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Why Is Flagler Being Mealy-Mouthed Over KKK Fliers?

April 18, 2010 | Pierre Tristam | 8 Comments

Redneck Shop and Klan Museum, Lauren, SC
The Redneck Shop and Klan Museum in Lauren, S.C. (© FlaglerLive)

Let’s be clear, as the Flagler County Commission is choosing not to be: On Easter Day this year, Ku Klux Klan recruiting fliers were dropped on driveways in at least three of Palm Coast’s neighborhoods (the Z, U and B sections). The act itself wasn’t offensive. The KKK is a legal organization. The message was, though it was also boilerplate bigotry: criminalize and kick out illegal aliens (a message an uncomfortable number of “regular” Americans embrace wholeheartedly) and, “if qualified,” join the KKK to clean up the nation of non-whites, the wrong kind of whites, homosexuals, and so on. Crosses weren’t burned on anyone’s lawns, but the stink was there all the same.

At a recent meeting of the county’s government agencies, convened to discuss something entirely unrelated, Palm Coast Mayor Jon Netts alluded to the fliers—without mentioning the KKK by name. He wondered out loud if the cities and the county should take a stand, issue some sort of statement or resolution condemning the fliers and putting the county’s embrace of diversity on record. County Commission Chairman George Hanns liked the idea. He, too, wouldn’t say “KKK,” as if the letters were as hooded as the group they clung to. Hanns directed his staff to write something up on the commission’s behalf. The direction was vague, the consensus vaguer.

The result was the vaguest possible statement–a 211-word jig about diversity that manages to be more patronizing than condemning even as it bends over backward not to define what it set out to denounce. It doesn’t refer to the KKK, doesn’t say what the KKK was up to, doesn’t even, for context’s sake, use the KKK’s own slapdash, fly-by-night leaf-dropping against it to properly calibrate the recruitment for what it was: more of a shot in the dark than an organized assault.


Click On:

  • Is KKK Recruiting in Palm Coast?
  • Read the KKK flier in question
  • Flagler County Commission Statement on the Flier
  • Southern Poverty Law Center’s Hate Map of the US


Instead, this is what was written in our name as residents of this county: “A printed document left on driveways and dropped off door-to-door made disparaging remarks about our neighbors and friends.” Seriously? Disparaging remarks? You could be talking about the daily paper’s columns and letters page. I’ve heard friends and neighbors in this town say far more “disparaging” things about any number of people, or kinds of people, than the KKK fliers did about undocumented immigrants. We live in a state that, by law, does far more “disparaging” things to homosexuals than the KKK flier does about “the destruction of our moral culture by homosexuals” (Florida remains the only state in the union to ban gay adoptions. That’s beyond bigotry. It’s legalized subjugation.).

To call Tea Party activists idiots is disparaging. To make a pun along the lines of Obama bin Lying is disparaging. It’s also part of our national conversation. Words aren’t bullets. But white supremacy, especially white supremacy in the context of an American and particularly southern history dominated by four centuries of white, state-sponsored terrorism against blacks, isn’t “disparaging.” Speaking about “placing like-minded people in our government” isn’t in the category of nasty “remarks about our neighbors and friends,” let alone part of the national conversation. It’s bigoted. It’s racist. It’s repugnant. And it must be treated that way, openly and directly, not in the mealy-mouthed euphemisms that are no different than that KKK flier’s euphemisms about “Christian-minded Americans of sound mind and good moral character” and “non-American business owners in our country.”

But that’s what you get when a vague public consensus turns into a vague direction to a few staffers left to decipher the will–actually, the lack of will–of a few well-intentioned but no less grand-standing public officials. And that’s what you get when such a statement goes up on the county’s Web site (not that you could possibly find it, because even its location and headline are veiled) without having been read or discussed, let alone approved, by the county commissioners requesting it–and requesting it without a vote after a discussion in a meeting that didn’t have that issue on its agenda and where taking action was illegal. This is how, in government lingo, an elected board’s “direction” turns into an official act of government in your name. With nobody’s name on it. Unaccountability 101 masquerading as concern for the community.

