Thursday, August 11, 2016

Three Families Respond To Trump's "Second Amendment People" Remark


John F. and Robert Kennedy's sister and nephew, Jean Kennedy Smith and William Kennedy Smith:
By now, we have heard enough dark and offensive rhetoric from Trump to know that it reflects something fundamentally troubled, and troubling, about his candidacy. Trump’s remarks frequently, if not inevitably, spark outrage, which is followed by a clarification that, in lieu of an apology, seeks to attribute the dark undertones of his words to the listener’s twisted psyche. This fools no one. Whether you like what he is saying or, like a growing segment of the electorate, you reject it, it is easy to grasp Trump’s meaning from his words. But what to make of a candidate who directly appeals to violence, smears his opponents and publicly bullies a Gold Star family, a decorated prisoner of war and a reporter with a disability, among others? To borrow the words of Army Counsel Joseph Welch, directed at another dangerous demagogue: “Have you no sense of decency, sir, at long last? Have you left no sense of decency?” 
The truth remains that words do matter, especially when it comes to presidential candidates. On that basis alone, Donald Trump is not qualified to be president of the United States.
Ronald Reagan's daughter, Patti Davis:
“I am the daughter of a man who was shot by someone who got his inspiration from a movie, someone who believed if he killed the President the actress from that movie would notice him,” Davis wrote in a Facebook post published late Wednesday. 
She reminded the real estate developer and former reality TV star that his supporters take his words seriously, even he doesn’t. 
“Your glib and horrifying comment about ‘Second Amendment people’ was heard around the world,” Davis said. “It was heard by sane and decent people who shudder at your fondness for verbal violence.”
Dr. Martin Luther King's daughter, Dr. Bernice King: