Call & Times

Truth won’t be found on either Covington video

- By MOLLY ROBERTS Molly Roberts writes about technology and society for The Post’s Opinions section.

Your opinion on the Covington Catholic fracas depends on the angle you choose to see it from. Literally.

A clash captured on video among a group of white MAGA-wearing schoolboys, a Native American activist and a handful of Hebrew Israelites gave Americans plenty to do over the long weekend. Commentato­rs at first condemned the students for surroundin­g, staring down and mocking an older man of color. Then, only a day later, those same commentato­rs began apologizin­g to the teenagers – and apologizin­g for them, too.

This shift occurred along a queasy sort of redemptive arc: People judged, and then they were judged in turn. The students’ denouncers, eager to cast these children as the embodiment of Trumpism in all its entitled deplorabil­ity, were truth-tellers on Saturday. By Monday, according to the revised consensus, they were emblems of the entire rush-to-judgment, politicall­y correct punditocra­cy.

In the new reality, which many observers have chosen to define as footage shot from an alternate vantage linked to in an article in the libertaria­n-leaning Reason, the teens themselves had been harassed by those Hebrew Israelites screaming homophobic profanity. (Hebrew Israelites are members of a religious movement who preach that African-Americans are the true descendant­s of the Israelites in the Bible.) Nathan Phillips, the Native American man, then inserted himself into the confrontat­ion. The boys may have been rambunctio­us, but by and large they had just stood by. Even the smirk on one student’s face that once inspired such ire was recast as a nervous attempt to defuse the situation.

Somber mea culpas from the mainstream poured forth, promptly followed by self-satisfied self-congratula­tion. They may have erred at first, the commentato­rs now told us, but they had adjusted their views, even when it did not suit their political inclinatio­ns, to accommodat­e nuance.

Or not.

The latest wisdom on Covington Catholic only swaps one neatly spun narrative for another. The original story was about how the racist, ignorant superiorit­y that undergirds the Trumpist ideology could move privileged white teenagers to chant “Build the wall,” as Phillips said they did, at someone whose ancestors were here long before theirs. The story now is about how the hyper-polarizati­on of today’s society can move right-thinking Americans to condemn those who do not deserve it.

The first version was concocted by progressiv­es of influence, perhaps with the help of some inauthenti­c internet actors, and amplified by news outlets that aired that initial damning video. The second comes from a fancy PR firm with Republican links that was hired to defend the Covington crew. This version, too, has been catapulted to prominence by some of those same outlets, eager to correct what the country suddenly sees as a massive mistake.

The problem is, neither of these distillati­ons captures the truth, which is hidden somewhere in a mess of different segments of different recordings showing different offenses by different parties. It’s true that the Hebrew Israelites shouted invective at the kids, and it is true that the kids chanted school cheers to drown them out. It’s also true that the schoolboys, whether someone else was mean to them beforehand or not, were giggling as they let loose with offensive war whoops and tomahawk chops while a Native American man beat his drum before them. It’s true that one of them ripped his shirt off in a signal of self-assured dominance. And it’s true that a smirk is a smirk.

Most important, it’s true that context demands more than watching a single event from all possible angles. It also means understand­ing the world where the event happened. Anyone who wears a Make America Great Again hat knows what it stands for, and who it stands against. Anyone with an understand­ing of American history knows that white people have long made excuses for other white people’s racist behavior – protecting their own as a method of protecting themselves. There’s a sense that outright condemnati­on often misses some essential reality. But sometimes, instead, condemning what is genuinely condemnabl­e is the most real thing one can do.

The quarrel over the Covington teens is not only a story of social media hate-mobbing. It’s also a story of the groupthink­ing tendency to hop off a bandwagon as unthinking­ly as we hop onto it. More important, it’s a story of our desire to make every cultural controvers­y fit into a framework that tells some distillabl­e truth about the state of our country today. Any actual truth about the rifts running through America right now can’t be cleanly distilled. That’s a harder story to tell – which might be why so few are trying.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States