Sponsored link
Sunday, June 21, 2026

Sponsored link

ElectionsCampaign TrailFrom the RNC to Kenosha: racism and death

From the RNC to Kenosha: racism and death

This is the legacy of the Trump Party, and everyone who has empowered it.

-

Two days after a pair of gun-toting white vigilantes got a prime-time speaking slot at the Republican National Convention, a gun-toting white vigilante shot and killed two people in Kenosha, Wisconsin.

These are not unrelated events, and it’s important that we all understand that.

If it’s okay to point guns at Black Lives Matter protesters, the Trump Party thinks it’s okay to shoot them.

Patricia and Mark McCloskey stood in front of their mansion in St. Louis with an assault rifle and a pistol June 28, and brandished them at peaceful Black Lives Matter protesters.

I have absolutely no doubt that if two Black protesters had waived guns at the McCloskeys, they would have been arrested immediately, on the spot, and faced serious charges. In this case, it took a month – and immense publicity, pressure, and protest – before the two were charged by local authorities with “unlawful use of a weapon.”

And the Missouri attorney general is intervening to get the charges dismissed.

Meanwhile, they became Trump celebrities. The president said the two were “defending themselves against violent protesters,” although there is no evidence at all that any of the protesters, who included politicians and members of the clergy, were in any way violent.

At the convention, the McCloskeys stoked the racial fear that has become the defining message of the Trump Party.

“What you saw happen to us could just as easily happen to any of you who are watching from quiet neighborhoods around our country” Patricia said.

The Democrats, she said, “would bring crime, lawlessness, and low-quality apartments into thriving suburban neighborhoods. Make no mistake: no matter where you live, your family will not be safe in the radical Democrats’ America.”

They live in a gated suburb, on a private street. They have tried to keep gay people out of the neighborhood.

But the overall, abiding theme of their talk, and of much of the RNC this week, was overt racism and an appeal to white people to take up arms against Black people and anyone who supports the Black Lives Matter and police accountability movement.

So that happened.

I don’t know how a 17-year-old kid got so crazy radicalized in the white supremacist world that he took up an AR-15 (and how does a 17-year-old get to walk around a protest with an assault rifle while there are cops everywhere, some of whom possibly thanked him for being there and gave him water) and opened fire on protesters.

But I do know that the Trump Party not only supports but encourages this kind of behavior, and is entirely responsible for what happened in Kenosha.

Two dead. One injured. A deeply disturbed kid in prison for murder.

This is Donald Trump’s legacy. But it’s also the legacy of every Republican who has signed on to the Trump Party and legitimized and empowered it. And they will have to own it for a long, long time.

48 Hills welcomes comments in the form of letters to the editor, which you can submit here. We also invite you to join the conversation on our FacebookTwitter, and Instagram

Tim Redmond
Tim Redmond
Tim Redmond has been a political and investigative reporter in San Francisco for more than 30 years. He spent much of that time as executive editor of the Bay Guardian. He is the founder of 48hills.
Sponsored link
Sponsored link

Featured

More Hunters Point toxic clean-up mess: ‘surprise’ radiological material discovered in a cabinet

Officials grilled at latest meeting on disaster, and a Lick Wilmerding High School senior takes up fight for justice.

Under the Stars: A house music master takes us back to Zanzibar

... and a techno originator flies us to Tokyo. Plus: New foamboy, Omar remixed, Broken Social Scene's tender missives, more

Good Taste: New frozen treat shops are ready for SF summer

Spoons up for old-fashioned scoops, Japanese soft serve, and Chinese froyo.

More by this author

Planning Commission sides with mayor on cutting fees for affordable housing

The vote, of course, was 4-2. But Lurie has backed down on charging more for arguments in the ballot handbook.

Lurie and four supes move to cut affordable housing fees for luxury developers

Planning Commission to consider plan that city data shows will not lead to any new housing construction

Lurie wants to make ballot arguments too expensive for small campaigns

EXCLUSIVE: Dramatic increase in fees would help big-money and undermine grassroots groups. It goes before the supes Wednesday.
Sponsored link

You might also likeRELATED