I asked Netts, the Palm Coast mayor, whether making an official statement denouncing the KKK might give it more of a platform than it deserved. I wasn’t sure. Nor was he. Nor were the county’s other mayors and a few city commissioners when they wrestled with the question at a League of Cities meeting earlier this week. Some thought that addressing it head on was the way. Some thought it was better to let it go, treat the fliers like the one-time night-thieving they were. The mayors couldn’t decide whether to join the county’s statement, sign it all as one, or have their own. It wasn’t clear where they left things when they did leave them.

Here’s the thing. Making no statement at all would have been fine: it would have treated the incident as the isolated imbecility it was. Making a statement may also have been fine, if it was properly deliberated and representative of the explicit and recorded will of elected representatives. It would have taken a stand, however disproportionate, against something that should never be left unchallenged. As Netts put it, citing words attributed to any number of people in any number of permutations, all that’s necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing (witness for that matter the first eight years of the decade).

That’s without getting into the thornier propriety of a government body making a public denunciation of a legal group in everyone’s name, however repugnant the group’s aims. Would the commission denounce a Nation of Islam chapter recruiting in town? Would it denounce a bunch of Islamists who suddenly want their daughters wearing burqas in school? Would I want my County Commission denouncing Planned Parenthood for facilitating abortions or celebrating the United Daughters of the Confederacy?

The worst thing the county could have done is what it did: Make a statement that wasn’t a statement. Pretend to take a stand while taking no stand at all. Do I really need to be told that people in Flagler celebrate diversity “by attending festivals put on by the various ethnic clubs and organizations to enjoy each other, the food, music and customs of many lands”? Are we addressing a Hallmark card to the KKK or telling it to take its recruitment drive and shove it where the hood should follow?

One more point: Even if it wasn’t isolated (and according to Cole Thornton, imperial wizard of the United Norther & Southern Knights of the KKK, whom I interviewed this morning, it wasn’t), it’s not as if the KKK is among the priorities to worry about in this society. It has no influence, no reach, no effect on people’s lives beyond its lust for psychological terrorism, which it rarely pulls off anyway, although I don’t doubt that the election of a black man president has done more for KKK recruiting than anything since D.W. Griffith’s “Birth of a Nation”–or that more of your friends and neighbors you’d dare admit privately espouse the very ideas they, or you, hypocritically denounce in public. (Thornton told me that he wanted to send a medal to Barack Obama for what his election has done to recruiting, though Thornton blamed Obama not for being black, but for being a radical liberal. His language at that point was indistinguishable from the language I heard at Palm Coast’s Tea Party rally on Wednesday. The Thornton interview will post later.)

Which is precisely why we have more serious bigotries to deal with every day, in our midst, than paper-thin recruitment drives from Confederate nostalgics. We should be worried about the more insidious kind of bigotries that our own sanctimonious elected officials or unelected talking heads revel in every day, the kind that affect our lives far more than a supremacist parading in secret in a cone-headed bed-sheet. An hour’s worth of Fox News in prime time or 10 minutes’ worth of tea partying is enough to make it seem as if the McCarthy era was an ideological civil war on training wheels. The training wheels are off. The country is more divided than it’s been in generations between its “right-thinking” and “wrong-thinking” Americans, between its rich and working class, even, and increasingly, between its young and its elderly, as the recent battle between the Medicare generation and those it shamefully sought to keep from having an equal share of the safety net showed us. Those are the issues we should be confronting, the triumph of evil that goes not only unchallenged but applauded and cheered.

How easy to pick at an obvious target like the KKK, and easier still to do it in language that commits to nothing more than fortune-cookie bromides. How meaningless too, in the end–as meaningless as those idiotic fliers in Palm Coast–when we’re mired in a culture where mutual denigration and the worship of self-interest are national sports and flag-wrapping the most fashionable hood around.

