The New York Post issued a “sideways” explanation (I really wouldn’t
call it an apology) on a provocative and highly incendiary political
cartoon it ran on February 18th, 2009. Combining two news events
of the day, one in which a Connecticut woman named Charla Nash was
attacked by her “pet” chimpanzee - which nearly ripped off her face
before having to be shot to death by police (when the chimpanzee
turned on them); the second event was President Barack Obama signing
a highly controversial but badly needed economic stimulus bill into
law - essentially within his first month in office, a nearly impossible
feat, given the highly partisan divide in Congress.
Instead of satirizing one or the other, the Post satirized both
- in the same cartoon. And they didn’t seem to have a problem with
that (according to their explanation) except one had nothing to
do with the other. One was a personal tragedy in our society, while
the other was a stark reality of our society. However, another stark
reality of society surfaced in the midst of these two events, the
First Amendment and the ability of the free press to speak for or
against acts of government, popular and unpopular, in truth and
in satire.
Political
cartoons are editorial commentary in satire where one picture is
worth a thousand words. In fact, that is the specific intent of
political satire, to mock how political action looks to the every
man (woman), and to reflect dissent in the aftermath of popular
actions. The New York Post offered a very incendiary cartoon,
rooted in cultural codification, racial symbolism and violent extremism
we’ve come to know as America
in various periods of its history. Incendiary cartoons have a dangerous
past in American culture. Often a cue for social dissent, political
cartoons that “cross the line” have historically been predicators
to social revolt, personal violence and tragic results.
The “chimp” cartoon” was more than about police shooting a chimpanzee.
Yes, that event did occur. But when coupled around the dissent of
the stimulus package, the cartoon takes on an entirely different
meaning. The deeper, and most offensive aspect of the cartoon was
in the caption. This is where the Post explanation holds
no water and gives credence to the racial subterfuge implied under
the guise of satire. The caption shows one police officer saying
to another officer (who shot the chimpanzee), “They’ll have to find
someone else to write the next stimulus bill.”
The Post says the cartoon was about the Nash incident, but the
caption was referring to what the media and the Congress (and the
public) has been calling the $789 billion dollar Obama Stimulus
Package. Let’s be clear on the semantics that have been circling
around this issue; The President called for it, the President lobbied
to have it introduced, the President shepherded the partisan conflict
that threatened to kill the bill and the President signed the bill
into law. Congress, nor anyone in Congress, could have gotten this
stimulus bill through except by the large political will and public
popularity of President Obama. Moreover, to the Post’s irrational
response, neither Nash nor her chimpanzee had anything to do with
the stimulus bill.
Most cartoons will scribble text in the images to help with the interpretation.
For instance, if the police were the Congress and the gun was Obama
and the chimpanzee was the American Public - properly labeled, the
cartoon and caption could make sense. Or if the police were the
public, Congress was the gun and the chimpanzee was the economy,
the cartoon and caption could make sense. But with no labels, it’s
left to the public’s discretion to figure out the meaning of the
cartoon, but the caption is the tip-off and the Post cartoon
had no text for interpretation or explanation. That’s a code.
In
the last few weeks, police have shot black men in Oakland,
Pasadena and Compton, under highly suspicious circumstances. That’s a sign. America’s
own history reflects hundreds of documented instances racializing
black people (particularly black men), most commonly referring to
them as “monkeys.” There are even archival documents showing the
great Abraham Lincoln, because of his anti-slavery leanings and
questions about his lineage, as a monkey. Monkeys, Apes, Chimps
were all symbols for sub-human evolution during Social Darwanism,
when Blacks were thought to be derivatives of the lowest primates
(monkeys) rather than the highest primates (humans). This symbolism
carried through half the 20th Century when black WW II soldiers
were thought to have tails (by Japanese and German soldiers). The
references lasted the whole century.
American society tries to portray African Americans as hyper-sensitive
when it comes to issues of race, but there is not much the Post,
or anybody else, can say when everybody knows that it was the Obama
administration that wrote the stimulus bill that made it through
Congress. He asked for it. He set the spending priorities and he
got what he asked for. To
suggest that the chimp wasn’t a symbol for Obama really insults
the intelligence of us all. And black people really get tired of
having their intelligence insulted, despite the supposition that
we don’t have any (intelligence).
We’ve certainly seen enough symbols, signs and codes to know them when
we see them. The only fool in this play is the editor that green-lighted
the cartoon. The danger here is that political cartoons have a prominent
place in America’s assassination
history. Prior to the deaths of Presidents Lincoln and Kennedy,
and even black leaders like Malcolm and King, incendiary political
cartoons made the publishing rounds, suggesting they were better
dead than as living advocates of unpopular social action. Unrebutted
suggestion is nothing more than a planted seed in the mind of a
social deviant. If the Post is trying to sow seeds of discontent
and murder, we need to rebut it at every turn - or some fool might
mistake it for popular sentiment. They have in the past.
That’s why the Post is being protested. They should be. We have
to check them, or wreck them, when they insult our intelligence
and our sensibilities in taking us into dangerous, tragic pasts
concerning our leadership as well as the leadership of this country.
BlackCommentator.com
Columnist,
Dr. Anthony Asadullah Samad, is a national columnist, managing director
of the Urban Issues Forum
and author of Saving The Race: Empowerment Through Wisdom. His Website is AnthonySamad.com.
Click here
to contact Dr. Samad.
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