The Australian-born terrorist who killed 50 people at the Christchurch Mosque in New Zealand a few days ago said US President Donald Trump was "a symbol of renewed white identity and a shared goal" with the case of white supremacists. Trump condemned the massacre and said it was unfair to blame him for it, sparking a familiar debate about the effect of his passion for fueling the existential fear of whites around the world. Trump spoke in the same tone as the murderer about immigrants as "invaders" and that Islam was a "problem".

Historical superiority

But the rush to blame Trump and his accusation of spurring racial hatred obscures the long-term impact of historically white supremacy in Australia. Settlement colonization, whose unique policy was to place severe restrictions on non-white migration to its areas of influence from 1901 until The end of the 1960s led to the identification of trapped egg culture.

Trump himself admitted the same thing in January 2017, eight days after he came to power, when he expressed admiration for Australia's brutal actions against refugees, holding them on remote islands. "It's a great idea, we have to do the same," Trump told Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull. Yes, you are worse than us. "

With the island of Australia near Asia, many Australians felt racial fear, fearing that they would be overwhelmed by non-white peoples, especially as a result of globalization, and the rise of mass immigration at the end of the 19th century.

The arguments of Christchurch's murderer in racial self-defense, echoing and strangely echoing a text adopted by supporters of white supremacy around the world in 1893, entitled "National and Personal Life: A Prediction," by Australian-educated Australian scholar Charles Henry Pearson The book claimed that white men are at risk of becoming "a minority and marginal by black and yellow races." Pearson identified China as a threat to white supremacy and urged his readers to defend "the last part of the world where superior races can live and reproduce freely from For a civilized civilization "

His ideas were heard by Australian politicians, who began the policy of "white Australia," shortly after Pearson's ideas emerged. The media tycoons in Australia, such as Keith Murdoch (the father of Robert Murdoch Malik Fox News), devote their media to serve the cause of white race unity.

Pearson's book was carefully read in Canada, New Zealand and South Africa. In 1920, the American lawyer, historian, and philosopher Luther Stoddard, inspired by Pearson, wrote a book entitled "The Rise of Colored Power against White supremacy." He expressed his "admiration for the instinctive and spontaneous solidarity that links Australians and white people in South Africa, "In a holy pact" against Asian immigrants. "

After the American thinker of African origin, WI Boyce, came up with the overwhelming seriousness of white supremacy, he felt fear and predicted in 1910 that "the problem of the 20th century will be the relationship between white and dark-skinned people."

This problem has reappeared in our time, in addition to Islamic extremism, China, massive migration in the shadow of economic instability, but the horror of racial extinction, and the urgent need for extreme measures against dark-skinned people, was an event before Trump and were publicly expressed by respectable members Of the Holy Union.

In 2007, novelist Martin Ames told Robert Murdoch of the Times of London newspaper: "There is a definite desire to say, 'Do not you have that desire?'" The Muslim community must suffer until its members organize this society. , What kind of suffering? Not to allow them to travel, expel them, deport them from their country, restrict their freedoms, and search anyone who is a disgrace, suspected of being from the Middle East or from Pakistan. When asked what he thought of what was attributed to him, he replied that he did not demand the application of such measures, but rather "described the desire."

However, Murdoch's desire to apply collective punishment was revealed in a tweet published on January 10, 2015: "Even if most Muslims are peaceful, but until they become familiar with extremists who are growing up like cancer, they must remain responsible for extremism .

In 2006, in his book, "America Alone: ​​The End of the World as We Know It," Canadian writer Mark Stein hopes that in the end the Europeans will understand what the Serbs did in the war against the Bosnian Muslims. "If you can not, Of the supremacy of procreation on your enemy was reduced by murder, "and the 60th triumph of Trump's victory in the presidential election." The more diversity there is, the more stupid, "he said." We do not want to live in a world where In which the Western civilization to the abyss ».

It is not by chance that Trump's strongest and most powerful supporter is Australia-born media magnate Rupert Murdoch. A member of the Australian Congress, who last year insisted on a "final solution" to immigration, including a ban on Muslims and others from the Third World, was encouraged, at least in part, by the global culture of white supremacy, .

Of course, considering Trump responsible for racist assaults is easy, but attempts to eliminate racism against colored people must begin with a 19th-century style in Australia and how it can re-emerge with horrific results in ethnically mixed societies today.

A writer at Bloomberg Bankage Mishra

Trump is responsible for racist assaults, but attempts to remove racism against colored people must start with a 19th-century style in Australia and how they can re-emerge with horrific results in ethnically mixed societies today.

It is not by chance that Trump's strongest and most powerful supporter is Australia-born media magnate Rupert Murdoch.