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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Sunday, October 9, 2005

COMMENTARY
Simpson makes mockery of quest for racial justice

By Patt Morrison

O.J. Simpson handed out autographs at NecroComicon, a Halloween/comics/collectibles event, on Friday — close to the 10th anniversary of his Oct. 3, 1995, acquittal in the deaths of his ex-wife and her friend.

DAMIAN DOVARGANES | Associated Press

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To the man who drew a happy face in the "O" when he signed his suicide note, I suppose there's no such thing as irony. But you'd figure even someone with O.J. Simpson's Teflon bravado surely wouldn't show up in Los Angeles:

1) close to the 10th anniversary of being acquitted of slicing two people to death;

2) at a Halloween/comics/ collectibles event called NecroComicon ("necro," as in death; "comic," as in funny — a play on a word dreamed up by horror writer H.P. Lovecraft);

3) to autograph sports memorabilia for money ("I'm not doing this for my health");

4) in what was promoted as his first public appearance in a dozen years, not counting celebrity golf games or court dates.

Yet here he was, back again like a bad penny in a Bruno Magli loafer. Ten years after a criminal jury declared Simpson not guilty of murder, and more than eight years after a civil jury found otherwise, it makes me squirm to remember those grinding, obsessive months of courtroom voyeurism, the impassioned declarations about racism, especially as we struggle with what Hurricane Katrina sent flooding into New Orleans — not just toxic water but the noxious buildup of poverty and neglect in black and white.

Against that massive and tragic display, it's embarrassing to reckon all the air time and ink expended on Simpson, sieving the matter of race relations through such a meager filter: the gossip gold-standard double-murder trial of a rich and famous black athlete/actor/sports commentator accused of slaughtering his white ex-wife and her white friend.

For many whites, Simpson was slam-dunk guilty, and for many blacks, he was a stand-in for every poor black man ever put in the dock. In the end, Simpson walked because he had it both ways: He could accuse the police of racism just as a poor black man might, but he could backstop that with the top-dollar defense only a rich man could afford.

It's pretty shameful the way we gawked at the TV screen, mesmerized as a rich and famous man gave us to understand that he, too, was a victim — of racism. By comparison, the race and class cleavage on the Gulf Coast has all the tabloid titillation of a shrapnel wound to the gut.

Reports of vicious post-Katrina crimes — almost all of them found to be false — may have registered higher on white viewers' plausibility index because the people supposedly committing them were black. And blacks were far readier to believe rumors, such as the 9th Ward being deliberately flooded — the legacy of credulity created by the reality of incidents such as the Tuskegee syphilis experiments.

Patricia Turner teaches black history at the University of California-Davis, and she's the author of "I Heard It Through the Grapevine: Rumor in African-American Culture." I called to ask her about the scale and contrasts of the virtual hurricane Simpson and the real one named Katrina. "It just reflects the messiness of our understandings about race at this moment," she said. "The notion that somehow or another we've gotten beyond race as a factor in the lives of Americans — it's not the case."

No one deserves any credit out of this, least of all us gawk-ers. Riveted by the inflated grievances of one celebrity, we forgot for too long the real grievances of nameless American millions.

Patt Morrison is a columnist for the Los Angeles Times.