i start to make you nervous and i’m going to extremes

August 7, 2007 at 7:25 pm | In Current Events, Society | 3 Comments
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New York City’s views on free speech are really hurting its standing in the “cities in which I might aspire to live” list. They’re trying to be clever by dancing around the First Amendment with “symbolic” laws, but it makes me incredibly uneasy nonetheless. This, however, cracked me up (emphasis mine):
…the b-word appears to have acquired more shades of meaning among various groups, ranging from a term of camaraderie to, in a gerund form, an expression of emphatic approval.”
I support removing hateful words from the popular vernacular, but as always, I would rather change people’s beliefs than legislate against those beliefs. A great way to win hearts and minds: using remarkably dry, geeky phrasing to describe “edgy” and “cool” things.

don’t get me started

April 12, 2007 at 4:31 pm | In Barack Obama, Current Events, Racism | Leave a Comment
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Imus has been fired. Welcome to the racist police state.

I’m not sure I can vote for Obama even in the general election, especially if it’s Giuliani or Hagel (read: sane; better than Brownback or McCain) for the GOP. Thanks, Dems! Thanks, Sharpton! You’ve done to me what you’ve done to millions of common-sense voters in the past! If you run that racist hypocrite Obama, who goes after a white idiot but has yet to call for the silencing of hundreds of rappers and black media personalities, I will need to do some serious thinking about whether I can live with such a vote. That’s just what the GOP wanted, guys. Nice job. That said, I think this kills his primary chances for that very reason: sensible liberals aren’t rallying behind extremism. Thank God (who sensible liberals don’t believe in, of course).

Again: not saying that I think there shouldn’t have been consequences for Imus, not saying I think he’s even worth defending as a person (he has apparently been a jackass for a while now), but on principle, no one should lose his job for saying something stupid, at least not while true hatemongers continue to dominate the media. And it wasn’t that he said something stupid about Jews, women, Mexicans, or gays (and he’s been there and done those); he pissed off the one minority group notorious for demanding a double standard to protect their racist speech but stopping whites from saying anything. If more of the outcry had been from feminist groups or other minorities bringing up past offenses, and this was about the totality of his actions, I’d be a bit less angry.

They should have let the market decide – if Imus’s ratings went through the floor, CBS could have pulled him and I wouldn’t complain because it would be a sign of public consensus. But this wasn’t a widespread outcry against Imus as some are claiming; this was noise-making special interests wanting to restrict the freedom of an American citizen. Period. And it makes me sick.

P.S. Isn’t it a nice convenience how this story (and Anna Nicole’s babydaddy) took the spotlight off Alberto Gonzales and a still-failing war? I’m SO glad we moved beyond such trivial issues.
Addendum: Snoop Dogg weighs in: “It’s a completely different scenario. (Rappers) are not talking about no collegiate basketball girls who have made it to the next level in education and sports. We’re talking about hoes that’s in the ‘hood that ain’t doing shit, that’s trying to get a nigga for his money. These are two separate things. First of all, we ain’t no old-ass white men that sit up on MSNBC going hard on black girls. We are rappers that have these songs coming from our minds and our souls that are relevant to what we feel. I will not let them muthafuckas say we are in the same league as him. Kick him off the air forever.”
I think this actually means Snoop is worse than Imus: derogatory terms are applied based on socioeconomic standing, and they actually believe in what they’re saying and find it “relevant,” rather than it being a disgusting facade. This is our country.

extreme ways are back again

April 11, 2007 at 6:36 pm | In Barack Obama, Current Events, Racism | Leave a Comment
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… aaaaaaaaand the Dems are self-destructing again.

This Don Imus controversy has gone too far. “Nappy-headed ho’s” is so vile that it merits firing a man? Sadly, Barack Obama thinks so. And because of that, he’s lost my vote in the primary. I’m not gonna scream about the First Amendment – Obama’s speaking as a matter of opinion, not advocating government censorship. But isn’t the American idea of free speech about more than the Bill of Rights? Isn’t it – or, given the Patriot Act, the better phrasing is shouldn’t it be – a belief that, with a few exceptions (which I shall touch on), ideas and opinions should be voiced without fear of extreme retribution?

Actions have consequences. Imus’s choice of words was horrible, and I support anyone’s right to be angry about them. Protest, picket, request that he be suspended or donate to an anti-hatred charity. I don’t think he should just issue a token apology and move on without some backlash. As a feminist, I certainly think the “ho” part of things was out of line and deplorable. Of course, one does wonder why there’s so much outcry about women being insulted with words, and yet the possibility remains that conservatives will be able to legally dictate women’s medical decisions. All of the lip service being given to female equality is quite at odds with the platforms of certain politicians.

But “nappy” is now yet another “n” word that white people can’t use? That is utterly ridiculous. It’s a descriptive term for the type of hair that many dark-skinned people have. Of course, maybe I’m being insensitive – by now, describing the skin color of the athletes could be out of line! I get that people were offended and that the context was insulting, and do see justification to take offense. But where does it stop? Imus, like Michael Richards, apologized for offending the black community, but the Al Sharptons and Jesse Jacksons of the world don’t care – they’re out for a pound of flesh and then some, and judgment-challenged white folks better watch out.

I’m not saying that racism against blacks is no longer an issue – since Katrina, I’ve realized just how little some Americans care about their fellow human beings. But if the goal is to stop the spread of hatred – a noble cause that I can get behind – start with the true hatemongers. Go after Bill O’Reilly and Ann Coulter (her biggest problem in Darfur? The genocide is inefficient.), who are actually part of our society’s growing indifference and/or antipathy towards other people. They are extremists with a hate-filled rhetoric that should not be given a voice in the mass media any more than Osama bin Laden’s. But it seems black leaders only want to silence people who have made perceived racist comments – the goal isn’t greater tolerance, but a chilling effect specifically on anti-black speech. I won’t go as far as to call Sharpton et. al. racists, but the mentality of “protecting me and mine” is the sort of fragmentation that does lead to the dehumanization of our fellow man.

Back to party politics, Obama has shot himself in the foot, and I can only hope the Democratic party isn’t dragged down with him. The Republicans have been as formidable as they have by turning American on American – be it evangelical on gay or Caucasian on immigrant – and it is a tactic at which they are experts. Now, the GOP can point to Obama joining extremists like Sharpton (which is even worse than if Biden or Clinton or another white candidate had spoken out first), and turn white on black. They can raise the specter of political correctness being taken to an extreme, of whites losing jobs and college spots to affirmative action, of a minority-pandering thought police state. And unless the Democratic party as a whole distances itself from Obama’s heavy-handed and divisive proposal, I can’t really argue with them.

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