The Ashley Todd Hoax Is America's Hoax

by: Paul Rosenberg

Sat Oct 25, 2008 at 10:43


From the very beginning, there were consistencies and inconsistencies in Ashley Todd's narrative about the alleged attack she suffered.  The inconsistencies were within the story itself (the reverse "B" most obviously).  The consistencies were with a long, long history of lies about blacks that are inescapably linked with racism in all its forms, from slavery, through segregation, through the "colorblind" racism of the present day.  Both leaped out at me as the story exploded. Among the consistencies were the 4,742 identified lynchings from 1882 to 1964, for which the breakdown of "causes" reads:
    "Cause"NumberPercent
    Homicides1,937 40.84
    Felonious Assault 205 4.32
    Rape 912 19.22
    Attempted Rape 288 6.07
    Robbery and Theft 232 4.89
    Insult to White Person 85 1.79
    All Other Causes 1,084 22.85
    Total 4,743 100.00

Speaking of "Insult to White Person," although not strictly a "lynching" per se, I thought as well about Emmett Till, a 14-year-old boy murdered for whistling at a white woman.  You see, the history of lynching is a history of terrorism, a history of collective punishment and mass intimidation.  One black does something, however trivial-or is alleged to-and some black, any black, must pay, without all that "due process" stuff that's reserved for white people.

This, quite naturally, puts the entire black community at risk.  Which is, of course, the underlying point.  A point that's very much alive today, as revealed in a blog post from Fox Executive Vice President Joe Moody, titled, with unintended irony, "Moment of Truth":

If Ms. Todd's allegations are proven accurate, some voters may revisit their support for Senator  Obama, not because they are racists (with due respect to Rep. John Murtha), but because they suddenly feel they do not know enough about the Democratic nominee.

At DKos, Meteor Blades asks:

Revisit their support for Obama not because they are racists? Why then? What exactly is it, Joe, that connects a blackety-black man who attacks a white female McCain volunteer with support or lack of it for the Senator?

It's not just racism is a generic sense, but the specific tradition of racial terrorism that's being invoked here.  Any black at any time can be singled out for any reason, even if he's on the verge of being elected President of the United States.

Paul Rosenberg :: The Ashley Todd Hoax Is America's Hoax
Racism?  Only someone who's a racist would see racism in that!  That's part of the core formulation of contemporary "colorblind racism" (see Racism Without Racists: Color-Blind Racism and the Persistence of Racial Inequality in the United States by Eduardo Bonilla-Silva).

Here's a vivid example from just last week:

The latest newsletter by an Inland Republican women's group depicts Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama surrounded by a watermelon, ribs and a bucket of fried chicken, prompting outrage in political circles.

The October newsletter by the Chaffey Community Republican Women, Federated says if Obama is elected his image will appear on food stamps -- instead of dollar bills like other presidents. The statement is followed by an illustration of "Obama Bucks" -- a phony $10 bill featuring Obama's face on a donkey's body, labeled "United States Food Stamps."

....

The woman "responsible" (they're never responsible) tried to explain that it was Obama who was the racist here:

The group's president, Diane Fedele, said she plans to send an apology letter to her members and to apologize at the club's meeting next week. She said she simply wanted to deride a comment Obama made over the summer about how as an African-American he "doesn't look like all those other presidents on the dollar bills."

"It was strictly an attempt to point out the outrageousness of his statement. I really don't want to go into it any further," Fedele said in a telephone interview Tuesday. "I absolutely apologize to anyone who was offended. That clearly wasn't my attempt."

Fedele said she got the illustration in a number of chain e-mails and decided to reprint it for her members in the Trumpeter newsletter because she was offended that Obama would draw attention to his own race. She declined to say who sent her the e-mails with the illustration.

It was "outrageous" that Obama would call attention to his race.  It offended her!

She said she doesn't think in racist terms, pointing out she once supported Republican Alan Keyes, an African-American who previously ran for president.

Or, "some of my best friends are negroes" as the segregationists used to say.

