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Saturday, June 20, 2015

Media spins horrific murder into a fight over a flag

Media spins horrific murder into a fight over a flag

BY: Becket Adams June 20, 2015 | 7:00 am
The South Carolina and American flags fly at half mast as the Confederate flag unfurls below at the Confederate Monument June 18, 2015 in Columbia, South Carolina. Legislators gathered Thursday morning to honor their co-worker Clementa Pinckney and the eight others killed yesterday at Emanuel AME Church in Charleston, S.C. (Photo by Sean Rayford/Getty Images

It took less than two days for the press to take a story about a white South Carolina man who shot and killed nine black churchgoers, and turn it into a story about the Confederate battle flag flying outside South Carolina's state house.

For media, the flag as a supposedly influential symbol of racial oppression and hate represented an issue that required immediate attention and hours of coverage. By Friday, the press' focus on the flag was intense.

"S.C. Confederate flag back in the spotlight after massacre," CNN noted, tracking the public furor over the state's choice to display the Civil War leftover.

The Huffington Post featured an op-ed titled simple "Take It Down."

The Atlantic's Ta-Nehisi Coates echoed these sentiments in a separate article titled "Take Down the Confederate Flag—Now."

"The flag that Dylann Roof embraced, which many South Carolinians embrace, endorses the violence he committed," the article declared.

The alleged terrorist, Dylann Storm Roof, 21, claims he targeted nine parishioners who had gathered for a prayer meeting Wednesday evening at the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church because they were black. Pictures of Roof quickly circulated that showed him standing next to a car with a Confederate flag plate.

The image stuck, and controversy over the flag found its footing.

Newsday featured an op-ed, titled "A disingenuous defense of the Confederate flag," wherein the author argued simply that the flag must be taken down.

The Washington Post weighed in with a widely circulated article titled "How people convince themselves that the Confederate flag represents freedom, not slavery."

"When people say 'heritage not hate,' they are omitting the obvious, which is that that heritage is hate," the article read.

As Technica's Cyrus Farivar said in reference to the Post article, "The SC Conf. flag is 'affixed [to the capitol] and can't come down unless someone gets up there and pulls it down.' Your move, SC."

There was also some politically themed reporting on the flag controversy.

The Huffington Post's Sam Stein made an "impressively mealy mouthed" attempt to link 2016 Republican presidential candidate Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., to support for the flag. Stein's linking of Rubio to the matter involved a high level of couching, including usages of "seen as" and "was described as."

(As governor of Arkansas, former President Bill Clinton supported and defended the state's observance of the symbols and leaders of the Confederacy. This historical fact merited little media coverage Friday.)

Elsewhere, C-SPAN's Howard Mortman dredged up 15-year-old footage of former President George W. Bush addressing the question of the battle flag during a 2000GOP primary debate in South Carolina. The Huffington Post meanwhile remindedits readers that former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush in 2001 ordered that the flag be taken down from its place at the state capitol in Tallahassee.

Newsrooms were also quick to react to Sen. Lindsey Graham's, R-S.C., remarks on the role that the flag has played in the state's history.

"It works here, that's what the statehouse agreed to do," the 2016 presidential candidate said Friday during a CNN interview. "You could probably visit other places in the country near some symbol that doesn't quite strike you right."

This prompted Vanity Fair's Kia Makarechito remark, "Lindsey Graham says the problem is racism, not the Confederate flag. Would he say the same about Swastikas?"

Massachusetts Gov. Charlie Baker experienced similar media scrutiny after he suggested this week that states should be allowed to display the flag if they so choose. He quickly backtracked from his comments Friday.

"I take my job as governor of 100 percent of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts very seriously, and, as I said, I'm sorry I didn't do a particularly good job representing that today," Baker backtracked Friday, according to the Boston Globe. "I just want to be clear — I abhor the symbolism and the history of the flag as much as anybody, and I am more than cognizant of the fact that literally millions of Americans died over what it represents in the Civil War.

Responding to the public and media furor over the flag, the Washington Examiner'sPhil Klein explained in an article Friday why conservatives specifically should oppose its being displayed by states.

President Obama's aides were even queried aboard Air Force One Friday by reporters keen to know where the commander in chief stood on the question of South Carolina's continued use of the Confederate battle flag. The White House reiterated the president's position that the flag belongs in a museum.

Not everyone in the press was aboard the we-must-discuss-the-Confederate-flag train, however, as Mediaite's Alex Griswold chided media Friday for trying to link the flag to the mass shooting.

"I don't like the Confederate flag, and I probably never will," Griswold wrote. "But to blame it for the evil in one man's twisted heart is cheap, illogical, and just an easy way to avoid addressing the real issues."

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AUTHOR:

T. BECKET ADAMS

Staff Correspondent

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