Obviously whoever made that swastika was intentionally appropriating the power of that symbol in order to use it to strike fear into the target audience. As Ed Norton's character in American history X summarized (in a flashback before that character grew and renounced his association with nazism) - "You see this? This means - Not. Welcome." Whether the symbol means there is a neo-nazi movement on UM's campus is not the main point. The question is - did leadership do enough to at least try to have a safe atmosphere without intimidation, while balancing with free speech. Not easy, but this guy didn't do enough.
It would be nice if the symbol lost all its power after WWII but that's not quite how things work.
I made a clear distinction in this discussion, that the issue of somebody actually smearing on the floor, walls - is a problem independent of what they actually depicted in . That's how my mind works. I break things down, and work from there to build things up.
In this singular instance (and still I have read nothing about this situation - other than what's in this 6 page message board thread - without opening any links), it could have been abstract art, it could have been no pattern at all, it could have been some kind of linear algebra matrix equation that describes the meaning of life - (ala Good Will Hunting). It's still somebody smearing on the wall, and that is a situation that should have been handled much differently - than it apparently has been handled.
My opinion, my thesis if you will, is that by attending to simple basic matters appropriately, you often build the foundation of handling complex matters effectively, and everything about this situation screams bad leadership to me. No surprise that there are racial issues dividing a campus, if somebody can smear on a wall and not be found and punished accordingly. My opinion.
As for the swastika discussion, it's inevitable in some circles, that any discussion will degenerate into a discussion of Nazi's. There's even a named rule about it.
My position, remains unchanged, that the time when the symbol by itself was truly frightening, has long passed. I concede that there are places in the world, where that may not be true anymore, but my opinion is that a university campus in the USA is not one of them. To me, the use of such a symbol in such a setting is a sign of weakness, ignorance, and generates disgust from me - not fear.
That an would draw a swastika somewhere in paint, or blood, or , with the intent to create fear or intimidate? Obviously.
The questions are two: #1. Do you let it intimidate you? and #2. What do you do about it?
I think the campus environment in Missouri has had enough of what is not an isolated incident, and is not going to let the students be intimidated, and what they've done about it, is appeal for accountability - and the result they got is the resignation of the university president.
Here's a newsflash - in case anyone missed it. The pres resigning isn't necessarily going to change anything with regards to racism tension and problems on the campus, and to the accountability for whoever drew a swastika in .
What the school does from here, as a community - student body and administration/faculty together is pretty important.
Here's another opinion from me - if that list of demands is true and accurate - there is language in there, that doesn't help to make things better.