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I don't think that is true at all. The issue is that the rage is more ready on the left, and their rage is more readily blamed on Trump, which gives the illusion of disparity between Obama and Trump. The only disparity is in the response and the coverage.
You are likely slow to blame Obama for the extent of the damage of the rioting during his watch, but his rhetoric definitely helped fuel it... along with the compliant media, and leftist agitators.
Of course the rage is going to be on the left, that's how division works. More and more the right will do little to critique itself and just offer blind support, more and more the left (and pretty much anyone in the middle/independent) will get upset with the direction things are going. When the R flips to the D, we'll see the same actions on the different sides. That's the danger of they hyperpartisan bullcrap. It's just an excuse for more. And while we didn't see a whole lot of right-wing violence during Obama (most because Obama, for as bad as he was, didn't quite inspire it), if Trump is replaced by a D, and that D cannot start to fix the issues of the divide, we're likely to see it. Particularly if that D plays to the split instead of tries to fix it.
We need to get rid of the Trump like people. We need someone more akin to Reagan, someone with the capability of reaching across the isle and pulling people in closer. We cannot regain reason and rational, intelligent behavior while playing to the hyperpartisan split.