President Trump trip sparks tempers, tension and taunts in Kenosha but also efforts to heal – Chicago Sun-Times

KENOSHA, Wis. The crowd that awaited President Donald Trumps visit here on Tuesday mirrored much of the American political climate over the past four years: loud, angry, bitter and divided.

But on the block where Jacob Blake was shot in the back by a Kenosha police officer barely a week ago, it was a party still loud, but focused on healing.

Were trying to turn something good out of all this, Anthony Garden said, slathering sauce over racks of ribs on a grill set up outside Blakes apartment complex near 40th Street and 28th Avenue.

A few hundred neighbors, activists and relatives of Blake took part in the community block party that made the neighborhood feel more like a Labor Day weekend gathering than the current epicenter of the nations latest reckoning with police violence and racism.

Instead, kids jumped in bounce houses, dance music blared, and residents shared water bottles, snacks, and face masks. Organizers also set up tables for people to register to vote, and even get tested for COVID-19.

Organizer Tanya McLean said they were out providing the services that have been denied Black communities for generations.

We still dont have the care, safety, and support that every one of us needs, McLean said, denouncing the language of hate and fear that Trump and others like him use to divide us.

Craig Young, a Chicago native who lives a few blocks from where Blake was shot, said Trump shouldve stayed where he was. But its good to see people taking a tragedy and turning it into something fruitful. Its sad it had to happen this way.

People are healing here, Kenoshan Joquin Gomez said.

But elsewhere in town and across the region, both supporters and opponents of Trump were busy making their feelings known and often competing to see who was loudest.

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Upon arrival at Waukegan National Airport across the state line, Trumps motorcade was greeted by people holding signs, some cheerfully bearing his name, some declaring Black Lives Matter and others, simply labeling the president Liar.

Others chose to forego signs altogether, instead holding up their middle fingers.

In Kenosha, the city square thats been home to days of raucous protest and bloodshed was mostly quiet through the afternoon as Trump made the rounds a few blocks away to survey areas of damage.

National Guard members kept watch outside the Kenosha County Courthouse while a plane flew overhead trailing a banner that read: Reject Trumps violence. Vote him out.

Two groups of demonstrators eventually converged, with about 100 waving Trump flags and shouting all lives matter in response to the crowd on the other side that roughly doubled them in size, chanting Black Lives Matter.

The discourse devolved from there to name-calling and mutual insults, from Marxists and communists to racists and Karens.

Some Trump supporters also chanted for the release of Kyle Rittenhouse, the 17-year-old accused of killing two protesters during a chaotic night last week. Trump has declined to denounce the Antioch teens actions.

Steven Fani, 51, said he brought his family with him to thank the president.

It was very disheartening and frightening to see all the looting and rioting happening around me, the Kenosha resident said. I never thought I would see that kind of destruction in my life here in America. I hope he sees the devastation and helps out these businesses and these people hurt by the riots.

Fani said he wanted all the facts out first before hed make up his mind on whether the police shooting of Blake was justified.

But 18-year-old Kenosha resident Shamell Green said Trumps visit only brought brutality and chaos.

Green clashed repeatedly with the supporters of Trump, asking how they could back such a divisive person.

For years he has stoked flames where there was no need to, Green said. He separates children from migrant families, he joked about [sexually] assaulting women, and he is now defending a kid who crossed state lines and ended up killing two people here.

As theyve been every day since the Rittenhouse shooting, the protests were peaceful as the downtown crowd dwindled to about a hundred by 4 p.m.

The tensest moment came when the remaining Black Lives Matter protesters were approached by a man wearing clothing of the Proud Boys, which the Anti-Defamation League calls a right-wing extremist group whose activity has attracted white supremacists.

Protesters shouted down the man and chased him to a nearby gas station, drawing a dozen squad cars of police who up until that point had been conspicuously absent from all the demonstrations.

After a brief but tense shouting match with police, protesters headed back to the city square while officers escorted the apparent Proud Boy away.

Manny Ramos is a corps member in Report for America, a not-for-profit journalism program that aims to bolster Sun-Times coverage of issues affecting Chicagos South and West sides

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President Trump trip sparks tempers, tension and taunts in Kenosha but also efforts to heal - Chicago Sun-Times

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