

KOZY WITH THE KLAN
by Michael Parenti
The mainstream media downplay or ignore the many demonstrations that progressive
forces have launched against war and social injustice. But not all demonstrators
are slighted. Since the early 1970s, when the press first started announcing
that the country was in a "conservative mood," the Ku Klux Klan
has been accorded generous coverage. Lengthy and not altogether unsympathetic
articles have appeared in the New York Times, Washington Post, Associated
Press, Time, Newsweek, and other publications. Klan leaders, skinheads,
and other hatemongers have appeared on just about every local and national
TV talk show. Indeed, the Klan and the media have often seemed entwined
in a cozy embrace.
The press also displays a partiality toward ultra-right political candidates.
Nazi-Klansman David Duke received more national media running for a seat
in the Louisiana state legislature than did socialist Bernard Sanders running
for the U.S. Congress in Vermont and winning. Likewise, right-wing presidential
candidates Pat Buchanan and Ross Perot received immediate and lavish media
attention upon announcing their intentions, while the progressive Senator
Tom Harkin remained unseen and largely unmentioned from day one of his campaign.
The corporate media have a soft spot for right-wingers and for hatemongers
like the KKK.
Do we want the press to cover or ignore the Klan? The question is poorly
put. We certainly want people to be informed about the menace posed by hate
groups like the KKK and the American Nazi Party, but we also do not want
the media to become promotional weapons for fascists and racists. So the
question is not how much coverage but the kind of coverage. Here are some
specific criticisms:
1. The press regularly fails to report the Klan's worst features, saying
almost nothing in depth about its racism, fascism, anticommunism and anti-Semitism,
and almost nothing about its history of violence, arson, terrorism, murder
and lynching. Some of that history is not far past: in the last fifteen
years at least nine persons have died at the hands of Klan members, while
scores have been harassed, intimidated, or injured.
2. The press has lavished attention on the Klan and Nazis, thereby magnifying
their visibility and exaggerating their strength and importance. Ten demonstrators
marching for some progressive cause would not win national media attention,
but Klan and Nazi gatherings of that size have been treated as big news.
When the Klan held a much-publicized rally just outside Washington, D.C.
in Montgomery County, Maryland, numbering all of twenty-four individuals
in robes, 140 media people were there to transmit the event to national
audiences. The Nashville Tennessean once ran a nine-part series on the Klan.
The series mentioned that the KKK had "a dangerous potential for violence
and terror," but it never elucidated the nature of that potential nor
mentioned any specific acts. However, it did offer a generous sampling of
the Klan's racist opinions. Gannett news service quickly shot the story
over the wires and all three major networks reported it. As a result, the
Klan's "Imperial Wizard," who liked the articles, started receiving
letters from people asking how they could join. (The Tennessean had conveniently
published his address.)
3. The press downplays the anti-Klan demonstrators whose numbers are many
times larger than KKK participants. The political statement that anti-Klan
demonstrators make on behalf of social justice and against racism is usually
ignored by the press. The public is left to conclude that they are just
hecklers spoiling for a fight. Andy Stapp, an activist with the Workers
World Party, offers some instances of double-standard reporting:
·Anti-Klan demonstrators outnumbered the fascists ten to one at a KKK
rally in Connecticut, but CBS, ABC and NBC all focused their cameras on
the Klan.
·Fifty Klansmen parading from Selma to Montgomery drew national attention
while 500 [civil rights advocates] marching against racism (67 of whom were
arrested) from Savannah to Reidsville prison the same week were virtually
censored out of the news.
·Ten armed KKK terrorists rate a six-column article and a large picture
in the New York Times, the same newspaper which printed not one word about
the 350,000 Black and White people who demonstrated together [for affirmative
action and civil rights] in Washington, DC, the capital of the U.S.
4. The press has no unkind words about how police and government agents
collaborate with the Klan and the Nazis, as when police attack anti-Klan
protesters. And undercover agents-who supposedly infiltrate the KKK to keep
an eye on it--end up playing key organizing roles. One investigation revealed
that most of the Klan chapters in certain parts of the South were organized
and financed by the FBI. Back in November 1979, a group of Klansmen and
Nazis murdered five Communist Workers Party leaders and wounded nine others
at an anti-Klan rally in Greensboro, N.C. The role played by undercover
agents in organizing and arming the Greensboro terrorists remained a story
much neglected by the major news media.
The media usually label communists and socialists as the "extreme left"
and equate them with the extreme right of Nazis and Klansmen--which is tantamount
to equating those who oppose racism, anti-Semitism and union-busting with
those who support such things. The left "extremists," however,
do not get the kind of lavish media exposure accorded the Klan. Thus, for
years Charlene Mitchell and Angela Davis headed a very active multi-racial
organization known as the National Alliance Against Racism and Political
Repression. But most people, including many on the left, never heard of
the organization even though one of its leaders was a nationally known figure.
Like other anti-racist groups the NAARPR suffered from a severe case of
media blackout. Fighting racism simply is not news. Advocating and practicing
racism is news.
Nazis and Klanspeople may be racist and violent but they are not anti-capitalist--which
might explain why the corporate press treats them so well. Indeed, throughout
much of its history the Klan functioned as a union-busting organization--as
did the Nazis in Germany in the early 1930s. Both the Nazi party and the
Klan are explicitly anticommunist and anti-socialist. At a demonstration
in Springfield, Massachusetts the Klan distributed a leaflet denouncing
the "Black Socialist Democratic People's Government" which it
claimed was plotting to overthrow "White America." The Klan conjures
up imaginary threats to explain away real social problems, attempting to
divide people along racial lines by transforming their legitimate economic
grievances into a hatred of Blacks, Jews, trade unionists, communists, welfare
recipients, and advocates of affirmative action. David Duke is correct:
his political agenda is really not that different from George Bush's.
The media's coverage of the Klan and the far Right in general over the last
twenty years has done its part to keep conservative forces in an ascendant
mode. The press gives maximum exposure to the Klanspeople, Nazis, skinheads,
hatemongers, David Dukes--all of whom widen the rightward range of visible
discourse for the George Bushes. Of course, the media do not see it that
way. They believe they just go out and get the story. Were they to join
in the battle against racism, they would, by their view, be guilty of "advocacy
journalism." So instead of exposing hate groups the press gives exposure
to hate groups. It's called "objectivity."
Copyright © 1996 Vida Communications and Michael Parenti. All rights
reserved.
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