–Pierre Tristam

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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Jim R. says

    April 18, 2010 at 2:47 pm

    Obama “a radical liberal” that’s even more ridiculous than those halloween costumes.

  2. J.A.Allen says

    April 18, 2010 at 6:15 pm

    Well, you all certainly portrayed us a boogeymen. Your making more of a liberal stink everyday and running the country into the ground. Just what laws are broken everyday by the ”illegal” immigration of human trafficking?. Twenty million illegals in this country that bring a wealth of crime and poverty from their culture is totally welcomed here by you it seems. Then theres the ”homosexual” agenda. For those of us that find it disgusting and against Gods Laws you all seem to welcome it with open arms. There are still some moral and God fearing people left in this nation. But we have no say in any proceedings as the liberal stance overrides our opinions and proceeds with theirs.

    What if an illegal immigrant wants to marry his donkey and live next to you….is too diverse or would you fine residents allow that to happen too? Afterall isnt THAT diversity?

    J.A.Allen
    UNSKKKK

  3. Jim R. says

    April 18, 2010 at 6:30 pm

    If the water shortage out west gets any worse the entire population of Arizona, Nevada and New Mexico may be migrating.
    That fence in Mexico may be used to keep American illegal immigrants out of Mexico.

  4. ken says

    April 18, 2010 at 8:10 pm

    Would it be necessary to criminalize illegal aliens as these KKK idiots suggest?
    If something is illegal, is it not already criminal?

    i’m referring to the following quote from your article.

    ” criminalize and kick out illegal aliens (a message an uncomfortable number of “regular” Americans embrace wholeheartedly)”

  5. Pierre Tristam says

    April 18, 2010 at 8:16 pm

    Ken, being an undocumented immigrant is a civil, not a criminal, offense (except in Arizona, which is rewriting its border laws based on North Korean law books, such as they are). The House of Representatives in the Bush years tried do criminalize being an undocumented immigrant (they attempted to make it a felony). Thankfully, they failed.

  6. MWWhiteley says

    April 18, 2010 at 9:32 pm

    ok…lets check the facts. First of all if we were truly a “hate group” as everyone is thinking these days, don’t you think something a little more drastic than dropping a piece of paper in someone’s driveway would have happened? Secondly, if this article is indirectly grouping the KKK with skinheads and neo-nazis, as I have gathered from what is written, thats as far from the truth as you can get. The agendas and goals of our group and theirs are completely opposite. Lastly, before you go making snap-judgments about us, look at the facts. Yes, the past history of the klan isn’t that glorious, but that’s where its staying. IN THE PAST. The klan of today is different than the klan of yesteryear. Just look it up if you’re so interested.

  7. B. Williams says

    May 28, 2010 at 9:44 am

    My feelings in regards to all of this hate and it doesn’t matter to whom is saying it or doing it.
    I would be happy if GOD came down and just wipe everybody out and started over again as he has done many times before.. We all tend to forget how this country started !!!!
    We all need to walk up to the mirror and ask ourselves if we really deserve to be here and if you are a decent human being i am sure the answer will be clear to you.
    When you or a family member that you love is ill or hurt and have a 90% chance of living or dying ! I don’t think you give a rats ass as to whether the person that save them is white,black or some other nationality.
    I don’t think you will be praying to God asking for a white man or woman..
    If so ! Then your family and friends really need to take a look at you and make a decision.

  8. Kelly says

    November 21, 2010 at 3:42 pm

    We are ALL human and the same on the inside, the color of one’s skin means nothing. And if you believe in God you should believe this. In the bible it says for you to treat others as you want to be treated and to love thy neighbor. It does not say only love thy neighbor if your neighbor has the color skin you favor. Hate only makes you miserable and a ugly person inside. So do yourself a favor and realize its not a white, black, asian or hispanic thing we are HUMAN. Let’s let God do the judging and just love one another.

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