraq, Somalia, Sudan, Syria or Yemen
has carried out a single fatal terrorist attack on US soil. Nor has a single
Syrian refugee killed a single US citizen on US soil.
This
isn't policy based on facts, fake or otherwise. This is policy based on bigotry.
It is
true that the countries singled out by Trump do harbour some terrorists --
indeed, according to one US immigration expert, six Iranians, six Sudanese, two
Somalis, two Iraqis, and one Yemeni have been convicted of attempting or carrying
out terrorist attacks on U.S. soil since 1975. Seventeen people over the past
forty-two years. No wonder the leader of the most powerful nation on earth is
quivering in fear.
On
the other hand, the couple who killed 14 people in an attack in San Bernardino,
California, in December 2015, were both of Pakistani origin (although one of
them had been born in the US). So is Pakistan on the ban list? It is not.
Nidal
Hasan, who killed 13 people on the Fort Hood military base in 2009, was born in
the US to Palestinian parents who had immigrated from the West Bank. So are
Palestinians on the ban list? They are not.
The brothers
who bombed the Boston marathon in 2013 were of Chechen origin. So is Russia
(Chechnya is part of Russia) on the ban list? It is not.
And
of course, the 9/11 hijackers came from Saudi Arabia, UAE, Egypt and Lebanon.
So are those countries on the ban list? They are not.
I apologise.
I should choose my words more carefully, because we're told that what President
Trump announced last weekend wasn't really a ban at all. According to his
spokesman Sean Spicer: 'A ban would mean people can’t get in, and we’ve clearly
seen hundreds of thousands of people come into our country from other
countries.'
So
who was the idiot who said: 'If the ban were announced with a one-week notice, the
"bad" would rush into our country during that week'?
Oops. It was President Trump. Who doesn't seem to know that no one from
any of the countries on his ban-that-isn't-a-ban list is allowed in to the US
without going through rigorous checks. Refugees usually have to wait for well
over a year before all the checks are completed.
Never mind. At least we now know who exactly is covered by this
ban-that-is-not-a-ban. Mo Farah can rejoin his family in Oregon, because according
to the UK Foreign Office, unless you're trying to get into the US directly from one
of the seven named countries, you've got nothing to worry about. It doesn't
matter where you were born, or even whether you have dual nationality.
So, for example, if you're a British-born jihadi, just back from Raqaa, as long as MI5 haven't spotted you,
you can jump on a plane at Heathrow and jet off to New York without a care in
the world. If, on the other hand, you're an eminent Iraqi physician, hoping to
take up the professorship you have been offered at Harvard medical school,
sorry, no chance.
It all makes perfect sense, doesn't it? Carefully thought out,
meticulously implemented. And you can tell that it's not aimed just at Muslims
because it affects everyone from the named countries. Well, everyone except
Christians, of course. And Jews, because if you're an Iraqi or Yemeni Jew with
an Israeli passport, you'll be fine as well.
Hmm.
The former mayor of New York and Trump uber-loyalist Rudy Giuliani says
he's the one who came up with the plan after Trump asked him to find a legal way
to implement a ban -- or not-a-ban -- on Muslim immigrants. Simples, said
Giuliani. 'We focused on ... the areas of the world that create danger for us,
which is a factual basis, not a religious basis. Perfectly legal,
perfectly sensible ... It's not based on religion. It's based on places where
there is substantial evidence that people are sending terrorists into our
country.'
'Substantial
evidence?' 'Factual basis'? Presumably that's why nearly a thousand -- a
thousand! -- State department officials and diplomats have signed a letter opposing
the measure. Experts, eh? What do they know?
I
hope Rex Tillerson, the former CEO of Exxon Mobil who is Donald Trump's
secretary of state, takes a hard look at the madhouse he has entered and
decides he wants no part of it. I hope defence secretary James Matiss, a former
general in the US Marine Corps, does the same. These men are not deranged
ideologues, blinded by bigotry. They should quit now, and explain why.
Their
consciences -- and those of hundreds more Republican politicians and officials
across the US -- can bring this nightmare to an end. Just as in Brexitland, the
consciences of Tory MPs who know that Theresa May is leading the UK towards a
precipice could also end a British nightmare.
I
have in mind the Tory MPs who claim to think 'The people have spoken' means 'I
surrender.' The Tory MPs who, if they lose an election, rush to tear up their
party membership and flock to join the Labour party. 'The people have elected a
Labour government. We must now support the Labour government.' I don't think
so.
And
the Labour MPs like Margaret Beckett, a former foreign secretary, no less, who
told the Commons that she was voting for the government's Brexit bill, even
though 'I still fear that its consequences, both for our economy and our
society, are potentially catastrophic.'
Washington isn't the only town where backbones are in short supply.
1 comment:
Democracy clearly sucks. But as Winston Churchill observed (more elegantly) the alternatives suck even more. However I doubt that democracies sucked as badly as they do now when he uttered his pronouncement.
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