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Were the MAGA hat teens at the Lincoln Memorial victims of the Trump effect?

By Clarence Page, Tribune Content Agency on

Remember the "red hat" kids?

Remember the video-recorded face-off between students from Kentucky's all-male Covington Catholic High School, some of whom were wearing bright red "Make America Great Again" hats, and a drum-beating Native American activist at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington?

Remember how the incident, at the beginning of Martin Luther King Day weekend, provoked a national combination of outrage and confused head-scratching across the Twittersphere, including the account of @realDonaldTrump?

Well, never mind. A report released Wednesday by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Covington near Cincinnati, which initially joined those who condemned the teens for allegedly mocking the Native Americans, confirms the more complete picture of the episode that longer video clips revealed: The apparent confrontation resulted from a big misunderstanding.

Compared to the initial reports, the Rashomon effect appears to have set in. Named after Akira Kurosawa's classic 1950 film, "Rashomon," in which a murder is described in four contradictory ways by four witnesses, the Rashomon effect describes an event that triggers contradictory interpretations by individuals.

This episode was inflamed by different forms of activism. The mostly white students, many of them wearing MAGA hats they bought at a souvenir stand, according to the report, were in town to attend the Jan. 18 anti-abortion March for Life rally. The Native Americans were there for the Indigenous Peoples March.

 

Also mentioned in the coverage was a group of five Black Hebrew Israelites, a fringe group with more than a century of history in black American communities -- and listed as a hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center. Shouting slurs at the teens, at Native Americans and at other black people for more than an hour, the Black Hebrews are notorious race-baiters. The students mostly refused to take the bait, but the slurs heightened tensions.

When a more complete picture emerged, the diocese commissioned Greater Cincinnati Investigation Inc., an independent investigative firm, to interview the students and other witnesses and review video from social network posts and network news.

"We found no evidence," the report concludes, that students performed a "Build the wall" chant or made "offensive or racist comments" to the drum-beating of 64-year-old Nathan Phillips. He is seen in the most widely broadcast video clip beating his drum and singing the ceremonial song in front of a smiling, MAGA hat-wearing Nick Sandmann, as he stood with the rest of his schoolmates.

The Rashomon effect in this instance may have been aggravated further by the Trump effect, judging by the wave of outrage that roared through social media.

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(c) 2019 CLARENCE PAGE DISTRIBUTED BY TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES, INC.

 

 

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