A new axis of evil? Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin share an open contempt for human rights

Yes, the U.S. has often been hypocritical on human rights. Now the Trump-Putin alliance has stopped even pretending

By Heather Digby Parton

Columnist

Published July 11, 2018 8:15AM (EDT)

Donald Trump; Vladimir Putin (AP/Getty/Shutterstock/Salon)
Donald Trump; Vladimir Putin (AP/Getty/Shutterstock/Salon)

Before President Trump took off for the NATO summit on Tuesday, he stopped on the White House lawn and took some questions from reporters. In light of the government's failure to meet a court-imposed deadline to return the children under age five who were separated from their parents under the draconian "zero-tolerance" policy, a reporter asked the president:

Q: Reaction to latest deadline missed on child reunions?

Trump: Well, I have a solution. Tell people not to come to our country illegally. That’s the solution. Don’t come to our country illegally. Come like other people do. Come legally.

Q: Is that what you’re saying? you’re punishing the children?

Trump: I’m saying this: We have laws. We have borders. Don’t come to our country illegally. It’s not a good thing.

Evidently, the age of those being punished is irrelevant in his mind as is the fact that applying for refugee status is perfectly legal. Perhaps these children should have "chosen" different parents? This issue has become more and more surreal as time goes on.

The AP reported earlier this week on a case in which the judge hearing a deportation case was faced with something so absurd that it's a wonder everyone in the courtroom didn't get up and run from the room screaming:

The 1-year-old boy in a green button-up shirt drank milk from a bottle, played with a small purple ball that lit up when it hit the ground and occasionally asked for “agua.”

Then it was the child’s turn for his court appearance before a Phoenix immigration judge, who could hardly contain his unease with the situation during the portion of the hearing where he asks immigrant defendants whether they understand the proceedings.

“I’m embarrassed to ask it, because I don’t know who you would explain it to, unless you think that a 1-year-old could learn immigration law,” Judge John W. Richardson told the lawyer representing the 1-year-old boy.

The separation of a toddler who can't even speak yet from his parents makes this particularly ludicrous, but this same absurd process happens to 7-to-10-year-olds as well, none of whom are in a position to understand. According to our president, that's the point. He clearly sees this policy as a tool for deterrence. which has been deemed illegal by the courts.

But then, he has said many times that he believes in using cruelty and violence against innocents to send a message. Most famously during the campaign he said this:

When you get these terrorists, you have to take out their families. They care about their lives. Don’t kid yourself. But they say they don’t care about their lives. You have to take out their families.

He's also claimed that "the wives know" and once conjured up some fantasy during a campaign debates in which he claimed that the wives of the 9/11 hijackers all knew what was going to happen and flew out out of the country ahead of time. (None of the hijackers was married. There was no flight. But you knew that.) As president, Trump has reportedly questioned why drone strikes should try to avoid civilian casualties.

The upshot is that he believes that families of people who have broken the law are automatically complicit. Evidently that includes babies. And he says it right out loud.

It's not that American presidents haven't killed innocents or supported despots when it pleased them. The U.S. government, going back to the beginning, has been hypocritical on human rights, starting with slavery and Native American genocide. For years, the U.S. defended some tyrants as "allies" while condemning others. During the Obama administration the press secretary once grotesquely quipped that a 15-year-old victim of a drone strike "should have had a more responsible father," which is a comment worthy of Trump himself. Nobody is saying that the U.S. has ever been above reproach on the human rights scale.

But in the context of his aggressive hostility toward American allies and his courting of autocrats, Donald Trump's open contempt for human rights and the institutions that promote them is taking America to a place it has not been for a century or more. He doesn't even deploy the old standard of "hypocrisy as the tribute vice pays to virtue" by rhetorically promoting the ideals and values that most Americans used to teach their kids. He's blatantly selling crude authoritarianism, and millions of citizens are buying into it.

He has made it clear for some time that tyranny and state violence are simple facts of life, with which he has no problem. Even as he disrespects America's traditional allies, he extols the virtues of leaders like North Korea's Kim Jong-un and Russia's Vladimir Putin. Consider Trump's comments after the Singapore summit, when he described Kim as a talented young man who took over a "very tough" country from his father. When Kim's abominable human rights record came up he replied:

Yeah, but so have a lot of other people done some really bad things. I mean, I could go through a lot of nations where a lot of bad things were done.

North Korea is the most repressive, totalitarian dystopia on earth, its excesses beyond Orwellian.

But that's not the first time he's rationalized the tyrannical regime of an authoritarian  leader he admires. During the 2016 campaign, MSNBC's Joe Scarborough asked Trump about Russian President Vladimir Putin's unfortunate habit of killing critical journalists and the then-candidate said, “I think our country does plenty of killing also, Joe."

Putin's human rights record isn't quite as heinous as Kim Jong-un's but it is very badAccording to the Committee to Protect Journalists, Russia is one of the deadliest countries in the world for members of the press, especially for critics of government policies and corruption.

Trump has defended Putin from these charges even as he has (sort of) assured his ecstatic rally crowds that he wouldn't kill journalists himself even though he hates them.

Trump said on his way out of town that of the meetings he's having with NATO, the British government and Vladimir Putin, Putin was  going to be "the easiest." That isn't surprising. The two leaders are philosophically a match made in heaven. Neither of them even pretends to care about human rights, and they are happy to say so right up front.

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By Heather Digby Parton

Heather Digby Parton, also known as "Digby," is a contributing writer to Salon. She was the winner of the 2014 Hillman Prize for Opinion and Analysis Journalism.

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