Page 2 The Skanner January 31, 2018 ® Challenging People to Shape a Better Future Now Bernie Foster Founder/Publisher Republicans Will Ride with Trump Forever Bobbie Dore Foster Executive Editor A Jerry Foster Advertising Manager Christen McCurdy News Editor Patricia Irvin Graphic Designer Monica J. Foster Seattle Office Coordinator Susan Fried Photographer 2017 MERIT AWARD WINNER The Skanner Newspaper, es- tablished in October 1975, is a weekly publication, published every Wednesday by IMM Publi- cations Inc. 415 N. Killingsworth St. P.O. Box 5455 Portland, OR 97228 Telephone (503) 285-5555 Fax: (503) 285-2900 www.TheSkanner.com The Skanner is a member of the National Newspaper Pub lishers Association and West Coast Black Pub lishers Association. All photos submitted become the property of The Skanner. We are not re spon sible for lost or damaged photos either solicited or unsolicited. ©2018 The Skanner. All rights re served. Reproduction in whole or in part without permission prohibited. Local News Pacific NW News World News Opinions Jobs, Bids Entertainment Community Calendar d ay ! • L i ke u s o n F ac it SPECIAL ISSUE: BLACK HISTORY Feb. 22 to y • ebo o k • learn • co TheSkannerNews m me • nts fter every Trump out- rage, we go through a similar routine. Trump says or does something that most sane people believe to be over the top; he is round- ly condemned; some Repub- licans shake their heads; masses of people ask that something be done…and then it all fades into the next news cycle. What was different in con- nection with Trump’s recent alleged remarks against Af- rica, Haiti and Latin Amer- ica—the notorious “s--thole remarks”—was that some Republicans who were in the room at the time of the alleged remarks first played dumb and then claimed that the re- marks had not been verbal- ized. At that point, there was laughter in the audience. Yet, in talk show after talk show there is a question that keeps getting asked: why isn’t something being done about this situation? Why can’t Trump be brought back to the standard of a respectable politician? The answer is not very difficult, but has several parts. Here goes. Bill Fletcher Jr. The Global African First, he is not now nor has he ever been a “respectable” politician. Whether as a real- ity-show celebrity or candi- date for office or now as Pres- ident, he has insisted on being provocative. He believes in stirring things up. It is this modus operandi that inspired his right-wing populist base. They were not looking for what they believed as more of the same. On top of that it remains far from clear that Trump would understand how to be a respectable politi- cian in either case. It seems to run against his nature. Second, who will do any- thing about Trump? The Re- publicans control both houses of Congress, the White House and the U.S. Supreme Court. They look at Trump as a blunt force object that serves the in- terests of their agenda. Many of them may be personally uncomfortable with him, but they know that if they move to take him down, they may pro- vide momentum for the Dem- ocrats. They would rather that the United States become and remain a global laughing- stock, than lose the political edge. “ Trump’s in- fatuation with author- itarianism is not a simple rhetorical device used to increase rat- ings Third, the so-called mod- erate Republicans who are deeply uncomfortable with the crudeness of Trump wor- ry that they will be challenged in Republican primaries by the extreme right should they move against Trump. Perhaps they wonder and hope that there will be deeper revela- tions in the Mueller investi- gation of alleged Trump/Rus- sia ties, but for now they will do nothing. Thus, holding Trump ac- countable is a matter of polit- ical power. It is not a matter of morality and good will. If those who see the Trump re- gime as a threat to humanity do not engage in mass politi- cal action, including, but not limited to, electoral politics, the situation will go from bad to worse. By worse, I mean growing authoritarianism. And here we must all be clear that Trump’s infatuation with authoritarianism is not a simple rhetorical device to increase the ratings. It seems to reflect the centerpiece of his worldview: Life is about Trump; Trump is the savior of the U.S.; Trump’s ideas are the greatest that humankind has every experienced. Those who get in the way of Trump’s truth, therefore, are enemies who must be removed. The challenge is now ours. Bill Fletcher, Jr. is a talk show host, writer and activist. Fol- low him on Twitter @BillF- letcherJr, and Facebook. What We’ve Lost During Trump’s First Year info@theskanner.com in y o u r c o m m u n Opinion T he year leading up to his inauguration in 2017, as the Republican presi- dential nominee, Donald Trump espoused senseless, baseless and ultimately