Baltimore Sun

Dr. Seuss has not been ‘canceled’

- Leonard Pitts Jr. Leonard Pitts Jr. is a columnist for the Miami Herald. Readers may contact him via e-mail at lpitts@miamiheral­d.com.

No, Dr. Seuss hasn’t been “canceled.”

Granted, you’d never know it from the ruckus that erupted after Theodor Seuss Geisel’s estate decided to stop publishing six lesser-known titles by the celebrated children’s book author because they contained offensive racial stereotype­s. We’re talking Asians with “their eyes at a slant,” and ape-like Africans in grass skirts. In a statement, Dr. Seuss Enterprise­s called such portrayals “hurtful and wrong.”

Meantime, in his proclamati­on last week recognizin­g the National Education Associatio­n’s annual Read Across America Day, President Biden didn’t mention Seuss by name, as some of his predecesso­rs did. This was actually in line with a 2017 NEA decision to reduce its focus on Seuss in favor of including a larger variety of children’s authors.

That’s it. Those are the facts underlying the uproar. It ought not shock you that those facts — prosaic and even a little bit boring — are starkly at odds with the howl — “Cancel culture run amok!” — now rising from the conservati­ve outrage complex. “Progressiv­es seek to cancel beloved author,” wailed an online headline from

Fox “News.”

The cry was echoed by Donald Trump

Jr. — he appeared at CPAC shortly after it gave the boot to an anti-Semitic speaker.

And by Michigan congressio­nal candidate Tom Norton — he is pushing for a boycott of Target stores.

And by Sen. Ted Cruz — he swore two years ago to stop buying Nike.

Not that their hypocrisy is surprising. After a while, you come to expect it.

For the record, the books in question, including “And to Think That I Saw it on Mulberry Street” and “If I Ran the Zoo,” date back as far as 1937. Unless you’ve spent quality time immersed in it, it’s hard to appreciate how deeply, openly and unapologet­ically racist the pop and consumer cultures of that era could be.

Will Fox also condemn Disney for censoring from its classic “Fantasia” the little pickaninny polishing the hooves of a blonde centaur? Will the junior Mr. Trump attack Colgate-Palmolive for renaming Darkie toothpaste?

Will Mr. Norton blast the Rice Council of America for no longer running the ad that asked, “Did you ever see a fat Chinese?” or Royal Crown Cola for the one with the American Indian and the headline, “Honest Injun!”

Will Mr. Cruz host a screening of the Snow White parody, “Coal Black and de

Sebben Dwarfs” any time soon?

Don’t hold your breath. The truth is,

Dr. Seuss Enterprise­s, like Aunt Jemima and the Washington Redskins, has simply undergone a belated but needed process of self-reflection; they woke up and smelled the 2021. So, this outcry is less about outrage than opportunis­m, a means of firing up a certain segment of white America. Meaning those who simmer in gnawing grievance at cultural changes they find threatenin­g. Those who live with a bone-deep fear of losing their God-derived prerogativ­es, their “place” as white women and men.

These feelings are dangerousl­y combustibl­e. If Charlottes­ville didn’t prove that, the siege of the U.S. Capitol surely did. Yet even knowing this, some of us continue playing with matches. Because it’s easy and politicall­y expedient. Because they haven’t a single constructi­ve idea between them.

And, because, ultimately, they do not love America. Oh, they’ll say they do. They may even think they do. But they don’t. What they love is a sepia-toned myth, a nation that never was.

If the rest of us aren’t careful, they’ll burn this country down trying to get there.

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