by James A. Bacon

Is the cartoon above, drawn by Virginia Military Institute alumnus Matt Daniel, racist?

Former Governor L. Douglas Wilder thinks so. “It’s clearly racist,” he told Washington Post reporter Ian Shapira after Shapira showed it to him.

Shapira evidently thinks so, too. “Some say” the depiction of Martin Brown, Virginia’s African-American director of Diversity, Opportunity & Inclusion, “resembles a monkey,” he wrote.

Wilder is one person. The word “some” implies that there are others. None are named or alluded to. In a long-standing Washington Post reportorial tradition of the scribe attributing his own opinions to nameless others, Shapira appears to be referencing himself.

Shapira was decent enough to quote Daniel, who happens to be chairman of the Spirit of VMI PAC and a defender of VMI traditions that Shapira has relentlessly assailed as racist and sexist. “It is not a monkey. That doesn’t even make sense,” Daniel texted. “It is a voodoo doll in a business suit being harassed by a hostile writer.”

So… whom do we believe? Let’s undertake a critical examination of the cartoon to see whose interpretation — Shapira’s or Daniels’ — makes the most sense.

First, permit me to draw your attention to the figures in VMI uniforms stacked to the side of the picture. They have stitched mouths and are punctured with needles. They bear remarkable resemblance to voodoo dolls, such as the figure seen at left, which is purchasable on Amazon.com.

Daniels 1, Shapira 0.

Now let’s focus on the main figure in the cartoon, which is a rendering of none other than the bespectacled Shapira himself. He is holding what appears to be a giant pin — an essential accoutrement for the vengeful piercing of voodoo dolls. Those familiar with Daniels’ adversarial relationship with Shapira will readily understand the symbolic representation of the reporter’s long-standing persecution of VMI traditionalists.

Daniels 2, Shapira 0.

Now, let’s turn to the doll itself. It is indisputably similar to the dolls in the stack: the same size, similar attire, similar facial and anatomical features. Like a psychoanalytic patent who views a Rorschach test and always sees something sexual, Shapira always sees racism. Everyone else viewing this cartoon will see a voodoo doll.

Daniels 3, Shapira 0.

Then there’s the fact that it makes no sense whatsoever for Daniels to portray Brown — an ally in resisting the implementation of DEI at the military institute — in a derogatory racist manner.

Daniels 4, Shapira 0.

On the other hand, Shapira did get the nonagenarian Wilder, who has been quick to throw around accusations of racism himself, to agree with him.

Daniels 4, Shapira 1/2.

It should be vividly clear to any sober person whose vision is not skewed by alcohol, pharmaceuticals, or obsession with race, that Daniel is skewering Shapira for his relentless vilification of the upholders of VMI traditions.

The pot shot at the cartoon is trademark Shapira —  insinuating racism even when there is an obvious alternative explanation. This incident makes vividly clear how Shapira views the world through the lens of race, and highlights his standards of proof for insinuating racism in print. Frankly, his blatant bias calls into question his entire body of work maligning the old VMI as guilty of “relentless racism,” and everything he has written since.


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Comments

53 responses to “Is This Cartoon Racist?”

  1. M. Purdy Avatar
    M. Purdy

    “Frankly, his blatant bias calls into question his entire body of work maligning the old VMI as guilty of “relentless racism,” and everything he has written since.” No, it doesn’t. I know you’d like to think this, but the evidence is substantial and documented. The cartoonist in question doesn’t get the benefit of the doubt, either.

    1. DJRippert Avatar
      DJRippert

      The Boy Who Cried, “Wolf” is a fair parable. It’s hard to take cries of “racism” seriously when those cries are shrieked constantly and at everything.

      Sometimes a cigar is just a cigar and sometimes a cartoon is just a cartoon.

      1. M. Purdy Avatar
        M. Purdy

        Parallel or parable? It’s not a parallel, because there never was a wolf to begin with in the old story. Contrast this situation.

  2. Lefty665 Avatar
    Lefty665

    Virginia’s DOI Secretary, as the doll is clearly identified, is actually black is he not?

    1. Nancy Naive Avatar
      Nancy Naive

      Oh god! Now I get it! How could I have missed it?!

      Matt drew the Va. DOI Secretary in a monkey’s form to intimate that Shapira is the racist for using a monkey voodoo doll, not because Matt’s the racist.

      Well shoot, that makes it all better! He had to be a racist to make it funny.

      Clearly, racism in defense of supremacist traditions is no vice; congeniality in pursuit of humor is no virtue.

      (What’s the symbol for sarcasm?)

  3. VaPragamtist Avatar
    VaPragamtist

    I don’t get it?

  4. Stephen Haner Avatar
    Stephen Haner

    What the cartoon is is sophomoric. It is counterproductive. It is insulting to the Post and its reporter, if not to Martin Brown, but that was the point. The only point. Trash the Post. Of course that depiction of Brown drew that response, and to not expect that proves the cartoonist is blind and tone deaf. But what I wonder is, if you agree with what Brown had to say, why demean him in that way? How does any of this calm the waters and let the poor cadets caught in the middle of this culture war just complete their educations?

    You and your allies are going to regret pissing off Wilder. Trust me. REAAALLY big mistake.

    1. M. Purdy Avatar
      M. Purdy

      Great post, thanks and agree.

    2. Lefty665 Avatar
      Lefty665

      It’s past time for Wilder to retire. He has had a really good run and accomplished a lot. I admire him, and he’s earned it. Retiring at 92 would also reduce the damage he’s doing to the Wilder School at VCU.

  5. beachguy Avatar
    beachguy

    It looks like the “Nerd” has a widow’s peak too, but he’s positioned in more of a profile. Cartoonist’s artistic liberties perhaps.

  6. Nancy Naive Avatar
    Nancy Naive

    Well, one cannot say for sure if Mr. Daniel is a racist, but I can, with some degree confidence, say that if he were active duty and published the cartoons depicted in BR (here and previously) and given some of his posts on GETTR and previously on GAB, he would have been relieved of duty.

    He’s not helping VMI and the reputation of future cadets with today’s military.

    1. Stephen Haner Avatar
      Stephen Haner

      Exactly. Counterproductive.

      1. Nancy Naive Avatar
        Nancy Naive

        Speaking of counterproductive, I don’t know if you’ve anything in a Traditional IRA, but in less than two weeks (only 6 working days), you could get an opportunity to convert with a +15% tax savings. Speak to your tax guy first.

  7. beachguy Avatar
    beachguy

    Political cartoons and agenda driven “News” reports are both meant to covey a particular viewpoint. At least the cartoon is entertaining. Maybe the cartoon is in bad taste, and maybe Mr. Shapira’s reporting is too one sided to the point of being misleading. Let’s discuss that instead of what’s maybe, possibly racist.

  8. James C. Sherlock Avatar
    James C. Sherlock

    Dr. Rorschach call your office.

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