{"id":1855,"date":"2020-12-10T19:19:06","date_gmt":"2020-12-10T19:19:06","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.radiofree.org\/?p=137515"},"modified":"2020-12-10T19:19:06","modified_gmt":"2020-12-10T19:19:06","slug":"trump-is-inciting-domestic-terrorism","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/radiofree.asia\/2020\/12\/10\/trump-is-inciting-domestic-terrorism\/","title":{"rendered":"Trump Is Inciting Domestic Terrorism"},"content":{"rendered":"
Donald Trump continues to question the integrity of the United States presidential election based on unsubstantiated claims and outlandish allegations. Such claims do more than erode America\u2019s democratic norms and institutions \u2013 they endanger American lives.<\/p>\n
Trump\u2019s narrative about massive voter fraud and a \u201cstolen election\u201d signals to his supporters that the Biden-Harris administration is illegitimate and could encourage violence against the forces that supposedly helped Biden \u201csteal\u201d the White House.<\/p>\n
Trump\u2019s refusal to accept the election outcome delayed the presidential transition, prompting more than 100 former national security officials from four Republican administrations, including President Trump\u2019s, to sign a letter<\/a> warning that the delay threatened American national security. The officials argued this posed \u201ca significant risk to our national security, at a time when the US confronts a global pandemic and faces serious threats from global adversaries, terrorist groups, and other forces\u201d. The risks were not simply hypothetical, they warned, pointing to the 9\/11 Commission Report which identified a shortened transition time between the Clinton and Bush administrations as jeopardising the national security community\u2019s ability to defend against al-Qaeda in the months before 9\/11. The transition is now under way, but Trump continues to spew misinformation about the election.<\/p>\n The national security officials\u2019 concerns are alarming, but they are neither the most likely nor most dangerous consequence of the president\u2019s continuing lies. Trump\u2019s repeated false claims add fuel to the already simmering fire of right-wing extremism in America. The individuals and groups who hold such views, including white supremacists, could interpret Trump\u2019s narrative to justify violence against the federal government, the Biden-Harris administration, or other targets.<\/p>\n Polling already indicates that an alarming number of Trump supporters do not believe the election was free and fair. Some polls indicate that as many as 70 \u2013 80 percent of Republicans have serious doubts about the election\u2019s integrity. One recent poll found that only 20 percent of Republican voters believe Biden actually won. Such beliefs, encouraged by the president, Republican lawmakers and conservative media, are troubling and could easily metastasise into violence.<\/p>\n According to the FBI, right-wing extremist groups now pose the greatest threat to American domestic security: not American Muslims radicalised by al-Qaeda or sympathetic to ISIS. This was never the case, despite the stream of television shows and Hollywood movies after 9\/11 which regularly portrayed them as suspect and potentially violent.<\/p>\n Today, the primary threat is white and domestic, not brown and \u201cforeign\u201d. They are the \u201cvery fine people\u201d Trump refused to denounce in Charlottesville and those he encouraged to \u201cliberate Michigan!<\/a>\u201d Emboldened by Trump\u2019s racist, xenophobic and bigoted rhetoric over the last four years and indignant because of a \u201cstolen election,\u201d some in these groups could resort to violence. Trump\u2019s fantasy about \u201cmassive election fraud,\u201d repeated by Republican lawmakers and amplified by right-wing media, is an incitement to violence for groups already predisposed to hatred and conspiracy thinking.<\/p>\n The Department of Homeland Security reported in October that white supremacist extremists \u201cwill remain the most persistent and lethal threat to the Homeland\u201d and that their ideologies are \u201coften reinforced by a variety of online content, including conspiracy theories\u201d. The DHS specifically warned these groups could target \u201cthe election itself, election results, or the post-election period\u201d. The October DHS Threat Assessment<\/a> was published before Trump\u2019s fictitious allegations and his supporters\u2019 outlandish claims about malfunctioning and misprogrammed voting machines, disappearing votes, lost ballots, dead voters, and Cuban and Venezuelan communist election interference.<\/p>\n