And as for that other stuff?  It didn't mean anything at all.  She doesn't see things that way:

"I didn't see it the way that it's being taken. I never connected," she said. "It was just food to me. It didn't mean anything else."

Watermelon? Fried chicken?  "Just food"!

Food stamps?

She said she also wasn't trying to make a statement linking Obama and food stamps, although her introductory text to the illustration connects the two: "Obama talks about all those presidents that got their names on bills. If elected, what bill would he be on????? Food Stamps, what else!"

Of course!  What else?  Nothing racist in that!  Only a racist would think otherwise!  This is a core belief of the colorblind ideology-anyone who's the least bit conscious that racism still exists is themselves a racist.  Only those who ignore racism are free from its stain!

Susan Smith-And Newt Gingrich

At the same time I thought of Emmett Till, I also thought of Susan Smith--and Newt Gingrich.  Smith was a white woman who blamed a black man for a carjacking-with her two young children in the car.  It created an national hysteria.  And then, after several weeks, she confessed it was a hoax.  She had killed her children herself.

Because it covered up the horrendous crime of killing her own children, this hoax carried with it a sense of primordial evil-something that white America can rarely bring itself to associate with racist acts.  And this case was no exception.  Instead of racism remaining central to the story, it became bizarrely inverted, as Newt Gingrich pounced on the incident in the closing days of the 1994 campaign, and blamed the murder on Democrats and the welfare state.  As progressive columnist Norman Solomon wrote several months later:

Back in early November, the motor-mouthed Gingrich had much to say about the case -- offering a treatise so wrong-headed that it's almost laughable. Except there's nothing funny about the Susan Smith tragedy...or Gingrich's attempt to exploit it for election-eve advantage.

Here's what Gingrich said three days before last November's election -- in response to an Associated Press reporter who asked him how the campaign was going: "Slightly more moving our way. I think that the mother killing the two children in South Carolina vividly reminds every American how sick the society is getting and how much we need to change things."

Gingrich concluded, "The only way you get change is to vote Republican. That's the message for the last three days." Two days later, less than 24 hours before the polls opened, Gingrich defended his comments on the Smith case as no different than what he'd been saying for years -- that violence and related ills arise from a Democratic-controlled political system: "We need very deep change if we're going to turn this country around."

Asked if the change he was offering the country would stop killings like those in South Carolina, he replied, "Yes. In my judgment, there's no question."

As it turned out, of course, liberalism had nothing to do it.  Quite the opposite.  Smith had been molested by her stepfather, a local leader of the GOP and the Christian Coalition.  Moreover, there was a profound contradiction in Gingrich's argument. As Ron Rosenbaum later wrote for the NYT Magazine, "Staring Into The Heart Of The Heart Of Darkness":

Newt Gingrich weighed in with his theory of Susan Smith's act. In Gingrich's view the real cause of Susan Smith's act was not Susan Smith; she was just the "efficient cause" in the Aristotelian sense. The formal cause was the 60's -- liberalism, the Great Society, the counterculture -- and the amoral social ethic they supposedly produced. It wasn't Susan Smith who pushed the Mazda into the lake; it was George McGovern.

Curiously, for an apostle of individual moral accountability, Gingrich was trying, however clumsily, to do what the Left, what Great Society liberals, have been accused of doing: he was blaming society for the evil deed of an individual.

This was not the only time Gingrich did this. There were a couple of other high-profile examples. James Ledbetter wrote about one of them in The Village Voice, on Dec 5, 1995 (available via Proquest at many public library websites):

Following the stabbing of an Illinois woman whose womb was ripped open, baby stolen, and children killed, Gingrich blamed welfare and the left: "Let's talk about what the welfare state is bringing. Let's talk about the moral decay of the world the left is defending. There's barbarity after barbarity. There's brutality after brutality. We shake our heads and say, 'What's gone wrong?'" The only confirmed welfare recipients in this story, by the way, were the victims.

This is just the tip of the iceberg, of course.  There' much, much vaster history that this is only a tiny part of.  But Gingrich was hardly a minor figure.  Recalling the Susan Smith incident this week-but without the connection to the Ashley Todd hoax, Hilzoy wrote at Political Animal:

Some liberals were aghast. But Gingrich himself paid no price for what he said. (I imagine this is one reason he went on doing it.) He was reelected to Congress. Shortly thereafter, he was elected Speaker of the House. Just last year, David Broder wrote:
    "If there is any politician of the current generation who has earned the label "visionary," it is probably the Georgia Republican and former speaker of the House."

As far as I'm concerned, anyone, of any political party, who blames the actions of someone like Susan Smith on his or her opponents shows that he or she is without shame. In a sane world, politicians who did this would be thrown out of office: their constituents might or might not agree with their political views, but they would be revolted by anyone who said such a thing.

But no, of course, he's a "visionary."  The "Dean" has spoken.  The bipartisan narrative is set.  It is joined at the hip with the wingnut racist narrative.  On close inspection, there is not a sliver of daylight between the two synergistic "opposing" narratives.

But, of course, close inspection is verbotten. Close inspection is "racist."

p.s. Of those 4,742 lynchings (or 4,743, tabulations vary), 1,297 victims were white.  Two things were going on: One, it was very dangerous for whites to be too closely allied with blacks.  Two, once you do away with the law for some people, it readily melts away for everyone.


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"verbotten"? Uh, you mean 'verboten' (4.00 / 3)
Sry for playing the German language police. And thx for a  great story that puts the Todd hoax into a broader perspective. McCain should publicly apologize for recklessly and irresponsibly playing with fire! Campaigning hard is no excuse for putting fuel into racist tensions. There have to be some lines not to be crossed, even for a rethuglican candidate for presidency!

Let it be said by our children's children that when we were tested, we refused to let this journey end, that we did not turn back, nor did we falter

Excellent Piece (4.00 / 2)
But it still leaves me wondering, what was Ashley Todd's motivation?  Susan Smith and the husband in Boston who killed his wife and blamed it on a "large" black man had a motive, they were murderers looking for cover.  

Everyone seems to peg Ashley Todd's motivation on that she is "nuts."  Nuts like Charles Manson's "Helter Skelter" where he wanted to start a race war?

Let's say that Ashley Todd is not all there, so where did the inspiration for her act come from, a colleague, a mailing, a robocall, a script she was reading in her work, a code phrase in one of McCain's speeches?

Manson claims his inspiration was from a Beatles song, all I'm asking is what was Ashley Todd's?


A Good Question (4.00 / 1)
But so far as I know, we're really not in a position to say as yet what her motivation was.  She's clearly not a very reliable person, so it's probably not going to be particularly easy to puzzle this out.

A desire to play a big role in order to be noticed would seem to be a plausible motive.  But that's sheer speculation on my part.

However, in the end it could even be a distraction.  It hardly matters what the individual motive is.  What matters is the social, cultural and institutional environment that warps all manner of individual needs and desires to a coherent (albeit also incoherent) end.

These factors act as consistent disinhibitors, undermining individual conscience.

"Senate passes expanded GI bill despite Bush, McCain opposition"


[ Parent ]
The Walls Must Come Down (0.00 / 0)
Race is, and always will be a bomb waiting for someone to light the fuse.  There are important details waiting to be revealed and Ashley Todd at some point will let them out, the police did say that after the lie detector test she was a fountain of information.  (Just not the "B.")

I think it is important to know what motivated her, if she's nuts and acted alone, let's treat her and move on.  If it was motivated by what she has seen and heard from the McCain campaign then it is a very important story.

I am one of those daydream believers who believes our country is on the road to epic change, the American people are about to give the Republican party an ass whooping they'll never forget.  

Even if it proves out that Ashley Todd is a "lone nut," the Republican party jumped on this story like they found the holy grail.  

In 10 days the American people will overwhelmingly elect Barack Obama.  It will not be a rejection of Bush, or McCain, or Palin - it will be a rejection of Republicanism.

"And, the walls came down."  


