Trump seeks to claim the mantle of history in
fiery Mount Rushmore address
The president’s speech, part of a July 4 weekend
celebration, comes after weeks of protests against racism and police brutality
that have forced broader discussions over America's monuments.
By JORDAN
MULLER
07/04/2020
12:16 AM EDT
President
Donald Trump on Friday issued a fiery condemnation of a "left-wing
cultural revolution" he said is mounting a "radical assault" on
American democracy in a speech steeped in historical hyperbole delivered
against the stunning backdrop of Mount Rushmore on the observed Fourth of July.
“Angry mobs
are trying to tear down statues of our founders, deface our most sacred
memorials and unleash a wave of violent crime in our cities,” Trump said. “They
think the American people are weak and soft and submissive.”
"Make
no mistake, this left-wing cultural revolution is designed to overthrow the
American revolution. And in so doing, they would destroy the very civilization
that rescued billions from poverty, disease, hunger and lifted humanity to new heights
of achievement, discovery and progress."
The
president’s speech, scheduled as part of a July 4 weekend celebration at the
South Dakota memorial, comes after weeks of nationwide protests against racism
and police brutality that have forced broader discussions over monuments to
racist historical figures.
It was a
divisive address that stood in stark contrast to a weekend holiday celebrating
national unity across a country also riven by a deadly pandemic.
"The
violent mayhem we have seen in the streets and cities that are run by liberal
Democrats in every case is the predictable results of years of extreme
indoctrination and bias in education, journalism and other cultural
institutions," Trump said.
Although
health experts have slammed Trump for holding the event amid a nationwide surge
in coronavirus cases, he did not directly refer to the virus or the country's
daily record-setting case toll.
Kim
Guilfoyle, the girlfriend of Donald Trump Jr. and a top Trump campaign
official, tested positive for coronavirus ahead of the president’s speech in
South Dakota on Friday, POLITICO confirmed.
Guilfoyle,
who traveled to Mount Rushmore to attend the event, was not in contact with the
president and did not travel on Air Force One. The New York Times first reported
Guilfoyle had tested positive.
South
Dakota Gov. Kristi L. Noem said the roughly 3,700 people who attended the event
did not need to wear masks or social distance. Like attendees of the
president's June rallies in Tulsa, Okla., and Phoenix, Ariz., thousands crammed
shoulder-to-shoulder to listen to Trump’s speech, his third campaign-style
event since the beginning of the pandemic.
The event
also featured fireworks and a flyover by Air Force One, Marine One and military
aircraft.
Trump has
come under fire for speaking at Mount Rushmore, a national landmark honoring
Presidents George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Theodore Roosevelt and Abraham
Lincoln with a history that has been scrutinized amid the nationwide protests.
Native
American groups — who consider the land on which the monument was built sacred
— staged protests outside, clashing at times with the National Guard.
“The
president needs to open his eyes. We’re people, too, and it was our land
first,” Hehakaho Waste, a spiritual elder with the Oglala Sioux tribe, told the
Associated Press.
Demonstrators
recently have torn down monuments to Confederate generals, colonial figures and
slaveholders nationwide, prompting the president to sign an executive order
calling for jail time for protesters who damage monuments. Noem pledged last
week to resist any attempt to alter or remove Mount Rushmore, a call echoed by
the president in his address.
Colleges
have renamed schools dedicated to patrons with histories of racism, and brands
like Aunt Jemima, Disney, and the Washington Redskins have announced plans to
consider dropping racist logos and imagery.
But to
Trump, many such protests and statements seem a challenge to his styling of
himself as a "law and order" president tasked with upholding the
nation's "splendid heritage."
"And
yet, as we meet here tonight, there is a growing danger that threatens every
blessing. Our ancestors fought so hard for, struggled, they bled, and the
nation is witnessing a merciless campaign to wipe out the history, defame our
heroes, erase our values and indoctrinate our children," he said.
"Against
every law of society and nature, our children are taught in school to hate
their own country and to believe that the men and women who built it were not
heroes, but that were villains. The radical view of American history is a web
of lies. All perspective is removed, every virtue is skewed, every motive is
twisted, every fact is distorted, and every flaw is magnified until the history
urged in the record is disfigured beyond all recognition."
Before
leaving the stage, Trump announced he would sign an executive order to
establish a “national garden of American heroes” featuring the building and
rebuilding monuments and statues of "historically significant Americans.
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário