Friday, July 19, 2019

Symbols Mean Things

On our recent trip to the American Cemetery in Normandy I was struck by something I learned.  When bodies were buried there were two choices.  A cross, a symbol of Christianity or a Star of David, the symbol of Judaism.  If you weren't Christian you got a star.  Think about that, a person who was Muslim, Sikh, Hindu, etc or even of no faith was buried under a symbol that was part of the faith expression of another faith.  That was part of the world we lived in but it brings up an interesting point.  Symbols do matter. But symbolic meaning of symbols change.

Recently there have been many incidents when symbols have been the center of controversy.  At Indiana University School of Public Health a classroom had an early 20th century tile installation that included a variety of cultural symbols.  One being a swastika.  Now the swastika was a symbol of many cultures and often is seen as a symbol of a celestial object or of peace before the 1930s.  In fact many old churches and synagogues have a form of it carved into friezes.  When I was a kid, I would visit the Fredric Remington Art Museum that included a recreating of the artist's study.  In the study were a set of spoons with swastikas.  It was always stunning as from and early age that symbol was a symbol of hate.  But Remington died in 1909 so he wasn't a Nazi.  But the symbol has taken on a life of its own.  Having that in a classroom will cause the same horrifying reaction I had as an elementary school kid seeing that symbol so prominently displayed.  With the rise of  antisemitism it is clear that IU chose wisely to eliminate it.  Now some say we can put an explanation on a plaque next to it but let's be clear, people don't read those very often.  In fact one of my favorite stories is from the Cincinnati Zoo's Gibbon exhibit.  You are greeted with a large sign that says "It's Not a Monkey" and goes on to explain the difference between a monkey and an ape.  In a brief encounter, I counted 20 people call them monkeys while standing next to the sign.  For the rest of the day whenever we encountered something we would say, "It's not a monkey".

Hijacked symbols are all over the place.  The Confederate Flag as it is called today, the crossed blue lines with stars on a red background is synonymous with the south though it was part of two of the three adopted flags of the Confederacy, known as the Southern Cross, it was never official as a stand alone flag.  Versions were used as unit flags including and square banner by Robert E. Lee.  In the post Civil War era it was used as a shorthand symbol of the Confederacy and at one time it was used as the flag of the Dixiecrats, the conservative southern democrats who broke off as a segregationist party.   In the south states have adopted the Southern Cross as part of state flags.  I was in Georgia when the debate about the flag led to the design without it being prominent and later changing to the current flag.  The irony of the current flag is that it is basically the 1st official flag of the Confederacy with Georgia Coat-of-Arms in the center of the circle of stars.  But the Confederate Flag we think of today is used in many ways but is seen by many as a symbol of racism, slavery and white supremacy because it was adopted by the people who promoted such things.  Even if adopted by those looking to promote their southern heritage from Alabama football programs to Lynyrd Skynyrd to states-rights advocates, the symbol cannot escape the fact it was often flown over the bodies of lynched men and women, carried at cross--burnings and used to strike fear in the hearts of non-whites in many places in the country.  Calls to remove it from state house polls and displays in schools make sense, even if the intent of the flag is not explicitly racist.

One argument against eliminating symbols from the everyday culture is that we are erasing our history.  This was used as monuments were taken down in many places in the south because they were of Confederate leaders.  Funny thing was many were put up during the Civil Rights Era to intimidate blacks seeking to be seen as equal.  History was never the intent. But I would argue we could eliminate every sign of the Confederacy in public life and we would still know about it if we study our history.  Growing up if someone turned on you, you called them a Benedict Arnold.  He was as much a standard for traitor as Judas from the Christian Bible.  Benedict Arnold was a Major General who fought with valor and was injured at the Battle of Saratoga for Continental Army.  There is a monument to his fighting there, but it is a boot and bears no name.  When he promised the British West Point he gave up the right to have his heroics lauded in our country.  While some wanted to honored his skills and cunning they did it without name.  Yet even today we know who he was.  We don't need symbols in public places to know our history.  We have the stories.

The argument here is also one of the 1st amendment as the statues and all symbols are a form of speech.  That is true they are, but the government is not outlawing the statues, nor the symbols.  In the case of state flags that have tried to eliminate imagery that is seen as hurtful or taking down of statues, the government is simply not endorsing those things.  If in any city you wanted to put up a statue of Robert E. Lee or Adolph Hitler or Carrot top on your private land, and the government tries to stop you, I will fight for your right to do it.  (just don't make me defend Carrot Top).

In recent weeks however the attacks on symbols has been really called into question.  When Nike wanted to put out a shoe with the Betsy Ross flag on it.  A flag with a blue field with a circle of 13 stars and 13 stripes alternating red and white Colin Kapernick, a spokesperson for the brand, objected.  He called it a symbol of racism.  It has been adopted by some some racist organization and it is similar to the 1st Confederate flag I mentioned earlier.   Nike withdrew the shoe and of course the conservatives lost their minds.  At first I sided with Nike, if that symbol truly does generate some concern that it would become white nationalist attire I get that others would feel uncomfortable promoting, especially with a company that has banked on a large African-American following for brand loyalty.  But as I think more, there could have been a middle ground.  But worse is the actor Chris Pratt.  I will start by saying I know little about Chris Pratt, he has made conservative comments.  Recently he wore a t-shirt of an American flag with the Gadsden Flag symbol of a snake and the words Don't Tread On Me.  A flag from the Revolutionary War and I have to tell you one of my favorites as a kid, it has recently been used by far right hate groups, Two white supremacists used the flag to drape the bodies of two police officers they killed in Las Vegas recently.  The Equal Employment  Opportunity Commission says the flag may, in some circumstances, be racial offensive in the workplace.  But there is no indication the Pratt is a aligned with the thinking of white nationalists.  But just wearing the shirt bring some serious criticism.

Symbols tell us things about the person or organization sharing it.  But rarely do we get the whole story from a quick glance.  As a culture we have always made decisions about what is publicly appropriate and what is not. While our 1st amendment protects us from government telling us what symbols we can use or promote, the community we live in tells us what is acceptable.  The local businessman who decorates his store with swastikas will likely never get the Chamber of Commerce award in most American cities, but if we outlawed is decorations we are going in the wrong direction. 

Sometimes the outrage about a symbol is seen as what it is, a fringe cause.  Currently there is a story of a woman calling a Spiderman art installation a symbol of the Devil.  Should the art piece be removed for one person's misunderstanding?  It is worth however taking into account the audience who has to see the symbols we do have around us.  A swastika in a classroom can heighten anxiety in a student whose family story involved many people killed by the Nazis. A Confederate flag still gives many African-Americans a visceral reaction.  There are many other ways that symbols can make people uncomfortable and it is just human and sometimes good business to acknowledge that.  (Nike stock rose after the flag controversy).  Public sentiment will always shape what is acceptable expression in symbols, words and deeds.  Sometimes for good and sometimes for nonsense.  But as long as it is public sentiment that is driving the discussion we are comfortable, but if the government starts to decide we are in danger. 

 



Tuesday, July 16, 2019

We Can All Agree the Tweets Were Racist...but we won't

Several times today we have revisited Rep. Ilhan Omar's statements that raised questions because they included anti-Semitic tomes.  For some this was a defense of the the President's recent tweetstorm that called for the 4 members of Congress, known as  The Squad, to go back where they came from after mentioning that those were backward countries.  First 3 of the 4 are born in the US.  The one who wasn't, Rep Omar, came here as a child.  It is not happenstance that the for women are black and brown.  The "go back where you came from" is a racist tome used to attack people of color often.  Especially those of a different faith or have radical ideas.

Let me be clear, if you are a Republican who says the Trump tweet is inappropriate BUT these woman say anti-American things, then you are supporting a racist statement not condemning it.  If you say that Trump's tweet are not Presidential, but those women should be grateful to be in this country then you are supporting racism.  If you say that President Trump's tweets are not what America stands for but these women shouldn't speak out against Israel then you are supporting his racism.  That is a fact.  You can't condemn something and then make an excuse.  It is like saying, it is terrible Jeffery Dahmer ate his victims, but they were already dead and he was hungry.  Don't do it.

The four woman he attacked, Rep.Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Rep Rashida Tahlib, Rep Ayanna Pressley, and Rep Omar have all said some things that I disagree with.  They have to live with their statements and every 2 years their constituents have an opportunity to fire them.  But if they are truly representing the voice of the majority of the people in their districts, they are in fact, doing the job they were hired for per our Constitution.  Calling them out for their comments is not the problem.  Telling them they must leave the country because of their opinions is a problem, made worse by suggesting they don't really belong here because of what they look like.

The real issue is that the President is mad at them for visiting the detention centers at the border and reporting on them accurately.  People are even angry that Rep. Ocasio-Cortez was sworn in to testify in front of a Congressional committee, meaning her statements must be true under penalty of perjury.  They highlighted a sharp contrast between what the President is saying, what the Vice-President is saying and what seems to be really happening according to everyone else including the Inspector General's office.  The President got mad and lashed out like an angry child and his racism was exposed.

So after one day of GOP silence on the issue, we now get the excuses for him doing it.  Many using Israel and Jewish people as human shields.  Sometimes lying suggesting Rep Omar and Tahlib support terrorist groups.  Pulling quotes to make them sound more anti-Jewish (while ignoring the anti-Jewish tomes that Trump has used in the past).  But it doesn't matter.   You can disagree with things they say and still protect their right to say it and in this case their right to remain in their jobs and country and that they should be afforded dignity not dehumanized by the leader of the country.  I know, I am doing it right now.

It should be simple to say the President's tweets were wrong, racist and dangerous.  It should be.  But it won't be.  More and more Republicans will come to his defense with excuses like a.  He can't be racist there is an Asian woman in his cabinet (happened yesterday)  b.  How can he be racist if black unemployment is so low (suggesting the President controls who you hire)  c.  How can he be racist if he one time helped a celebrity who was black (something we heard throughout the campaign).  or my favorite d. How can he be racist he won the same aware as Rosa Parks (said on TV this weekend)  An aside the award had nothing to do with race when it came to Trump, it was a quickly created award and he got it for being a real estate guy in New York or German decent.

This could be a teachable moment for the Republicans and the President.  They could call him out, tell him he went too far, teach him about the rich and wonderful history of immigrants of color in this country.  Have him meet with these women and discuss policy differences.  Let's have an open discussion about issues of race, religion, gender.  We won't.  In office Republicans will either continue their mealy mouthed attempts to look like they are condemning it while justifying it or like the leadership simply stay silent or support it.  The President will continue to lob racist, sexist, Islamophobic tweets at people and say as he did yesterday "many people agree with me".  The White Supremacists will continue to feel motivated and seen by a President who appears to embrace their ideology and in the end, we will see where the American people are in all this.

Today the House of Representatives has a chance to condemn the President's tweets in a floor vote, this could be a start.  I wish I had hope.


Friday, July 12, 2019

The Power of Nonsense

The other day I was clicking around YouTube as Dianne was reading and came across videos on the Mandela Effect.  Simply put this is a weird situation where a large group of people remember events differently than they happened and the repeated talk about it reinforces the belief.  Now anyone who studies memory knows that this is an easy thing to explain.  Memory is not like a recording of events, it is more like bullet points that we fill in the gaps with our previous experiences.  This is true of many memories even ones that we make emotional attachments to and think that they are solid.  An example is that of major events when people say "I always remember where I was when..."  Various historical events include:  Pearl Harbor, Kennedy assassination, the Challenger explosion, Princess Diana's death, 9-11, etc.  Called flash bulb memories they seem seared into our brains but in fact they are not.  Often when you take a deeper dive into your own personal story about where you were and what you were doing when you learned about them, you are wrong.  Sometimes remarkably wrong and other times just a bit off.  Many times, even in the face of real evidence, they still believe what they remember and not what is proven fact. 

With the Mandela Effect, often you have many people who remember the same way you do, even if clearly wrong.  Named for Nelson Mandela, because when he left prison in 1990 many people were surprise because they had thought he had died earlier in the 80s,   But as late as 1985 there were plenty of people raising awareness of Apartheid, and the Artists Against Apartheid released Sun City that ends with a call to Free Nelson Mandela.  In part the news of the time was all over the place but so many people believed that Mandela had died, stories rose that there was a funeral, an Oprah special etc. These are hard memories to dispel in people even with the fact for many years after Mandela was seen regularly on the world stage.  The Mandela effect has many other examples.  People remember a movie call Shazam, staring actor/comedian Sinbad in the mid-90s.  It never happened.  There was a movie called Kazaam staring Shaquille O'Neil and in the 60s and 70s a cartoon called Shazzan had a similar plot to the missing movie.  Couple that with Sinbad hosting a movie about Sinbad the Sailor dressed in stereotypical Middle Eastern garb often associated with a genie and the confluence of things built a memory. 

I could list many other examples but the point is that most of the Mandela Effect memories are easily explained and often silly.  But that hasn't stopped a niche market of people to believe that something more sinister or other worldly is going on.  If you search the internet you can find places that  speak of the Mandela effect as being evidence of us shifting to alternative timelines, others saying it is a full on psyops program by the government.  In medicine there is a saying, when you hear hoof beats think horses not zebras.  The simplest diagnosis is often the right one.  But for so many they thrive on the conspiracy theory to drive and seem to build their identity around it. 

