Christine Flowers: Trump, Rwanda and the dangers of political propaganda

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It is an old childhood truism that “sticks and stones may break my bones, but names will never hurt me.” In the United States, where speech is protected with a constitutional and social ferocity like no other country in the world, this has always been the default position. We want strong, full-throated debates, and we don’t want to punish people for using language that offends.

But sometimes, language crosses the line. Sometimes, and even our own jurisprudence recognizes this, language can incite violence. That’s one of the exceptions to the almost absolute protection for free speech. And then we have those situations where language is used not so much to incite as to dehumanize. And if you are no longer human, you are no longer protected against inhumanity.

Take the Rwandan massacres. In 1994, the ruling Hutu government enlisted the aid of several radio stations, most notably Radio Television Mille Collines (RTMC), to spread propaganda among the illiterate Hutu population, urging them to look at their Tutsi neighbors as animals. RTMC exercised an immense amount of power and influence in the country. Concordia University has gathered the transcripts of some of those recordings, and they chill the blood. According to the preface to those transcriptions:

“From October 1993 to late 1994, RTLM was used by Hutu leaders to advance an extremist Hutu message and anti-Tutsi disinformation, spreading fear of a Tutsi genocide against Hutu, identifying specific Tutsi targets or areas where they could be found, and encouraging the progress of the genocide.”

We all know what happened. Starting in April 1994 and continuing for 100 days, over 800,000 people were murdered by the Interhamwe, the government forces. And those radio broadcasts helped gin up the anger against the Tutsis.

Of course, the genocide would have occurred without the radio transmissions. But the words used and disseminated by those in positions of authority were powerful weapons, turning people’s opinions against an innocent but hated ethnic minority. Words are cheap and plentiful, and the arsenal is easily replenished.

I write this not to compare what happened this weekend in Butler, Pa., to the Rwanda genocide. That would be a foolish use of my own words. Donald Trump is not dead, he survived an assassination attempt, and the killer was neutralized. We do not even yet know his motives, and it will likely be a while before we do. In the meantime, conspiracy theorists will weigh in with their tin foil hat opinions. I do not own any of those.

But I am also not insensitive to the fact that the political climate has become dangerously heated over the last eight years. When Donald Trump was elected back in 2016, women, in particular, acted as if they had been ordered to purchase burkas, leave school, and keep their wombs open for rental. Minority groups started screaming about the revocation of rights, and we were told that everyone in the Trump administration was one level down from Satan.

But it’s when he left office that things started to really ramp up, to the point that this past week alone, I counted at least 127 times on the combined networks of CNN, MSNBC, ABC, NBC and CBS that Trump was called “a threat to democracy,” or variations of that phrase. I started actually taking notes and writing down the times the words were mentioned after a roundtable on CNN used the terminology on every single broadcast between seven and midnight. It was a script, and they all used it.

When they call someone a “convicted felon” because they actually have been convicted, albeit under questionable circumstances, you can be annoyed at the lack of grace. Still, you can’t say it’s inaccurate. But when you paint someone as a dangerous man, a despot, someone who will destroy the country, force women to push out babies and then die on the delivery table, create concentration camps for immigrants and allow police to kill minorities at will, you create a very dangerous dynamic in society.

Most reasonable people won’t do anything. Most will just shake their heads and say, “Yeah, I hate the guy. What’s for dinner?”

But there are far too many people like the 20-year-old in Butler, Pa., who decided to go out in a blaze of glory targeting the “threat to democracy.” A troubled, diseased mind is susceptible to rhetoric and propaganda. It is political malpractice to give them the push they need.

Thank God Donald Trump survived. Now can everyone just shut up?

Christine Flowers is an attorney and lifelong Philadelphian. @flowerlady61

This article was republished with permission from the Delaware Valley Journal.

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3 thoughts on “Christine Flowers: Trump, Rwanda and the dangers of political propaganda”

  1. Oh the irony of Christian Flowers demanding everyone “shut up” when she can’t shut up for five minutes on social media, her far right wing propaganda columns, etc. Flowers frequently refers to pro choice Americans as “baby butchers”. She calls anyone not completely on board with the government of Israel “antisemites”. Ironically, she’s all too happy to send her taxpayer money to fund Israel’s abortions. She only blames Americans for their choice. Her social media is filled with inflammatory rhetoric. If she wants people to shut up she needs to start with herself.

  2. There is also Ms. Flowers reputation for blocking anyone on her social media that she disagrees with.

    As for the rest of this tripe she calls an article, there is no comparison to what happened in Rwanda to what is happening in the United States. It was Trump who chose to and continues to use derogatory names for anyone and everyone he does not like, including Republicans who worked for him. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_nicknames_used_by_Donald_Trump Until we know why the shooter at Butler, PA did what he did its highly subjective.

    As for those hysterical women, they were right. Texas has a bounty on anyone who gets an abortion or helps in this process, even if they are an Uber driver. Other states now have laws that will not take into account rape, incest, or the health of the mother. It seems only when they tried to go after IVF did they realize that they had gone to far.

    Rwanda didn’t happen just because powerful people convinced “the illiterate Hutu population”, it was because they believed those words. The insurrectionists on January 6th were highly literate, yet they believed the words coming from Trump and his acolytes. Made repeated claims that the election was rigged, tried to pressure elected officials to overturn votes, and filed 60 lawsuits

  3. Is it true that Mrs. Nimrata Nikki Haley was invited to speak at the Republican National Convention 30 minutes before an assassination attempt on former President Trump?
    Is it true a company called Austin Private Wealth LLLC shorted 12mm shares of $DJT via a put option on July 12th, the day before the assassination attempt?
    So many questions. These guys did not forget that everyone has a camera on their cell phone. The issue is Trump was not supposed to survive! He turned his head at the EXACT correct moment! If their (yes, their) assassination attempt succeeded then the algorithms simply would’ve deliberately altered and deleted the massive amount of video of inconvenient and embarrassing behavior that day. All the incongruities would’ve taken years to bubble up because of all the ensuing chaos. All the videos, photographs, transcripts or other records, such as from websites or other archives (like the 20-year old’s internet and social media history) would have been censored and throttled as part of a deliberate attempt to give the impression that something never happened. But something did happen. Trump lived. And the videos immediatly went viral. Videos of eye witnesses talking to the BBC and warning secret service and state police before shots were fired. Trump supporters are on video telling the police about it, and the security still let the assassination attempt happen. Why didn’t they rush Trump off the stage? They let someone shoot at Trump several times. And now Mayorkas is blocking the Secret Service Director from testifying. It is beyond great that Trump turned his head… he is alive. That was not supposed to be the outcome. Trump survived their assassination attempt despite all odds. Who got greedy and made a market bet that Trump was going to get killed? SEC can you look into it?

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