David Duke Be Damned, When Will Donald Trump 'Disavow' the Klan?

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Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump speaks at a rally at the Fort Worth Convention Center on February 26, 2016 in Fort Worth, Texas. Trump is campaigning in Texas, days ahead of the Super Tuesday primary.  

Photo by Tom Pennington/Getty Images

Donald Trump is a racist. He says racist things, has endorsed racist policies while running for president and has engaged in racist practices while running his various businesses over the last 40 years. As most of American history shown us, being a racist is by no means a disqualification for running for president, however, accepting the support of a terrorist organization should be.

Trump was openly endorsed by former Ku Klux Klan Grand Wizard David Duke and his campaign is accepting help from the KKK, America’s oldest and most deadly terrorist organization. If that isn’t a wake-up call to African American voters in particular I don’t what will be.

Last Friday, Trump was asked by a reporter how he felt about being endorsed by Duke (as well as by several other Klaverns across the country). Trump, visibly annoyed by the question, said that he “disavowed” Duke, but not the KKK. After 48 hours of criticism from Ted Cruz, Marco Rubio, the RNC and just about anyone else involved in the 2016 campaign, Trump tweeted his “disavowed” clip again on Saturday. Then things got really interesting. During a Sunday morning interview with CNN’s Jake Tapper, when asked again about the endorsement Trump lied and claimed to “not know” David Duke, then said he had no idea which organizations did or did not support him.

The press has been all over this story most of Sunday, but hasn’t really tapped into how serious this situation is. Let us be clear: The Ku Klux Klan is a terrorist organization. Like Boko Haram, or al-Qaeda or ISIS. They, and their offshoots, have killed thousands of African Americans, beaten even more and just a few days ago Ku Klux Klan members protesting Mexican immigrants stabbed three counter protesters during a brawl. Any candidate claiming to not know what the Klan is while not universally distancing themselves from the organization in every way possible is a threat to national security, and a specific threat to the American people.

Mainstream media outlets allow uninformed cops, pundits and analysts to suggest all day long that BlackLivesMatter activists, or the Black Panthers or even President Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama are terrorists. And yet here we are with an actual terrorist organization supporting a candidate, and him giving them a pat on the knee under the table, and no one will call this what it is. (Well, maybe one person.)

Further, this speaks volumes about the state of public discourse around race in America and how bigotry is soft peddled for political gain. Trump lied on CNN. Not only does he know who David Duke is, 16 years ago he disliked him so much he didn’t join the Reform Party for fear of being associated with racists.   

Said Trump in a statement then published by the New York Times back in 2000: “The Reform Party now includes a Klansman, Mr. Duke, a neo-Nazi, Mr. Buchanan, and a communist, Ms. Fulani. This is not company I wish to keep.”

However now, racists are okay so long as it’s politically expedient. Trump regularly has Neo-Nazis at his rallies and outside of one instance never “disavows” their support.

Between his first “disavowed” on Friday and his interview on Sunday, I’m sure Team Trump became aware of the fact that the American National SuperPac, founded by a consortium of white terror groups, has been making robo-calls on his behalf. Reports out of Super Tuesday states Minnesota and Vermont have revealed there are recorded calls telling voters Trump will stop the “gradual genocide against the white race” and to not vote for Marco Rubio because he’s “Cuban.” And just in case Trump claims to not know that this was going on, he admitted to accepting a $250 check from the organization’s founder William Daniel Johnson.

Lastly, this isn’t the Republican Party’s first or second flirtation with the Ku Klux Klan in recent months. In 2014, Steve Scalise (R-LA) was busted for speaking at a KKK rally in Louisiana and tacitly supporting David Duke, and he was summarily defended by Republicans. Even a member of the Congressional Black Caucus came out to cape for him. Not to mention the half dozen or so Republicans with KKK “associations” exposed by Anonymous in 2015.

Now is not the time for disingenuous discussion and hand wringing. By Trump’s own standards (considering he once said that all mosques should be looked into) his association with the KKK would make him unfit to serve as president. And while the process may allow for him to win the Republican nomination, any American, of any color, creed or nationality should go out, register to vote and make sure that he doesn’t become president of the United States. If the War on Terror starts at home, the least we can do is make sure candidates aren’t giving them aid and comfort.

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