emp- ty assertions about the state of Black Americans and our communities. “What the hell do you have to lose?” he screamed in front of a predominantly White crowd in a small, predomi- nantly White suburb of Lan- sing, Michigan. After Trump was inau- gurated, the Congressional Black Caucus (CBC) found it prudent to answer his question. In March, the CBC Executive Committee, led by our Chairman Cedric L. Richmond (D-La.), presented Trump with a 130-page policy document entitled, “We Have A Lot To Lose: Solutions to Advance Black Families in the 21st Century.” The document, which was compiled by the entire 49-member Caucus, outlined policy solutions down to the bill text for issues facing our communities. Voting rights, criminal justice reform, eco- nomic justice, education, health care, immigration – these were just some of the topics we presented to contin- ue our progress. Unfortunately, these are the issues that Trump and his ad- ministration have chosen to ignore. The President, who has not commented on the document since we present- ed it to him, obviously has had other ideas, almost as if he wanted to answer his own Rep. Karen Bass Senator (D-Calif.) question in his first year, to show us what we can lose. The truth is that in this first year, we’ve lost a lot. Almost immediately after being elected, Trump estab- lished the Presidential Ad- visory Commission on Elec- tion Integrity and appointed a known vote suppressor to lead it. The commission was designed to intimidate vot- ers and Trump—because of political and legal pressure— “ Hard-earned progress will never be safe so long as big- otry, hatred and racism hold power recently decided to dissolve it into the Department of Home- land Security. Throughout the past year, Trump has stacked the fed- eral courts with judges with nothing short of scandalous records when it comes to vot- ing rights. Among his nomi- nee group was Thomas Farr, who helped lawmakers draft and defend a 2013 law that the Fourth Circuit Court of North Carolina ruled targeted Af- rican American voters “with almost surgical precision.” On the criminal justice front, Trump has used the Department of Justice to em- brace mass incarceration and shy away from transparent policing. One example of this is an FBI report published last August entitled, “Black Iden- tity Extremists Likely Moti- vated to Target Law Enforce- ment Officers.” One problem with the report is that the term “Black Identity Extrem- ists” is an invented group that does not exist. There are no Black people organized to kill law enforcement offi- cers. When I asked Attorney General Jeff Sessions, Dep- uty Attorney General Rod Rosenstein and FBI Director Christopher Wray about the origins of this report, none of them could tell me what the report was even based on or how the term was created. Economically, Trump has gone after our consumer pro- tections. Congress is working to repeal Dodd-Frank, a land- mark piece of legislation de- signed to protect consumers from the wreck of the 2009 recession. Trump’s favoring of big banks will ultimately leave consumers in the same spot they were during the re- cession, or worse. In 2014, for the first time ever, the major- ity of public school students in the United States were non-White. Secretary DeVos has been less than helpful to these institutions, ignoring grave disparities in how stu- dents of color are disciplined compared to White students, and supporting a budget that would further attack services that public schools provide. Trump has also gone after our healthcare by actively sab- otaging the Affordable Care Act, continually issuing state- ments citing death spirals and other doomsday prophesies in addition to cutting funding for advertisements and allow- ing health insurance compa- nies to sell short-term plans with inadequate coverage. Trump and other Republican leaders have already openly discussed cuts to the social safety net, meaning Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security, as justification for their defi- cit-exploding tax plan. Trump has spent a consid- erable amount of time attack- ing Black immigrants and their countries with both his racist words and policies. In addition to referring to Hai- ti and African countries as “shitholes,” he’s attacked re- cipients of the Diversity Visa Program, rescinded the De- ferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program and scheduled the elimina- tion of Temporary Protective Status for many countries like Haiti and El Salvador. The entire reason we have this program is to help pro- tect immigrants from ills in their home country, which can range from famine to civ- il war. To deport hundreds of thousands after opening our borders to them is unconscio- nable. When we look at the is- See TRUMP on page 11 nt • lo c a l n e w s • eve