Twitter is not inherently evil. Like all technological developments, it depends how it is used. I have few problems with it because I follow only those people and organizations that speak either God’s truths and/or are faithful to the principles He has established. There are some, however, who seem to see it as a weapon—and it comes from both sides of the political arena:
![](https://ponderingprinciples.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/Enough-Tweeting.jpg)
President Trump stirred up controversy (again) recently with a couple of pointed tweets. One targeted a group of four Democrat congresswomen that has, in the journalistic trend of the day, now been called “The Squad.”
![](https://ponderingprinciples.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/Squad-1024x536.jpeg)
When one examines the worldview of these congresswomen, one can easily critique the radicalism they promote. And if one opposes their policies (as I do) the response should be to show the error of their ways, not demean them personally. But that’s not the Trump way; to him, it’s always personal. So when he tweeted they should go back to the countries they came from and fix things there first, he stepped into a pile of ignorance: three are natural-born Americans; the fourth was naturalized as a child.
Trump’s tweet was then taken by the liberal media to be a statement of racism since none of these women are white. Now all we hear in the mainstream media is that Trump is a racist. I don’t know that for sure; I’m not jumping on that bandwagon. But what I do know is that he, regardless of his advanced age, is immature, petty, and rather juvenile. That character, along with a large dose of ignorance, is why I have a problem with his presidency.
That said, one reason why I won’t immediately accuse him of racism is that that particular accusation has become so common, and applied to anything and everything, that it has become almost meaningless.
![](https://ponderingprinciples.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/Everything-Is-Racist-1024x326.gif)
That same cartoonist also offered this with respect to one of the “Squad”:
![](https://ponderingprinciples.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/Call-Me-Racist-1024x325.gif)
Trump then tweeted about congressman Elijah Cummings, an African-American who represents Baltimore. He referred to Cummings’s district as rat-infested and as a place no person would want to live. Again, this was perceived as a racist statement from a racist president. It’s easy to jump to that conclusion, especially when you want to.
There’s a simpler explanation as to why Trump attacked Cummings: he’s heading the congressional committee holding hearings that amount to an impeachment inquiry. Trump doesn’t necessarily see Cummings in a racial perspective; it’s just that he’s the “enemy” who is attempting to remove him from office.
Now, stepping back a little, I can see why I might be somewhat sensitive to charges of racism. In a previous university, when I was explaining why America’s Founders at the Constitutional Convention didn’t outlaw slavery at that time, I found out later that at least one African-American student thought I was making a racist statement. No, it was purely historical fact.
Then, a few years ago, during the Ferguson controversy, I referred to Michael Brown, the man who was killed when he robbed a store and then attacked a police officer, as a “thug.” A former student made a big deal out of this and called for me to be dismissed because of my “racist” comment.
No, I will call anyone who robs a store in the manner in which Brown did and then reached into a police car to try to take a policeman’s holstered gun from him a “thug.” I don’t care what color, ethnicity, or religion that person might be. Thuggery is thuggery, pure and simple. Even the Obama Department of Justice, after a thorough review, exonerated the police officer.
Donald Trump may be a racist, for all I know, but those tweets, by themselves, don’t provide the evidence I need for that conclusion. He has far more problems than that, as I’ve alluded to above. I will critique him for other aspects of his character that are well established. I will critique him for the substance of some of his policies: tariffs, lack of concern for the national debt, chummy relations with those who should be considered our enemies, etc. But I won’t join a bandwagon just because it’s trendy.