Last night in Fayetville
Multiple videos show a protester at a Donald Trump rally in North Carolina being sucker-punched by a Trump supporter.
The videos, which appeared on social media early Thursday and are shot from different perspectives, show an African American with long hair wearing a white T-shirt leaving the Trump rally as the audience boos. He is being led out of the rally by men in uniforms that read “Sheriff’s Office.” The man extends a middle finger to the audience on his way out.
Then, out of nowhere, the man is punched in the face by a pony-tailed man, who appears to be white, in a cowboy hat, black vest and pink shirt as the crowd begins to cheer. The protester stumbles away, and then is detained by a number of the men in uniforms, who handcuff him while he is on the ground.
The guy who was punched talked to the Post.
Rakeem Jones, the man who was hit, said the punch came out of nowhere.
“Boom, he caught me,” Jones told The Washington Post in a telephone interview. “After I get it, before I could even gain my thoughts, I’m on the ground getting escorted out. Now I’m waking up this morning looking at the news and seeing me getting hit again.”
He’d gone to the rally with some friends as a social experiment.
He said the woman with them started shouting once Trump’s speech began.
“She shouted, but at the same time, they were shouting too,” Jones, a 26-year-old inventory associate, said. “Everyone was shouting, too. … No one in our group attempted to get physical.”
Jones blamed the Cumberland County officers escorting him from the rally for failing to protect him — then detaining him instead of the man who attacked him.
Well yes, that seems highly blameworthy. Shouting at a shouty political rally isn’t a crime, while punching people is.
“It’s happening at all these rallies now and they’re letting it ride,” Jones said. “The police jumped on me like I was the one swinging.” He added: “My eye still hurts. It’s just shocking. The shock of it all is starting to set in. It’s like this dude really hit me and they let him get away with it. I was basically in police custody and got hit.”
Well, that’s fascism.
Ronnie C. Rouse, a man who shot one of the videos, was with Jones at the rally.
“We’re definitely anti-Trump,” Rouse told The Post.
Rouse said as soon as Trump’s speech began, someone in the crowd singled out him and his friends, screaming, “You need to get the f— out of there!” Rouse said that his group had not said anything and that the comment was unprovoked. But he said they were almost immediately surrounded by eight Cumberland County sheriff officers, who escorted them out. On the way up the stairs, the attack came.
Rouse, a 32-year-old musician, said he didn’t see the punch but saw the aftermath — his friend “slammed” by officers to the ground and handcuffed. Noting that someone in the crowd shouted, “Go home n—–s,” he said he was taken aback.
Trump is inciting this, and as far as I can tell he’s doing it knowingly and with malice aforethought.
“We’ve been watching all this stuff happen to everyone else,” Rouse said. “This isn’t Biloxi. This isn’t Montgomery. This is Fayetteville. … it’s a well-cultured area.” Noting Fayetteville’s proximity to Fort Bragg, he added: “I wanted to take my 11-year-old child, to give him a touch of what’s happening political-wise. I’m glad I didn’t. I’ve never been more embarrassed to be from here in my life. It’s just appalling.”
Appalling and very very scary.
Trump rallies are getting a reputation for violence by Trump supporters against disruptive protesters. Police in Fayetteville had to form a line separating pro- and anti-Trump groups outside the coliseum.
According to CBS New York, police are investigating at least two alleged assaults at a recent Kentucky rally. One involved a young African American woman who was repeatedly shoved and called “scum.”
Trump himself has not been quick to criticize the violence. After a fight erupted between protesters and police last year in Birmingham, Trump said: “‘Maybe he should have been roughed up.” Of a protester in Nevada last month, Trump said: “I’d like to punch him in the face.” In Kentucky, he said: “Get him out. Try not to hurt him. If you do I’ll defend you in court. … Are Trump rallies the most fun? We’re having a good time.”
Yes, that certainly is not being “quick to criticize the violence.”
‘Cowboy hat.’ Of bloody course.
“Trump himself has not been quick to criticize the violence.”
This sentence was seriously written by a professional writer for a major publication, followed by quotes of Trump expressly supporting and encouraging the violence. My childhood diary had higher journalistic standards.
Honestly, I thought that was a bit of deliberate understatement. I think the quotes do the job without needing help from the reporter. I do it that way myself quite often. Bloggers have more leeway, of course, but still, I don’t think that was bad journalism.
My problem with it is that (in my reading anyway) “has not been quick to criticize the violence” implies either being slow to make a critical statement, or having neither criticized nor condoned it. But he actively did comment on it in a way that wasn’t just not-critical, but in a way that seems strongly supportive. I agree that the writer was probably going for “deliberate understatement” but it comes off more as sloppy or inaccurate to me.
It is fascism. That’s what it is.
What scares me is that Trump won’t be the last. He’s inspired this, made it acceptable, and the media winked at it for far too long. Now it’s part of the zeitgeist.
Fair point – and on this issue it’s best to be crystal clear.
Wow. A Trump staffer assaulted a reporter–
–a Breitbart reporter. It’s OK, though, because he didn’t realize she was from Breitbart.
http://www.wehuntedthemammoth.com/2016/03/10/the-violence-at-trump-rallies-keeps-getting-worse-now-a-trump-staffer-has-assaulted-a-reporter/
For not the first time in Trump’s run*, I find myself thinking of:
https://xkcd.com/261/
And re Lady Mondegreen, exactly. People keep saying, oh, he won’t actually do that stuff. Let’s hope (and let’s hope he never gets the opportunity), but what he’s normalized is normalized already. For all their frustrating perniciousness, underground bigotries are to a degree limited by social constraints in the damage they can do. What he has made acceptable will be easier to see, but more immediately harmful.
(*And, probably, not the last.)
It’s really creepy how he’s getting away with this shit.
I was somewhat aware of an authoritarian cultural undercurrent in the US but I wasn’t expecting it to be this strong. It is really disturbing to see in action. Even if Trump loses there’s still the millions of people who supported him and were emboldened by him.
Even worse, the guy who punched him bragged about it on camera. He’s since been arrested and they’re investigating the deputies that were involved.
http://www.wral.com/man-charged-with-assaulting-protesters-during-trump-rally-in-fayetteville/15513151/
#7
A blatant acknowledgement of a basic premise of fascism: that violence is legitimised by politicical affiliation of the victim.
https://www.facebook.com/144310995587370/photos/a.271728576178944.71555.144310995587370/1136982122986914/?type=3&theater