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?????????????????????????????????????????????????Wednesday, November 30, 2016
Nearly 900 cases of hate, intimidation after Trump win: report
White supremacists have verbally and physically attacked minorities, invoking Trump's name, says new SPLC report

The Southern Poverty Law Center suspects there are many more unreported cases of intimidation and abuse (AFP)
Nearly 900 incidents of hate and
intolerance were recorded across the United States in the days following
Donald Trump's election, many by assailants apparently emboldened by
his victory, an advocacy group reported Tuesday.
"I
have no doubt whatsoever that this is a tremendous, tremendous
undercount," said Richard Cohen, president of the Southern Poverty Law
Center, which monitors hate crimes.
"The level of hate that's been unleashed by the election... is something entirely new."
The
group recorded 867 cases of harassment and intimidation in the 10 days
following Trump's election, which was cheered by white supremacists and
others fired up by his rhetoric disparaging immigrants, Muslims and
women.
"Many
harassers invoked Trump's name during assaults, making it clear that
the outbreak of hate stemmed in large part from his electoral success,"
it said in a report.
Though
it was not clear from the SPLC data whether the United States is
experiencing a spike in such attacks, Cohen said that: "Time after time,
those who reported hate incidents to us said they had never experienced
anything like that before."
"The level of hate that's been unleashed by the election, they told us, is something entirely new."
Most incidents involved graffiti or verbal harassment, although a small number were violent physical altercations.
Slightly
more than half of the cases were anti-immigrant or anti-black. The
incidents were reported in nearly every state in the country, led by
California with 99 cases.
At
a middle school in Colorado Springs, Colorado, Latino students were
told that "Not only should Trump build a wall, but it should be
(electrified) and Mexicans should have to wear shock collars."
In
Silver Spring, Maryland, a church offering Spanish-language services
was spray-painted with the messages "Trump Nation" and "Whites Only."
Swastikas
In
Los Angeles, a large sign saying "NO N----RS" was placed next to a bus
shelter, while a woman in Arizona reported that two men in a truck
yelled "Trump forever", adding racist and sexist slurs, as she put
groceries in her vehicle.
There
were recorded 80 instances of swastikas scrawled onto public spaces,
schools, cars and garage doors. Many also included references to Trump.
In Vermont, the front doors of a synagogue were defaced with swastikas.
Although
the SPLC report only detailed cases from the 10 days after the
election, Trump-related disturbances have continued to crop up as the
president-elect stokes controversy with his senior advisor picks.
Trump
has faced calls to distance himself from white nationalists, and the
pressure became acute after members of the white supremacist movement
were caught on film celebrating his victory with Nazi salutes.
He
finally did so in an interview with the New York Times last week,
saying: "I don't want to energize the group, and I disavow the group."
But
Trump's pick of chief strategist Steve Bannon remains closely
identified with white nationalism, while his attorney general nominee
Senator Jeff Sessions has been accused of racism and his national
security advisor, retired lieutenant Michael Flynn, has promoted
anti-Muslim conspiracy theories.
The SPLC is spearheading an online petition calling on Trump to rescind his appointment of Bannon.
'Stop it'
In his first major interview following his election, Trump instructed perpetrators of harassment and intimidation to "Stop it."
But those words fall flat when considering Trump's senior administration appointments, Cohen said.
"His
words must be followed by concrete actions, both his policies and his
appointments, to repair the wounds of division that his campaign has
caused," he said, calling on Trump to apologize and reach out to
marginalised communities.
"If he doesn't do those things, the hate that Mr Trump has unleashed during this election season will continue to flourish."
Trump
has proposed policies have put civil rights advocates on alert. His
Muslim ban proposal, suggestions of creating a Muslim registry, attempts
to crack down on journalists and pledge to deport all undocumented
immigrants have raised concerns.
On
Tuesday, he tweeted that people who burn the American flag should lose
their US citizenship or spend a year in jail, although US law bars the
government from revoking citizenships, and burning the flag is not
unlawful.

