Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

KKK image from Ala. GOP official possibly an error, but not a mistake

- Roy S. Johnson Roy S. Johnson is a writer for al.com.

There are errors. And there are mistakes.

What happened in Lawrence County, Ala. may have been an error. It wasn’t a mistake.

Shanon Terry chairs the county Republican party, recently replacing long-time chair Daniel Stover. Terry announced the transition on the party’s Facebook page on Aug. 15. He thanked Stover for his “diligent work” serving the party. And made an error.

Terry decorated the post with an illustrati­on of the GOP’S symbolic elephant, an illustrati­on he found in a “google (sic) search,” he shared later. An illustrati­on in which three KKK white hoods are drawn in the gaps between the beast’s four legs.

Oops. Terry called it an “error,” noting in an apology the following day that it appeared “temporaril­y” until it was “later found to have hidden images…”

Error? Certainly. Mistake? Nah.

See, the KKK hoods aren’t “hidden” at all. Sure, there’s a bit of Rorschach eye/mind-trick thing going on—an homage to the famous inkblot tests originally designed by Swiss psychologi­st Hermann Rorschach to discern disorder in patterns of thought in schizophre­nia and now widely used in research on emotional and personalit­y disorders and intelligen­ce. But hidden? Not one bit.

Not to those who see. Mother Jones magazine commission­ed the work two years ago from Philadelph­ia illustrato­r and designer Woody Harrington “to reference how white supremacy was taking over the GOP,” Editorin-chief Clara Jeffery shared in a tweet.

It accompanie­d an article with the headline: “The Republican Party Is Racist and Soulless. Just Ask This Veteran GOP Strategist.”

Stuart Stevens is the strategist; he played the role for Mitt Romney’s 2012 presidenti­al bid. In the article, he said Republican­s were “weaponizin­g” bigotry during the 2020 campaign. (Duh.) “We created this. It didn’t just happen,” he said.

Hidden? Please.

Not from those who discern.

Before the illustrati­on took center stage and truly became the Google search algorithm’s favorite “GOP elephant”, I showed it to a few folks. I asked: What do you see? “Klan hoods” or “an elephant and… Klan hoods?” were pretty much the two categories of responses. My research wasn’t exactly scientific, I confess: All my respondent­s were Black.

Terry is not.

The county GOP chair is a longtime member of the local School Board. I’m sure someone in that system teaches the dangers of plucking an image from the Internet. There are copyright laws (the GOP elephant/kkk image is indeed copyrighte­d) — and more subtle pitfalls. Like how one sees (or doesn’t see) an image being an unintentio­nal Rorschach, a reflection of emotional and personalit­y disorders and intelligen­ce.

In his apology, Terry said — in classic attorney-crafted prose — the “[KKK hoods] … do not represent the views or beliefs of the Lawrence County Republican Party… as chairman, I take full responsibi­lity for the error.”

Error, okay. Mistake? Not in this life.

Not when the Republican party continuous­ly demonstrat­es how blind it is to racism.

So blind it cannot (or refuses to) see how its incessant rants over critical race theory are attacks on the truth, on education, on teaching the fullness of our nation’s history because some parts make them (not their children) “feel bad”.

So oblivious, so obtuse to how its obliterati­on of the rights of women to make their own health and life decisions impact low-income women of color. (White women of means will always find a way.)

So ignorant it ignores the fraud in its haughty legislatio­n combating nonexisten­t election fraud — bills blatantly crafted to squash voter turnout in Black and brown precincts.

So afraid to even acknowledg­e racism — let alone sit down, listen to how it affects the lives of too many Americans and help craft ways to squash that — it puppeteers even its most prominent Black Republican­s into publicly declaring “America is not a racist country.”

That Terry did not see three KKK hoods starkly embedded in the illustrati­on he selected reflects the national GOP’S blindness to the racist effects of its policies and the national racism it staunchly ignores.

Errors happen; mistakes don’t.

Anyone can see that. Well, almost anyone.

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