This is dangerous because reality matters, a lot.  Trying to convince people that every thing can be traced to a nefarious cause has consequences.  This week we learned the often repeated lie about Seth Rich, a Democratic staffer who was murdered in what police believe a failed robbery, was a story planted by a Russian operation to discredit Secretary Hillary Clinton.  The lie was the Rich was the leakier of Clinton's emails and she had him killed.  This lie found purchase in the right wing noise machine underbelly and soon found its way to Fox News and talk radio that talked about it even after the election.  This could be one more piece of the horror show that is the political conspiracy world that included a story that a pizza place in Washington was the headquarters of a sex ring that was managed through the basement of the building.  The building had no basement but that didn't stop someone showing up with a gun to demand he be allowed to investigate.  If you think this is all over, earlier this week a group of right wing activists went to the New Castle Police department in New York to call for them to arrest her. 

Some of the people who spread this nonsense on the internet were invited to join the President at the White House this week.  He was discussing with them how social media is treating them badly because, and I am not kidding, they get banned for violating the rules of use of the platform.  The President of the United States is whining and wants to use the power of the government to help people who report things like Facebook and Twitter are shadow banning them.  That some how they think they are posting but no one can see it.  They did that on Twitter and Facebook.  Others spoke of various plots by Clinton and other Democrats to overthrow the government.  Some in the room promoted the Birther cause and the raging Islamophobia that pollutes their websites often speaks of an attempt to overturn out government through Creeping Sharia.  Oh and a real life Nazi was there. 

Nonsense has cache and not only in the political world and frankly not only with conservatives.  But conservatives have the loudest voices in politics.  This week there are thousands who claim they will storm Area 51, a military base in the Nevada desert used to test and develop secret projects, in search of the aliens rumored to be there.  This place has been ground zero for the alien crowd so much that it is part of the vernacular of the country.  Why people believe the US has aliens and using their technology is beyond me but in the end it is easier for people to believe the lie for whatever reason. 

Nonsense is something that people seem to thrive on.  Be it people who would rather believe they are bouncing between alternate realities than memory is a faulty mistress or that Hillary and Bill Clinton are criminal geniuses that have gotten away with dozens of murders but couldn't stop a TV personality from winning the Presidency you will never go broke creating a good story to sell to people who would rather believe than think. 

Thursday, July 4, 2019

Fighting for Freedom


A few weeks ago I stood on the beaches of Normandy.  At Omaha Beach I was awed by the remnants that remain of the battle that took place 75 years ago.  A battle that included members of my own family.  The attached newspaper page has an article about my Uncle Bill who was part of a battalion that helped clear the beach of the obstacles put out to slow any attempted landing there. Among those defenses was The Czech hedgehogs a simple and deadly surprise for those who wanted to storm the beach.  The story of his unit getting honored by General Eisenhower for their bravery under fire.  At the end of the article it references my other uncles and my father who joined the fight in France.  Helping to win the war for the allies.

I do not know what war is like, but the newsreels and the stories put to film created a frightening scene of death and destruction.  The message of the D-day museum was not only the bravery of the warriors and the horror they faced, but what they were fighting for through the artillery, blood and death.  Young men, some in their teens, joined the battle to fight for freedom.  While I can assume their heads weren't filled with the detailed nuance of the fight between Western Liberalism and the Authoritarian ideology of the Nazis and the fascists of Italy, they knew that if Europe fell that the ideals of our democracy were at risk.

So it is truly appropriate as we celebrate today the freedom they helped save as we remember the founders of the United States and our Declaration of our Independence on July 4th.  Our country has been evolving in spreading that freedom to more and more people.  But we must always remember that our freedom is fragile.  As we celebrate today we have seen the rise of authoritarianism in Europe and even her in the US.  We have a President who seems in awe of the power of dictators and  want to be like them.  He seems to want to set aside the rule of law, most recently defying a Supreme Court ruling on the census and the citizenship question.  As we think about the freedom that was conceived by our founders who were tired of living by the whims of a single ruler so too do we have to remember that the real power of our nation must remain in the governed.  That the people of the nation matter and our voices should be heard.  This isn't about a partisan rant but true patriotism is not honoring a man but the values that build this nation.  Let us remember words so important to our nation's birth:

 That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness. Prudence, indeed, will dictate that Governments long established should not be changed for light and transient causes; and accordingly all experience hath shewn that mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed. But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such Government, and to provide new Guards for their future security.

May this July 4th be meaningful, fun and reflective.




The Eclipse Is Bringing Back Memories of My Dad

In less than a day Indianapolis will be in the path of totality for a solar eclipse.  There has been a great deal of hype for this around he...