Racism, coded language and the "politics of distraction" in U.S. history
Directions
: Read the summary, watch the videos and answer the discussion questions below. You may want to turn on the "CC" (closed-captions) function and read along with the transcript
here
.
Summary:
President Donald Trump’s tweets about four female members of the U.S. House of Representatives have launched fierce debate about whether his meaning was racist. There is no doubt, though, that his words echo threats and insults that have been lobbed against perceived outsiders in America for generations. To explore the painful history, NewsHour's William Brangham talks to the University of Minnesota’s Erika Lee and UC-Berkeley’s Ian Haney Lopez.
"We have a political leader who, for his own benefit and for the benefit of his party, sees himself as leading the country further into division and hatred and violence," Lopez stated, adding that, "At the very moment that this is so treacherous, it's also an opportunity, because President Trump is making clear, through his actions, a dynamic that has actually plagued our country for the last 50 years since the civil rights movement." Trump denies his tweets to the Congresswomen, which involved him saying they should “go back and help fix the totally broken and crime infested places from which they came,” were racist. All four lawmakers are American citizens; three were born in the U.S.
3. Check out this daily news story from Classroom's new
#SuperCivics2020
series:
How to get along with our political opposites
,
which focuses on how Americans are struggling to approach opposing political opinions with civility instead of contempt and what can be done to fix the polarization problem.
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