'Scooby-Doo' Character Will No Longer Call the Cops — That Would Be Racist

Is it racist to call the police? Judging by a video game’s update, it seems the answer may be yes.

Every Scooby-Doo fan knows how each episode ends: The gang brings in officials to jail the bad guys. But according to many in government over the past few years, such a conclusion is problematic — after all, we should #DefundThePolice.

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Such modern morality was recently applied to the free online game MultiVersus.

From NBC News:

Velma Dinkley, the character from the beloved cartoon Scooby-Doo, has been dubbed a “Karen” for her ability to call police on Black characters in a new video game. …

She’s one of the many famous characters players can choose from Warner Bros. Discovery’s catalog including DC Comics’ Wonder Woman and Batman and Looney Tunes’ Bugs Bunny and Tasmanian Devil.

Of course, Velma can summon the cops for characters of various races and (presumably) species, not just black humans. Yet, says NBC, her “ability to call police on Black characters such as basketball star LeBron James, who appeared in the movie Space Jam: A New Legacy, didn’t sit right with everyone.”

If you’re unclear on the “Karen” label, the outlet describes it as “a white woman who uses her status and power to humiliate a person of color.”

There has been a spate of viral moments of white women threatening to or calling police, particularly on people of color, for things as trivial as watering flowers and barbecuing in parks.

On Twitter, some gamers decried Velma’s trigger/dialing finger. One wrote, “I am enjoying Velma in MultiVersus, but…a character [whose] special move is calling the police on her enemies definitely don’t <sic> sit right with me as a black man…”

The frenzy frothed into a Change.org petition claiming as follows:

MultiVersus…features various characters within the Warner Bros. Discovery catalog, including Velma from the Scooby-Doo franchise. …

[T]here is a…move [in which] Velma gathers “clues” and can then summon a cop car to chase down her opponents. Although historically, the Scooby-Doo gang has (but not always) worked with the police to catch the suspect within the cartoons, this cop car is not necessary in the game nor does it add meaning to her moveset.

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Why is that disconcerting? Because of this:

For decades, and especially in recent times, Black & Indigenous people of color around the world have suffered under police brutality. And this cop car is ignoring the problem of police brutality in this day in age.

We the players of MultiVersus,” the petition goes on, “demand the [developers]…please reconsider the ultimate art of the cop car chase to be replaced by the Mystery Machine…”

At publication time, the petition boasts a whopping 34 signatures. But these days, that’s all it takes. Companies prefer to play it safe, lest they become tangled in a web of wokeness.

On the MultiVersus update site, a new change is announced:

Instead of calling the police, Velma now solves the mystery and calls the Mystery Inc. gang and the Mystery Machine to take the bad guys away.

Beyond the petition and social media posts, it’s a response to undeniable cultural cues:

Professor Corrects Student Who Labels Cops ‘Heroes’

The Bushes’ Alma Mater Teaches Kindergarteners ‘Whites Make It Harder for Black People’

Public School Warns 2nd Graders Cops Are ‘Nice to White People and Mean to Black People’

‘Self Defense’ Course Says Don’t Call Cops — They May Shoot the Black Victim

Science Journal Decries Racism in Geology, Claims Black People Are Too Scared to Hold Hammers (Because of Police)

As for Velma and her Caucasian crew confiscating criminals and caging them in a van, isn’t that felonious kidnapping — of, sometimes, black characters? No matter, this is where we are: Depending on the particulars, vigilante justice trumps the cops coming.

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-ALEX

 

See more content from me:

Teacher Warns Students Not to Judge Adults Who Want to ‘Have Sex With a Five-Year-Old’

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