[ Parent ]
I Think You're Buying Into False Distinctions (4.00 / 1)
I think it is important to know what motivated her, if she's nuts and acted alone, let's treat her and move on.  If it was motivated by what she has seen and heard from the McCain campaign then it is a very important story.

How could she not be influenced by "what she has seen and heard from the McCain campaign"???  You want to argue that maybe she was "influenced" but not "motivated", if she "acted along"?

If you step back for a second, doesn't this just seem ludicrous?

The point is, these folks have been creating this sort of a paranoid fantasy world for decades now.  Back in 1995, one so-called "lone nut" blew up the Federal Building in Oklahoma City as a result of it.  We're just damned lucky it hasn't gotten much, much worse, given all the bile that's been spewed.

I, too, hope we can dramatically turn a corner.  But we need to be quite clear what we are turning away from.

"Senate passes expanded GI bill despite Bush, McCain opposition"


[ Parent ]
We Agree (0.00 / 0)
There needs to be a rejection of the ways of Atwater, Rove, Schmidt, et al.  The way Republicans do and have done their business.  My point is they are self destructing and Ashley is a part of the unraveling.

This is from a blog by Brent Budowsky, Limbaugh, Palin, Bachmann: Three Musketeers of McCarthyism

The latest example was the neo-racist smear and lie attack by this McCain supporter who claimed she was attacked by a black, 6-foot-4-inch Obama supporter who allegedly planted a "B" on her head. McCain and Palin directly merchandised this lie, as did the McCain staff and their allies in the media. Now, as the prime perpetrator was led away in handcuffs, they are shamed again, but let's understand how fast McCain and Palin jumped on what was not only a fraud but a racist fraud.

The McCarthyite Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.) may well be defeated for reelection following her attack on Obama and many Democrats in Congress whom she said should be investigated for anti-American behavior. Palin moves from talking about the real Virginia (her latest Macaca moment) to talking about pro-America communities versus anti-America communities in her role as the Josephine McCarthy of the campaign following the lead of John McCain, spearheading the neo-McCarthyism of what is left of the Republican Party and what is left of the John McCain who bears no resemblance to the man who ran in 2000.

Limbaugh, Palin and Bachmann are the Three Musketeers of the new McCarthyism, who run on the platform of the Abbott and Costello of demagoguery and ineptness, Bush and McCain.

I hope we can agree on this point too, the Internet, Youtube and sites like this are a major catalyst in the Republican's downfall.  


[ Parent ]
She didn't act alone. (0.00 / 0)
After the alleged incident she supposedly went to a friend's house, from which she called the police. That means she was with at least one other person at the moment she made contact with the authorities and set the hoax into motion.

So did her friend discourage her from calling the police, or egg her on?

Montani semper liberi


[ Parent ]
Looking at her motivations, (0.00 / 0)
there's really a disturbing sort of exhibitonist erotic component to the claim that she'd been sexually assaulted and received her own scarlett letter in the process. Meteor Blades seemed to think she could get help; I'm not optimistic that she'd be an easy case.

[ Parent ]
Easier Than Drudge, Though (0.00 / 0)
By several orders of magnitude.

But I agree. She's going to need a lot of work.

"Senate passes expanded GI bill despite Bush, McCain opposition"


[ Parent ]
She is a College Republican. (0.00 / 0)
A Baby Ratfucker, a Karl Rove wannabe. What more explanation is there? No doubt her friends were all high-fiving her in the dorm room, doing shots of Jack Daniels, until she got caught.

Montani semper liberi

[ Parent ]
Thanks for the good post Paul, but you seem... (0.00 / 0)
to be saying that we need to confront the real problem here, and name our enemy?

Shame our enemy?

Are Republicans our enemy? (well, duh)

Would it work for you if we just admit that these guys have ruined our country, and actually the political process means we have to look back and prosecute Republicans (and Democrats) who have been screwing up our system:, or do we have to do something now about this racist act?

You seem to be implying something you don't seem to be saying.

Spit it out, Paul.


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