These Letters to the Editor (August 19) responding to President Trump’s tweet that invoked a debunked legend about Gen. John J. Pershing subduing Muslim rebels in the Philippines with bullets dipped in pig blood deserve an audience beyond the readership of the Star Tribune.
I won’t stand for fake news about my cousin, Gen. John Pershing
“I don’t usually express my political opinions in public, which may or may not be a good thing. But now it’s personal. When a sitting president tries to spread fake news about my relative, Gen. John J. Pershing, I take it personally. (“Under siege, Trump turns fire on GOP,” front page, Aug. 18).
“Cousin John was an exemplary general, most notably because of the humane and respectful way he treated the African-American soldiers under his command. To even suggest that the general displayed hateful behavior is, at best, ill-informed or, at worst, vicious and ignorant.
“In this case, President Donald Trump is propagating fake facts to make a fine, upstanding historical figure look like a white supremacist. Totally not true, as historian after historian has repeatedly said. The events that the president is using to make a point simply did not happen.
“This is just another example of the bullying behavior Trump has shown over and over. If he can’t get his way, he finds someone else to put down or uses fake news to make his point — even if the point has no merit.
“Melania Trump has said she wants to fight bullying while she is First Lady. I suggest that she start at home.”
- Susan Wiesler Dean, Northfield, MN [fourth cousin of Gen. John J. Pershing]
This Letter to the Editor followed.
“Long story short.
“Trump has defamed and slandered the good name of Gen. John ‘Black Jack’ Pershing.
“Short story longer.
“He and George Washington are the only two people to be named General of the Armies. As a young man, Pershing taught at an all-black school. He was given the nickname ‘Black Jack’ as a pejorative because he treated the black students fairly, and he works the ‘insult’ proudly. When he arrived in the Philippines, he gave a copy of the Qur’an to the local leaders and offered to assist in building mosques. During World War I, he had the command of the segregated 369th and was respected and admired by the black troops.
“While Pershing was apolitical, the treatment that blacks received from him and their fellow French troops gave hope to the civil rights struggle of returning black vets between the wars. He was never an Islamaphobe.”
- Ernie Neve, Minneapolis
The same day the Star Tribune published the letters, the president waved to his departing chief strategist, Steve Bannon, as a warrior against fake news:
“Steve Bannon will be a tough and smart new voice at @BreitbartNews…maybe even better than ever before. Fake News needs the competition!” – Donald J. Trump.
I didn’t get the chance to present your material this morning, but we watched the 20/20 episode on the far right vs. antifa. (I hadn’t even heard the latter word until a couple of days ago.) Fascinating discussion. We live in interesting times. Just remember how many interesting times we — and, indeed, our country — have survived. I want to live another twenty years. By then maybe we’ll have a better understanding of what’s going on now.
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Ah! Such an optimist. 😂
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Yup! Remember me 20 years from now
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