Bill Cosby Reads the Riot Act
by
Patrick
J. Buchanan
by
Patrick J. Buchanan
Twice
recently, Bill Cosby has read the riot act to his fellow African-Americans.
In
May at a gala at Constitution Hall in Washington, D.C., celebrating
the 50th anniversary of Brown vs. Board of Education, the Supreme
Court decision that outlawed school segregation, the comedian and
actor charged that some "lower economic people" were disgracing
Black America and dishonoring those who had fought for civil rights.
Roared
Cosby, "They're not holding up their end on this deal."
DeWayne
Wickham, a writer for USA Today and Gannett News, got a tape of
the speech.
"I'm
talking about these people who cry when their son is standing there
in an orange (prison jumpsuit)," Cosby told his largely black audience.
"Where were you when he was 2? Where were you when he was 12? Where
were you when he was 18, and how come you don't know he had a pistol?
"We've
got to take the neighborhood back," Cosby said. "They're standing
on the corner and can't speak English. I can't even talk the way
these people talk: 'Why you ain't. Where you is.' You used to talk
a certain way on the corner, and when you got in the house, you
switched to English. Everybody knows that at some point you switch
to English, except these knuckleheads. You can't be a doctor with
that kind of crap coming out of your mouth."
Accused
of airing his community's "dirty laundry," Cosby, at a Chicago conference
of Jesse Jackson's Rainbow/PUSH Coalition, fired back: "Your dirty
laundry gets out of school at 2:30 every day. It's cursing and calling
each other (the N-word) as they're walking up and down the street.
They think they're hip. They can't read. They can't write. They're
laughing and giggling, and they're going nowhere."
With
seven in 10 black children born out of wedlock in urban America
and crime so pervasive in some cities 40 percent of young black
males are in jail or prison, or on probation or parole, Cosby is
speaking truth. Where dissent begins is on the question: Who is
responsible?
Cosby
calls it a copout to blame White America. "For me, there is a time
when you have to turn the mirror around," he said. What the African-American
superstar is saying to black folks is: You have made this mess yourselves.
Your problems are your own fault. Your failures are your own responsibility.
This
message holds true not only for most black folks who make a mess
of their lives, but for almost all of us who do. And it is the beginning
of redemption to recognize this truth. From Alcoholics Anonymous
to Chuck Colson's Prison Fellowship, reformers know the beginning
of reform is to stop blaming someone else.
But
the leadership of Black America cannot embrace the Cosby message.
Why? Because if White America is not responsible for the social
crisis in Black America, upon what moral ground do these leaders
stand to demand retribution or reparations?
If
White America is not guilty, why should White America pay, other
than out of the goodness of its heart? And some black leaders are
fully aware of the alarming implications of Cosby's message, the
Rev. Al Sharpton being one of them.
Confessing
to having had a "mixed reaction" to what Cosby had to say, Rev.
Al told The Washington Post: "I agree that we have to do
something about the internal contradictions of our community. But
we also must be careful not to relieve the general community of
what they've done to our community."
Translation:
If the white folks are not guilty, why are they morally obligated
to do penance for social sins they did not commit by keeping the
wealth and power transfers flowing?
DeWayne
Wickham comes down in the moderate middle: "Too many liberals believe
racism is the only culprit here and too many conservatives
think the blame rests entirely on the people who are the faces behind
these awful statistics. The truth, I'm convinced, is somewhere in
between."
Wickham
is onto something. How, after all, do we explain the fact that,
in the 1940s, segregated and poor Black America had lower divorce,
illegitimacy and promiscuity rates than does affluent White America
in 2004? How do we explain a crime rate in segregated and poor Black
America, 50 years ago, that was but a fraction of today's crime
and incarceration rate in a freer and richer Black America today?
Segregation can't explain it. Economics can't. Racism can't.
Our
grandparents, black and white, had different beliefs about right
and wrong, and how men and women should behave and live than this
generation and they lived those beliefs. The moral, social and
cultural hurricane has swept over America since those times, affecting
us all. But the eye of the storm passed over black America.
July
14, 2004
Patrick
J. Buchanan [send
him mail], former presidential candidate and White House aide,
is editor of The American
Conservative and the author of eight books, including A
Republic Not An Empire and the upcoming Where
the Right Went Wrong.
Copyright
© 2004 Creators Syndicate
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J. Buchanan Archives
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