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Bernie Sanders and the “Blame-Games” of Racism and Abortion

Jonathan Culbreath
6 min readJan 17, 2020

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In a recent interview with the editorial board of The New York Times, Senator Bernie Sanders made some salient observations about the causes of institutional racism in the United States. As might be expected, Sanders explains the phenomenon of racism with reference to the socioeconomic crises that currently afflict the country and form the centerpiece of his presidential campaign. Prompted by a question from Brent Staples, referring to Donald Trump’s racism, Sanders claims that the socioeconomic ills of our time — or of any time — lead those with an agenda to play “the blame game.” Minorities wind up taking all the blame for the manifold ills which afflict the country, while all the while the true causes go unacknowledged.

Here is the excerpt:

Brent Staples: I think it’s — how about the fact that Trump has touched a chord in 40 to 44 percent of the people? I mean, what about that issue is that Trump is a symptom of a widespread problem. I mean, how do you address that? The problem exists whether Trump is president or not is what I’m saying.

I wish I could give you a great answer, brilliant answer to that. But this is what I will tell you, because that’s, you’re right. What is the issue? How did Trump become president? O.K. And I think it speaks to something that I talk about a lot and that is…

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Jonathan Culbreath
Jonathan Culbreath

Written by Jonathan Culbreath

I write about Philosophy, Politics, Economics, Culture, and Religion.

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