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After Riot, NY Times Taunts ‘Law and Order’ Trump as ‘Hollow,’ a Mantra for Police Racism


 
By Clay Waters

The New York Times again attacked President Trump’s “law and order” rhetoric by implying it’s racist (and that Trump himself is racist) while insisting the phrase has backfired on Trump after the disgusting spectacle of the riot on Capitol Hill.

Reporter Elaina Plott’s “political memo,” “How Trump’s ‘Law and Order’ Mantra Was So Loaded Yet So Hollow,” also smeared the police as a group while downplaying the political damage wrecked by the left’s cry to “defund the police.”

For years, the phrase rolled off his tongue in times of strife, a rallying cry to his predominantly white base.

So it was unsurprising when, on the day after his supporters stormed the Capitol, he uttered those familiar three words just 20 seconds into a video filmed from the White House.

“America is, and must always be,” Donald Trump declared, “a nation of law and order.”

Plott boasted Trump’s “favored mantra had become all but meaningless.”



Ever since descending the gilded escalator of Trump Tower to announce his presidential bid in 2015, Mr. Trump has tethered his success to the politics of law and order, stoking fears and then positioning himself as the only person capable of confronting them. As for what — or whom — Americans should fear, Mr. Trump virtually always targeted people of color and people who protested for their rights: Mexicans, migrants from Central America, Black Lives Matter activists, the diverse array of protesters in major cities last summer.

But this month, it was a largely white mob trawling the Capitol grounds with Trump banners and zip ties, and killing a police officer. And yet the president did not preside over a tear-gas-fogged show of force, as he had during a protest for racial justice before the White House last summer….

This piece of the “news analysis” could have been pasted from an editorial in the far-left Nation:

If Mr. Trump spent much of his presidency casting the G.O.P. as the party of law and order, he is concluding it by clarifying just who, in his view — and in his base’s view, the law was designed to order. It’s the Black Lives Matter protesters who are confronted and arrested by the police in Mr. Trump’s law-and-order America; the white mob, on the other hand, can expect officers who pause for selfies.

“This ‘Blue Lives Matter’ stuff was just a code word for race that they were using,” said Stuart Stevens, a longtime Republican strategist. “‘Law and order’? Here you have a police officer murdered on Capitol grounds, and the White House doesn’t even acknowledge it. It’s incredible.”

Stephens, a former Romney for President adviser and a truculent Trump critic, is a New York Times favorite. After the outbreak of rioting on Capitol Hill, he claimed on MSNBC that Trump “called on American terrorists to attack the Capitol, which they did more successfully than 9/11 terrorists.”

Plott argued that Trump law-and-order message didn’t work electorally, though her own paper admitted differently after the disappointing congressional results for Democrats in November.

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