There are some people in this world, let’s just call them Social Justice Warriors, who see a racist under every bed
And the award for dumbest reporter in America goes
announces
Benny Huang
to… Josh Feldman of Mediaite! During game seven of the World Series, Feldman noticed three cards
in the stands each bearing the letter ‘K’ and began wondering via
Twitter if the Klan was rearing its ugly head. He quickly dashed off an
embarrassing piece entitled “Wait, What’s That KKK Sign Doing at the
World Series?” He was apparently not the only one who believed that the
three K’s were somehow related to the Ku Klux Klan. Feldman’s piece
relied on a Twitterstorm of perplexed and angry messages from people who
also perceived racist intent behind the three K’s.
This is what happens when bandwagon-jumpers tune in to watch baseball
for the first time in their lives. If these people knew anything about
the sport they would know that ‘K’ is baseball shorthand for a
strikeout. It’s common for fans to tally strikeouts by holding up cards
with the letter ‘K’ on them. Three K’s means three strikeouts—not
Ku Klux Klan. Sheesh. Even I knew that and I haven’t watched an entire
baseball game in years. After the error was discovered, Mediate altered
the story, claiming that “some Twittters” made the foolish mistake, omitting the fact that the most prominent of these Twitterers was their very own Josh Feldman.
The whole incident would be funny if it weren’t so sad. Did these
people really think that the KKK crashed the World Series? Yes, they
probably did. As ridiculous as it sounds, they honestly believe that the
KKK is a force to be reckoned with in modern American life and not just
a negligible group of fringe yahoos who are justifiably held in
universal contempt.
Apocryphal KKK sightings are becoming increasingly common. In April, the University of Indiana had a minor panic
after news spread via Twitter that an honest-to-goodness klansman was
prowling the campus—with a whip no less. Crisis was averted when it was
discovered that the “klansman” was Father Jude McPeak, a Franciscan
friar dressed in the white garment of his order. The “whip” was actually
a rosary hanging from his belt.
At the height of last autumn’s racial unrest at the University of
Missouri, word of klansmen on campus went viral—just in time to prove
the student protestors’ point that their campus was infested with
racism. As you can probably imagine, the whole thing was a giant
hallucination. Payton Head, Mizzou’s student body president, did his
part to amplify the panic by pushing misinformation (or, more likely,
disinformation) through his Twitter and Facebook accounts. Payton Head
is black, by the way, and one of the main instigators of the insane
Black Lives Matter-inspired hysteria that rocked Mizzou in 2015.
The turbulent events of last autumn began when Head claimed that someone had screamed the n-word
at him from a passing pickup truck. I have my doubts that such an
incident happened at all because Payton Head is an agenda-pushing racial
arsonist and a liar. We know this at very least from his tweeting about
the illusory klansmen on his campus: “Students please take precaution.
Stay away from windows in residence halls. The KKK is confirmed to be
sighted on campus. I’m working with the MUPD, the state trooper [sic]
and the National Guard.” The Twitter rumors only got more outlandish
from there. Suddenly the imaginary klansmen were chanting “white power!”
One Twitterer seemed to believe that klansmen were throwing bricks
through dorm windows while enjoying police protection. How’s that for institutional racism?
Eventually Payton Head was forced to admit that the KKK was not on
campus. Duh. “I’m sorry about the misinformation that I have shared
through social media,” Head wrote on Facebook. “In a state of alarm, I
was concerned for all students of the University of Missouri and wanted
to ensure that everyone was safe. I received and shared information from
multiple incorrect sources, which I deeply regret.”
But Payton Head was not duped. He claimed to have been working with
the campus police, state police, and the National Guard. How could that
possibly have been true when in fact there never were any hooded bad
guys to speak of? Furthermore, the university says that the National
Guard wasn’t even on campus. Payton Head told a ridiculous lie that was
believed by far too many paranoid ninnies.
The only word to describe the insane fear of a weak and dying redneck
organization like the KKK is paranoia. It occurs to me however, that
many people don’t perceive paranoia to be a problem when racism is its
subject. Given the negative connotation of the word “paranoia” they of
course avoid using it, though they embrace it all the same. Dare I say
that our society, or at least segments of it, considers paranoia of
racism to be a virtue of sorts? Their attitude seems to be that racism
is so utterly loathsome that there can be no such thing as excess when
opposing it.
There are some people in this world, let’s just call them Social
Justice Warriors, who see a racist under every bed. I am intentionally
borrowing a Cold War phrase that was often used to discredit
anti-communists for perceiving “a communist under every bed.” The phrase
had a certain sting to it because it portrayed anti-communists as
hopeless paranoids—which they weren’t. Anti-communists weren’t looking
for communists under every bed but there were plenty to be found in
Hollywood (Lillian Hellman, Dalton Trumbo), in academia (Howard Zinn,
the entire Frankfurt school) in the news media (I.F. Stone, Carl
Bernstein), and in the so-called “civil rights movement” (Bayard Rustin,
Hunter Pitts O’Dell, Stanley Levison). By the late 1960s the communists
weren’t even hiding anymore; they were waving Viet Cong flags and
brandishing Mao’s little red books.
Yet despite the plethora of evidence that communists were indeed
burrowing into our societal institutions, some particularly ignorant
people still talk about anti-communism as if it were nothing more than
tilting at windmills. Now, some 25 years after the fall of the Soviet
Union we’ve come to embrace paranoia—real paranoia—as something
to be admired. The Don Quixotes of our time are Payton Head and his
allies yet we don’t mock them for being wrong in the same way that we
mocked anti-communists for being right.
The genuine paranoia of 21st Century race-baiters is
excused because it indicates a supposed consciousness of racial issues.
In the parlance of the Black Lives Matter movement these people are “woke”—which
is to say that their eyes are open to the reality of racism in America.
They see nothing wrong with crying wolf about racism because it shows
that their hearts are in the right place. Recall Payton Head’s Facebook
post in which he claimed that he was only worried about the students’
safety. And who could fault him for an abundance of caring? The rest of
us who don’t see imaginary men in white bedsheets are miscreants for not
perceiving racism in every aspect of modern American life. It’s a
messed up world we live in when paranoids get to lecture the rest of us
for not sharing their pathology.
Paranoia of any kind is unattractive and even dangerous. Granted,
people will always disagree about what constitutes paranoia. If one
person perceives a real threat and another does not, the second person
will think of the first as paranoid while the first person will think of
the second as blithely unaware. But which one is right? In a country
where fake hate crimes regularly spur the population into fits of rage, I
think we can safely say that the pathology resides mostly with the
Social Justice Warriors. There’s nothing wrong with us but there is
something very, very wrong with them. It’s time they paid a social
penalty for their crazed antics. Laugh at them. Scorn them. Call them
nutjobs because that’s what they are. Only when they cease to be
rewarded for their supposed good intentions will the hysteria end.