Donald Trump’s anti-immigrant rhetoric is hardly new, though by any fair measure, it appears to be getting worse.
It was in early October when the Republican first started using anti-immigrant rhetoric that echoed Adolph Hitler’s “Mein Kampf.” The former president told a conservative outlet, in reference to migrants entering the United States, “Nobody has any idea where these people are coming from. … It’s poisoning the blood of our country.”
After he started repeating the line with unnerving frequency, Trump was reminded in a recent interview that his language mirrored Hitler’s. The presumptive GOP nominee shrugged with indifference.
Around the same time, the Republican said in reference to migrants, “In some cases, they’re not people, in my opinion.” As The New York Times reported, he took such dehumanizing talk in a literal direction at an event yesterday.
Mr. Trump also used his speech, which lasted roughly 45 minutes, to defend his use of dehumanizing language to refer to immigrants accused of crimes. After referring to the man who the authorities say killed a 22-year-old nursing student in Georgia in February, Mr. Trump said: “Democrats said please don’t call them ‘animals.’ I said, no, they’re not humans, they’re animals.”
He made the comments while flanked by police officers, as if Trump were an ally to law enforcement. He is not.
"They're not humans. They're animals … I'll use the word 'animal,' because that's what they are" — Trump pic.twitter.com/T5IyRXNOFE
— Aaron Rupar (@atrupar) April 2, 2024
In the same pitch, Trump leaned into “bloodbath” rhetoric — it’s apparently no longer a word he’s applying to the automotive industry — and insisted that migrants are “coming into our country with contagious diseases.”
Naturally, the former president also insisted that foreign countries are deliberately sending “prisoners, murderers, drug dealers, mental patients and terrorists, the worst they have” to the United States, which remains a baseless claim for which there is no evidence.
In case this isn’t obvious, one of the reasons the Republican is relying on Hitler-like dehumanizing language is that it helps lay the groundwork for radical post-election policy measures. After all, if the White House doesn’t believe it’s dealing with human beings, it can justify all kinds of abusive conduct — including militarized mass deportations and detention camps.
But I also continue to believe Trump pushes such dangerous language because he expects an electoral benefit.








