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Racehorse Theory And Why It Matters

Trump’s touting of “racehorse theory”, a belief in genetic superiority tied to eugenics and the Nazis, is alarming Jewish leaders, as the Los Angeles Times reports:

Trump has long spoken about his beliefs in the superiority of his genes, dating back to his days as a Manhattan developer; he’s talked less frequently of his belief in the racehorse theory, which basically calls for using breeding to encourage desirable traits and eliminate undesirable traits.

Initially used for horses, the theory was ultimately used to justify selective breeding of people, including forced sterilization laws that were on the books in 32 states and used in some of them up through the 1970s.

As the Times notes, Trump has referenced racehorse theory on an off for years, calling himself a “gene believer” in a CNN interview, saying “Hey, when you connect two racehorses, you usually end up with a fast horse.”.

As the Forward’s Rob Eshman noted, this was a clear-as-day whistle to Trump’s white supremacist supporters:

Rob Eshman, the former editor of the Jewish Journal who is now the national editor of the influential Jewish American online newspaper the Forward, said Trump’s language was a clear signal to his supporters who harbor racist or anti-Semitic views.

Racehorse theory “is basically like a forerunner to eugenics theory, which led to the Nazis’ ‘final solution,’” Eshman said after Trump’s Minnesota comments. “It’s one of the least coded messages he has sent.”

As Tim Dickinson notes in Rolling Stone, racehorse theory and eugenics are essentially white supremacy “embraced not as a cultural construct, but as if it were based in hard science. In another moment, Trump’s remarks would have made for a front-page scandal.”

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