RJK315
This piece traces a pattern rather than a single moment. From the early 1990s to the present, Donald Trump has repeatedly relied on racial fear, coded language, and public scapegoating as a deliberate political and cultural tactic. Long before the presidency, these strategies were already visible in housing discrimination, attacks on integration, the amplification of racist myths, and the framing of exclusion as business logic or common sense. This essay follows that thread across decades, showing how racial signaling evolved from tabloid controversy and real estate disputes into campaign rhetoric, policy decisions, and media spectacle. It examines how denial, revisionism, and selective memory allow these actions to be reframed as misunderstandings rather than strategy, and why those tactics continue to generate loyalty and power. This is not about partisan loyalty or personal dislike, but about recognizing a consistent method and understanding why it continues to work.