Donald Trump Refuses to Talk About His Role in the Racist Birther Movement
Years after the issue was debunked, Donald Trump still refuses to back away from the birther conspiracy he helped fuel.
“I don’t talk about it,” Trump told NBC’s Ali Vitali on Monday.
Trump re: Obama's birth place: "I don't talk about it."
Has that ever absolved any other politician from past statements?— Ali Vitali (@alivitali) September 5, 2016
Trump made similar comments to “Late Show” host Stephen Colbert last year.
(h/t Huffington Post)
Reality
First of all, President Obama was born in Hawaii. Shut up.
And second, Donald Trump rose to political fame with the questioning of the legitimacy of America’s first black President, with a clear origin in racial prejudice.
In March 2011 when Trump appeared on “The View” and asked the panel, “Why doesn’t he show his birth certificate?” While on Fox News’s “On the Record,” Trump demanded, “I want to see his birth certificate.” In an interview with NBC’s “Today Show,” he revealed, “I’m starting to think that he was not born here.”
And in the most irony of ironies, Trump has refused to release his own birth certificate and passport information.
2011 Birther Study on Racism
A 2011 study of birthers in the Journal of Experimental Social Psychology showed racial prejudice played a substantial role in those who believed the claims that Obama wasn’t an American.
“The influence of racial prejudice in contemporary U.S. society is typically manifested in subtle, indirect forms of bias. Due to prevailing norms of equality, most Whites attempt to avoid appearing biased in their evaluations of Blacks, in part because of a genuine desire to live up to their egalitarian standards, but also because of concern regarding social censure. As a consequence, Whites’ prejudice is more likely to be expressed in discriminatory responses when these actions can be justified by other factors.”