I’ve been wondering about the problem of young people growing up in a time when Donald Trump is ubiquitous and seen as a normal political leader. The youngest voters were only 6 years old the last time we had a presidential election in which he wasn’t the candidate. He might as well be FDR to them. It became particularly worrisome to me when I heard about all those text messages being sent to Black kids and girls right after the election saying they were going back to the plantation or “your body my choice” and processions in the halls of high schools waving Trump flags. It’s just so ugly.
This piece by a high school senior says it all:
After Trump’s victory, it became okay to be young and a Trump supporter and anti-woke. It became okay to make offensive jokes, which in many cases were not jokes but just crude and rude insults. It became okay to support the oppression of marginalized groups.
I attend a school that fits well into Middle American Republicanism in the Northeast. I won’t repeat the many things I’ve heard in class and the halls that would be classified as hate. But this isn’t limited to my school, my region, or even the deep red states where racism has always been front and center.
The Los Angeles Times reported this week that “pro-Trump students at Beverly Hills High School held two days of what the [school] district termed “spirited demonstrations” to celebrate the election results. Boisterous students chanted pro-Trump slogans and carried flags mounted on poles throughout the school — but some Black students said racial slurs and racist rhetoric were used. The rallying students knocked on and tried to open the door of the classroom where the Black Students Union was meeting, which caused some of the teens and the teacher in the room to fear for their safety.”
The LATimes continued, referring to a student-run mock election that Trump narrowly won:
“Trump supporters at the school rallied rowdily in courtyards and hallways, shouting pro-Trump slogans as they rushed around the school. The rallies made many students who don’t support the former president feel uncomfortable.
“Students were seen screaming profanity throughout the two rallies and were aggressive to those with opposing views. Everyone has the right to express their political views, but countless students and teachers felt unsafe with the crowd’s mob-like behavior,” wrote the editors of Highlights, the high school’s student-run publication.
[…]
Miss Universe was crowned on November 16th. The blonde-haired, blue-eyed Danish woman, Victoria Kjaer Theilvig, who is now Miss Universe, unwittingly became conservative’s Miss Everything as they tweeted racist and transphobic things against other beauty queens with darker hair and skin.
Among these conservatives was Donald Trump Jr. He wrote on X, “Biologically & objectively attractive women are allowed to win beauty pageants again. WE ARE SO BACK!!!”
Other conservatives took his statement, copied and pasted it, and flooded X with it.
She also talks about a new casual racism and sexism among her peers. There’s no defense for such behavior, of course. But can we be surprised by it? Look at the leadership of the winning political party. Look at the voters who support them. Look at all these important media figures and business leaders rushing to cater to Donald Trump, the most openly crude person to ever win the presidency, ushering in a whole new era of hate and bigotry into our politics. Why would kids not think this isn’t acceptable in our society, celebrated, even? It clearly is!
We had the chance to repudiate this grotesque public behavior and we failed. So now we will have 12 straight years of it. If we are to assume that most people become slightly politically sentient at about 12, that means when Trump finally ends his tenure (if he does) nobody in this country under the age of 24 will have ever been aware of a world in which the president and his followers behaved any differently. The next presidential election the youngest voters will have been born the year Obama became president.
Trump’s legacy is more that border walls and tax cuts I’m afraid,.