In editorial, David Livingstone Smith calls Capitol insurrection a threat to democracy

David Livingstone Smith, Ph.D., professor of Philosophy at the ΒιΆΉΒγΑΔ, has penned an editorial for in Indian outlet The Edition, in which he states that President Donald Trumpβs dehumanizing rhetoric leading up to the Jan. 6 insurrection at the Capitol is a threat to democracy.
Smith focuses on Trumpβs speech prior to the riots that interfered with the election certification of Joe Biden, in which the sitting president told his followers that they are βthe real people.β
βThis is classic dehumanizing rhetoric,β Smith writes. βWhen an authoritarian leader tells his followers that they are the βreal people,β he is implicitly telling them that their rivals are not βreal people.ββ
βHe is inviting them to think that their opponents are less than humans and that they should be treated as less than humans, that they do not deserve the respect that human beings accord to one another, and that they can be abused and even killed with impunity,β he continues.
Smith has researched dehumanization for the past 12 years, and he has authored three books on the subject. His most recent, βOn Inhumanity: Dehumanization and How to Resist It,β was released this past summer.
In his piece, Smith goes on to say that the insurrection will have lasting detrimental effects on the nationβs democratic ideals.
βTrump is known for his racist and xenophobic language, and he has used dehumanizing speech from time to time in the past. But what happened on January 6th is more ominous than anything that has gone before,β Smith cautions. βDehumanizing language, uttered to an angry crowd in a situation of extreme political volatility, may have ignited a conflagration that will be very difficult to extinguish.β