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Wednesday, December 30, 2015

Obama's Skin Was Darkened In 2008 GOP Ads: Dog Whistle Racism

2008 GOP ads show racial bias against President Obama
This still image is taken from a television advertisement aired by John McCain's presidential campaign in 2008 connecting Barack Obama with Bill Ayers. (Solomon Messing / Pew Research Center, handout from John McCain for President)


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Obama's skin looks different in 2008 GOP ads
Max Ehrenfreund
Washington Post
A new study shows that negative ads targeting President Obama in 2008 depicted him with very dark skin, and that these images would have appealed to some viewers' racial biases.
The finding reinforces charges that some Republican politicians seek to win votes by implying support for racist views and ethnic hierarchies, without voicing those prejudices explicitly. The purported tactic is often called "dog-whistle politics" -- just as only canines can hear a dog whistle, only prejudiced voters are aware of the racist connotations of a politician's statement, according to the theory.
That debate has been prominent in the 2016 campaign, primarily targeting Donald Trump, but it has existed in almost every recent presidential election. To hear their opponents tell it, when Republican politicians say they oppose a generous welfare system, they really mean black beneficiaries are lazy. If they endorse strict immigration enforcement, they really mean that Latinos are criminals, critics say.
A study published online this month in Public Opinion Quarterly provides new evidence that one GOP campaign -- intentionally or not -- has aired advertisements that exacerbate viewers' racial biases.


Analyzing 126 advertisements from the presidential campaign in 2008, the authors first digitally measured the darkness of the two nominees' skin in each spot, then sorted the ads into categories based on themes. President Barack Obama and his opponent, Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., looked very different in various advertisements depending on how the footage was edited and produced.
That was particularly the case in negative advertisements, in which each campaign manipulated the images of its opponent to shadow or wash out his face for dramatic effect.
Interestingly, though, when McCain's campaign aired spots that connected Obama with alleged criminal activity by liberal groups, the producers almost always used images that made Obama's skin appear very dark.

Video: http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/politics/ct-obama-gop-racial-bias-20151229-story.html 

Eighty-six percent of these ads contained an image of the president in which the his skin tone was in the darkest quartile of all ads studied.
Likewise, as the election approached, images of Obama in spots aired by McCain's campaign became gradually darker.
Images of McCain campaign's own candidate, meanwhile, became somewhat lighter.
Whether this was a conscious strategy on the part of McCain's campaign is impossible to say.The Washington Post contacted the Republican National Committee and McCain's Senate office. They did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
Yet a large body of evidence shows that racial prejudices are stronger against African-Americans with darker skin. For example, jurors are more likely to sentence to death black defendants with stereotypically African facial features, even when accounting for the severity of the crime.
The authors of this study -- Solomon Messing of the Pew Research Center; Julia Mabon, a software engineer who works for LinkedIn; and Ethan Plaut, a postdoctoral fellow at Stanford University -- confirmed that darker images of Obama did indeed affect the way viewers perceived him.
The researchers showed subjects manipulated images of Obama and then asked them to play a game resembling a crossword puzzle. The subjects had to fill in blanks, such as "C R _ _ _." One respondent might write "C R O W D," while another might write "C R I M E." Given the letters "L A _ _," a respondent could write "L A Z Y."
Those who saw the image of Obama with light skin gave that word or another anti-black stereotype as a response 33 percent of the time. Among those who saw the darkened image, the figure was 45 percent, showing that they were more likely to have those negative stereotypes on their minds after seeing the photograph.

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