The racist “comedy” set at Donald Trump’s Madison Square Garden rally on Sunday has set off a deluge of condemnation. Tony Hinchcliffe’s bigoted comments — about Puerto Rico being a “floating island of garbage,” Jews clinging to money, Palestinians throwing rocks and Black people carving watermelons — were the type of stuff you’d expect from a pro-Nazi comedy act in Hitler’s Germany.
But we shouldn’t view them in a vacuum. To me, they speak to a trend: the MAGA movement’s tendency to fuel hate under the guise of comedy.
Tony Hinchcliffe’s bigoted comments were the type of stuff you’d expect from a pro-Nazi comedy act in Hitler’s Germany.
Particularly with Donald Trump’s rise in today’s Republican Party, conservatives have used a veil of silliness and surrealism to give his hateful rhetoric and policies a softer tone and feel, or an unserious one. (Full transparency: I think about this whenever Trump does that little herky-jerky dance thing).
There’s already been a chorus of conservative voices leaping to Hinchcliff’s defense, claiming that liberals just don’t know how to take a joke. See: Rep. Matt Gaetz of Florida.
To everyone mad at @TonyHinchcliffe
IT WAS A JOKE!








