We learned at the beginning of the month that, at the behest of Donald Trump's white nationalist advisers, the Trump administration plans to refocus a U.S. government program that seeks to curb violent extremists so that it exclusively targets Muslim individuals—stripping it from its current role of also preventing, for example, violence by white nationalists. This would appear to be in keeping with the Trump notion that the only violence of significance in the world is that conducted by Muslims; a white nationalist entering a Canadian mosque or a South Carolina church to murder non-whites remains, to the Trump presidency, invisible crimes.
The news was greeted with appropriate contempt within the Muslim community, and it's looking like the Trump team may have inadvertently caused the slow collapse of the whole damn program.
The program, CVE, is a grant program. It offers funds to community groups that work to delegitimize extremism, rehabilitate those extremists, and otherwise act as foil to extremist groups. After hearing that the program will be retooled into a vehicle for the Trump team's own anti-Muslim bigotries, however, would-be receivers of those grants are already bowing out rather than be associated with the tainted program. Bayan Claremont, an Islamic school in California, was due to receive $800,000 from the program—over half the school's yearly budget. But the school's president says they just can't stomach being associated with the effort.
It's "a heck of a lot of money, (but) our mission and our vision is to serve the community and to bring our community to a position of excellence," Turk said. "And if we're compromised, even if only by perception in terms of our standing in the community, we ultimately can't achieve that goal," he said, adding that accepting the funds would be short-sighted.
The school is the fourth organization to refuse already-granted funds from the program this month. If grants will no longer be going to combat domestic terrorism in the white supremacist and other non-Muslim communities, and with American Muslim groups now rejecting the newly-bigoted program as something they can’t be a part of, the grant program may find itself struggling to find any partners worth partnering with.
This was probably not the Trump administration's actual plan, but yet another episode of Bannon-led bumbling incompetence. It turns out white nationalists are generally not the brightest minds—hence the white nationalism—and it turns out that when they get the opportunity to act upon their plans and impulses, things reliably go downhill in a hurry. We really need to break ourselves of the notion that this is a clever lot. No; it is an impulsive, childish and racist lot. They are far more keen on implementing their own dull notions than they are in sussing out what the actual effects of those plans would be.