Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Army, Navy officials probe whether gestures were racist

- CINDY BOREN

WASHINGTON Officials at the Army and Navy academies are investigat­ing whether hand signs flashed by students standing behind a reporter during a TV interview were intended to convey a message of white supremacy.

The incident involved two West Point cadets and one Naval Academy midshipman who were behind ESPN’S Rece Davis as he reported on the sideline before the annual rivalry football game Saturday in Philadelph­ia.

“West Point is looking into the matter,” Lt. Col. Chris Ophardt said in an email.

“At this time, we do not know the intent of the cadets.”

Commander Alana Garas, a spokespers­on for the Naval Academy, said in a statement to The Associated Press, “we are aware and will be looking into it.”

The gesture, which is open to interpreta­tion, resembles the common one used to indicate “OK,” but with the hand pointing downward.

In September, it was moved from a trolling gesture to a hate symbol by the Anti-defamation League, which maintains a database of hate symbols. In doing so, the ADL was careful to note on its website that the gesture has multiple messages.

“The overwhelmi­ng usage of the ‘okay’ hand gesture today is still its traditiona­l purpose as a gesture signifying assent or approval,” the ADL post reads.

“As a result, someone who uses the symbol cannot be assumed to be using the symbol in either a trolling or, especially, white supremacis­t context unless other contextual evidence exists to support the contention. Since 2017, many people have been falsely accused of being racist or white supremacis­t for using the ‘okay’ gesture in its traditiona­l and innocuous sense.”

It went on to say, “Because of the traditiona­l meaning of the ‘okay’ hand gesture, as well as other usages unrelated to white supremacy, particular care must be taken not to jump to conclusion­s about the intent behind someone who has used the gesture.”

Last week, West Point officials dropped the “GFBD” slogan used by the football team after learning of its associatio­n with white supremacis­t groups.

An abbreviati­on for the phrase, “God forgives, brothers don’t,” it has appeared for several years on a rally flag carried into games by the Black Knights, and it reportedly was featured on some team-related merchandis­e. A hashtag, #GFBD, has also been used online by supporters of the team.

According to the ADL and the Southern Poverty Law Center, the slogan and its abbreviati­on are popular among members of the Aryan Brotherhoo­d of Texas, a white supremacis­t prison gang. The ADL has also described “GFBD” as a phrase “shared” by such groups with motorcycle gangs and “intended to reinforce group loyalty” or to warn of never “snitching” on fellow members.

In a statement, an academy spokespers­on wrote that a “thorough investigat­ion” showed “that the Army football team began the use of the skull and crossbones flag with the initials in the mid-1990s.

The football team continued to use the motto until leaders at the academy were made aware that the phrase is also associated with extremist groups.

“The motto was originally used to emphasize teamwork, loyalty, and toughness. The academy immediatel­y discontinu­ed using it upon notificati­on of its tie to hate groups.”

Last year, the U.S. Coast Guard reprimande­d an officer who used a similar hand sign during a live MSNBC broadcast. The officer, with 23 years in uniform, was not identified by the Coast Guard, but received a letter of censure signed by Capt. John Reed, the head of Hurricane Florence response in Charleston, S.C. “While your actions may have seemed funny and playful to you, they clearly showed lack of maturity and inability to understand the gravity of the situation, namely the preparatio­n and response to Hurricane Florence, a declared disaster,” Reed wrote in a letter the Coast Guard provided to Navy Times.

Navy won Saturday’s game 31-7 behind the play of quarterbac­k Malcolm Perry, who rushed for 304 yards and two touchdowns, and snapped Army’s three-game winning streak in the series, which Navy leads 61-52-7.

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