By retweeting Britain First, Trump offends a decency he cannot understand
The Guardian
Opinion
By Brendan Fox
[Brendan Cox is the widower of former Labour MP Jo Cox and co-founder of More In Common]
If youre like me, you check the news each morning with the worry that Donald Trump might have tweeted his way to the third world war. So in some ways, the fact that all he did this morning was to retweet the world-view of a far-right extremist from the organisation Britain First is something of a relief. At least were not waking to gifs of mushroom clouds over Korea. But that is to take false comfort. That shouldnt be where we set the bar for the president of our closest ally.
It is fair to say that all of us who spend too much time on social Hes done so from calling Mexicans rapists to pledging a ban on all Muslims entering the country, to failing to disavow the neo-Nazis in Charlottesville. On Twitter hes retweeted far-right activists following Charlottesville, shared antisemitic memes against Hillary Clinton and shared content from @WhiteGenocideTM an account featuring dozens of racist memes. have probably retweeted people we might not be aware of, or who have dubious views on other issues. If this were a one-off, I might give President Trump the benefit of the doubt. But its not. Trump, from the beginning, throughout his campaign and since the election, has used hatred and bigotry to mobilise support.
Hes done so from calling Mexicans rapists to pledging a ban on all Muslims entering the country, to failing to disavow the neo-Nazis in Charlottesville. On Twitter hes retweeted far-right activists following Charlottesville, shared antisemitic memes against Hillary Clinton and shared content from @WhiteGenocideTM an account featuring dozens of racist memes.
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-Puzzler
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2017/nov/29/donald-trump-britain-first-hate-best-response-tolerance