FROLITICKS

Satirical commentary on Canadian and American current political issues

What Is It With Trump And All These Post-Election Rallies?

Someone should tell President Trump that the electioneering should have been over last November. However, once again Trump is planning to continue holding rallies to arouse the masses.  For example, Trump is pressing forward with plans for a large-scale political rally next week in Phoenix, Arizona, despite pleas from the city’s mayor and other officials not to hold a polarizing event while feelings remain so raw over the recent violence in Charlottesville, Virginia. These are not presidential events to officially announce or promote new legislative initiatives because there are none.

Last November, I blogged that I couldn’t help but compare Donald Trump with the former Italian dictator Benito Mussolini. Mussolini loved rallies and military parades, with his black shirted supporters marching in step to patriotic music and shouting nonsensical slogans.  Now, I’m not saying that Trump’s supporters at these rallies are fascists.  However, let me quote from my earlier blog: “Mussolini had quickly gained a reputation for his magnetism and remarkable rhetorical talents, inspiring large disenchanted crowds with populist slogans. Trump adeptly worked his campaign rhetoric to galvanize his supporters at large orchestrated gatherings.”  As an extreme narcissist, Trump appears to need regular reassurance that some Americans still adore and support him, including apparently the white supremacists whom he refuses to condemn in no uncertain terms.

What’s with all these continuing rallies? There are no mid-term elections at this time.  If there were, I’m not too sure that very many Republican candidates would want Trump’s support at this time.  The GOP appear to be in disarray following the failure to pass their proposed health care legislation and to end so-called Obamacare.  The White House is in a mess with even the house rats fleeing the premises.  Trump’s staff still spend most of their time trying to clarify what the President’s actual position is on a number of important current issues, not always succeeding to do so.

Instead of parading around the country seeking reaffirmation of his popularity, which is now at an all time low, Trump should spend more time in Washington. He needs to mend fences with Congress, his Cabinet and what’s left of his original staff.  What Americans don’t need are more rallies.  What Americans are looking for is clear and unifying leadership from their president and his administration.  No more off-the-cuff meanderings.  No more divisive speeches full of historical inaccuracies and bombastic statements.  Either be president for all Americans, or resign and let someone else provide the essential leadership needed to tackle the critical issues that America and the world face. Then and only then can one begin to talk about “making America great again”!

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White Supremacists Movements Should Be Outlawed In North America

The recent march of white supremacists in city of Charlottesville, Virginia again highlights the dangers of extreme movements of such hate groups who attack people based on their colour, religion and ethnicity. Such movements have no place in today’s multicultural societies in the U.S. or Canada.  They attract groups like the Ku Klux Klan and neo-Nazis and movement leaders like David Duke and Richard Spencer.  They align themselves with grotesque Nazi and KKK doctrines.  Unfortunately, while President Trump condemned the bloody protests, he did not specifically criticize the white nationalist rally and its neo-Nazi slogans, blaming “hatred, bigotry and violence on many sides.”

The KKK and other white supremacists movements have also existed in Canada since the 1800s, only to emerge more recently under other names, including the Western Guard and the Canadian National Socialist Party. Unfortunately, such groups recruit disenchanted young whites and prey on the growing anti-immigrant sentiment in parts of the United States and Canada. In the U.S., white supremacists appear to have been galvanized by promises of Donald Trump to “take our country back”. Many of the white nationalist protesters often carry campaign signs for Mr. Trump.  Although Trump appears to condemn the violence associated with the movement, he seems to be reluctant to condemn such movements in stronger terms — perhaps out of a reluctance to upset those who have supported him publicly.

Experts note that while some white supremacists have engaged in random acts of violence, others have carried out targeted attacks on Muslims, Jews, people of colour, aboriginals and LGBTQ people. While security agencies acknowledge the presence of right-wing extremists, they don’t appear to be a high priority.  Governments perceive such groups as being fragmented and primarily posing a threat to public order and not to national security.  There is also a reluctance to interfere in their activities due to apparent concerns with violating their freedom of speech.  Instead, the authorities simply react to specific incidents which may violate criminal , hate and civil rights laws.

Maybe it’s time that we not only condemn “white supremacists” associated historically with violence against citizens in both our countries. To say that they are just “pro-white, and not anti-anybody” is a farce. The basic premise of the movement is to promote hatred, exclusion and white supremacy.  Their continuing affiliation with KKK and Nazi beliefs confirms their reliance on national extremism of the worst kind.  It is time now that the governments of both countries seriously consider outlawing their existence, while protecting legitimate and peaceful freedom of expression. White supremacist movements have no place in today’s society, especially given their self-evident continuing and unacceptable promotion of hatred.

 

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Trump Administration Cuts to Workplace Health & Safety Programs Hurts Workers

The Bureau of Labor Statistics recently reported that nearly 5,000 workers were killed on the job in the United States in 2015. The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), an agency within the U.S. Labor Department, oversees workplace safety in most sectors. Another agency within the Labor Department, the Mine Safety and Health Administration (MSHA), oversees health and safety within the nation’s most dangerous mines. However, under President Trump, both agencies are under attack. The Trump administration and lawmakers seem to be making good on commitments to roll back occupational health and safety (OHS) regulations on businesses. Both OSHA and the MSHA appear to be prime targets. OSHA is expected to see a major cut to its budget which most likely will result in fewer safety inspectors to do enforcement and proactive work.

This year alone, deaths in U.S. coal mines with ten coal miners killed to date, have surged ahead of last year’s total. The United Mine Workers of America says agency initiatives fall short, noting that federal inspectors who conduct such mine visits are now barred from punishing the owner if they spot safety violations. A number of the government’s Cabinet agencies would see significant budget cuts under the President’s proposal. One of the biggest losers is the Department of Labor.  In the last few months there have been several instances in which workplace safety decisions have been revisited by the Trump administration, with a number of health and safety rules and standards being challenged or overturned.

As an admirer of past U.S. health and safety initiatives, including excellent research undertaken by the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), the administration’s attacks on these agencies represent a regressive display of terrible policies. There has been great progress in the fields of OHS in recent years, with the U.S. leading the way. For example, the NIOSH WorkLife Initiative is intended as a guide for employers and employer-employee partnerships wishing to establish effective workplace programs that sustain and improve worker health. Workplace injury rates had been declining in recent years as a result primarily of OSHA and MSHA enforcement and education programs.

However, work-related fatalities and injuries are still far too high in the U.S. and elsewhere. Reducing the capabilities of health and safety agencies to do their jobs isn’t going to help matters.  OSHA and the MSHA have worked closely with employer, labour and professional organizations to implement reasonable and cooperative policies and programs.  Yes, there are costs for employers to comply with OHS laws, but there are also direct costs to the country, workers and their families as a result of workplace fatalities and injuries.  In this day and age, there is no reason for a worker not to expect to leave for work in the morning and to return safely at the end of the day.  After all, these are fathers and mothers, sons and daughters, brothers and sisters.  Failure to protect all workers and to go after the bad actors will cost us all in the long run!

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