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Opinion | Why aren’t we better than this?

young homeless despair child,traumatized little girl

There are good people in Alabama. 

I know this to be true. I’ve lived here my entire life. I’ve seen the good people of this state in action. 

I’ve watched them help each other after tragedies. I’ve watched them stop to help strangers on the side of the road. I’ve watched them go to unimaginable lengths to lessen suffering or just make someone’s day a little brighter. 

I know, too, that this state is filled with people who gleefully pack churches on Sunday mornings, and who slap Bible verse bumper stickers on their cars, and who profess to live by the teachings of Jesus Christ. And I believe that they mean it. 

So, why don’t we support better people to lead us? 

I mean, look around this state and this country. The people Alabama voters support are mostly detestable — people who have sold out the majority for their own interests, who have made themselves richer as the state remains mired in poverty, who have turned us against each other by using idiotic prejudices. 

Why do we support the narcissist in the White House and his hateful administration, which seems hellbent on destroying the lives of anyone with brown or black skin? 

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And boy, do we ever support the guy. Alabamians, in a recent Morning Consult poll, supported Trump more than any other state. Only Mississippi was close to Alabama’s 26-point net approval rating. 

Georgia was at 2. 

Two!

How can that be? 

How can this Jesus-loving state watch the images of small children, scared and crying, being pulled from their parents and still support the guy whose policies are behind it? 

Last week, hundreds of Mississippi school children were left at daycares and elementary schools after Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers raided several plants, rounding up alleged undocumented workers and hauling them off to detention facilities. With zero plans for caring for their children. 

Such a thing doesn’t happen by accident. ICE agents and the federal government knew full well that these people had children. After most arrests, child services is contacted and the children of anyone arrested are taken into custody. Because, you know, they’re kids and someone needs to care for them. 

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But not in Mississippi. Nearly 700 people were detained at least overnight. No one bothered to make arrangements for their kids. 

Oh, and did I mention that about half of those detained were back home the next day, with no charges, because they weren’t undocumented? They just had the misfortune of being Hispanic in 2019 America. 

That raid came less than a week after a lunatic traveled nine hours to El Paso, Tx., in order to shoot immigrants at a Walmart. He killed 20. But not before leaving behind a manifesto that parroted the words of Donald Trump and some of the most well known rightwing talking heads and politicians as they disparaged Hispanic immigrants. 

A few days after that, U.S. Senate candidates in Alabama were attacking each other because one said some sort-of harsh things about Trump. And then they each spent time on Twitter trying to prove which one loved Trump more. 

Because they know that loving Trump — even after all that hate over the last week — still plays well with Alabama voters. 

It’s mind-boggling. 

With all of our history, and all of the lessons that we’ve supposedly learned, how is it possible that we’re still no better than this? 

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How are we still so fearful of anyone with dark skin? So easily misled by conmen looking to cash in on our fears? So willing to expect the worst of someone based merely on looks? So quick on matters of race to set aside all the teachings of the religion that supposedly dominates this state that we turn our backs on the suffering of children? 

I just don’t know how we’re not better than this by now.

 

Josh Moon is an investigative reporter and featured columnist at the Alabama Political Reporter with years of political reporting experience in Alabama. You can email him at [email protected] or follow him on Twitter.

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