Suffering From Chronic Shock-Jock Syndrome: If Don Goes, Michelle,
Bill, Rush, etc. etc. Should Go, Too
by Lila Rajiva
by Lila Rajiva
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I am still
trying to figure this one out:
Don Imus was
fired from his radio show by CBS on April 13 because.. what?
- Political
discourse in the United States is much too civil for such coarseness...
You know, "ho’s"....
"nappy-headed."......
I see.
What would
this be, though?
"[Clinton]
masturbates in the sinks." ~
Ann Coulter, Rivera Live, August 2, 1999
- Oh....sorry!
nothing to do with locker room language on the airwaves. It was
the thought behind it, you know..."nappy-haired" – racial
put-downs....can’t have that sort of thing going on now, can we?
Can’t we?
"I've been
to Africa three times. All right? You can't bring Western reasoning
into the culture. The same way you can't bring it into fundamental
Islam." ~ Bill O’Reilly (5/6/02)
- Sheesh!
Sorry again!.. and ok, now I get it...it’s the way he used
language to pick on someone not his own size. These poor kids.....these
nice middle-class Rutgers-attending BB-playing college kids...Hey,
even Ann Coulter thought they were angels. Pick on someone your
own size, Don. Try taking a hit at politicians – - like brave
Brother Rush:
Rush Limbaugh:
"Everyone knows the Clintons have a cat. Socks is the White House
cat. But did you know there is a White House dog?" H puts up a picture
of Chelsea Clinton, daughter of the president, age 13. (Ivins column
in Arizona Republic, 10/17/93).
- Ooooh...you
really don’t get it, do you? Chelsea...she was a public figure......sort
of.....nearly......at least, she’s the kid of a public figure.
But these Rutgers kids, they were just regular people...and he
took away their moment...he humiliated them.....he intimidated
them
Intimidation....Pretty
big word. Guess it takes someone big to do it. Like Bill O’Reilly:
O'Reilly: "There
ya go, Mike is – - he's a gone guy. (to a listener who had just
called in) You know, we have his – - we have your phone numbers,
by the way. So, if you're listening, Mike, we have your phone number,
and we're going to turn it over to Fox security, and you'll be getting
a little visit."
(Bill O'Reilly,
March 2 cited in "When Will The FCC, FBI and the FTC Look Into O’Reilly’s
Threats?" Steve Young, American Politics Journal, 25 March
2007).
What Don Imus
said on the airwaves was offensive, no question. But for decades
now we have been interpreting free speech laws to extend to coarse,
offensive language – even when it’s without noticeable value as
political or religious speech. Why make an example of one man at
the expense of principle and consistency?
And look at
the context in which his remark was made – a shock-jock entertainment
show.
Look at the
transcript:
DON IMUS: So,
I watched the basketball game last night between – a little bit
of Rutgers and Tennessee, the women’s final.
SID ROSENBERG:
Yeah, Tennessee won last night – seventh championship for [Tennessee
coach] Pat Summitt, I-Man. They beat Rutgers by 13 points.
IMUS: That’s
some rough girls from Rutgers. Man, they got tattoos and –
BERNARD McGUIRK:
Some hard-core hos.
IMUS: That’s
some nappy-headed hos there. I’m gonna tell you that now, man, that’s
some – woo. And the girls from Tennessee, they all look cute, you
know, so, like – kinda like – I don’t know.
McGUIRK: A
Spike Lee thing.
IMUS: Yeah.
McGUIRK: The
Jigaboos vs. the Wannabes – that movie that he had.
IMUS: Yeah,
it was a tough –
CHARLES McCORD:
Do The Right Thing.
McGUIRK: Yeah,
yeah, yeah.
IMUS: I don’t
know if I’d have wanted to beat Rutgers or not, but they did, right?
ROSENBERG:
It was a tough watch. The more I look at Rutgers, they look exactly
like the Toronto Raptors.
Imus wasn’t
intending to be insulting...he was being, reactively, stupidly,
"hip," – trying to imitate a patois he had no feel for.
And what he
said, while crude and in public, was in a forum of entertainment
which lives or dies by such crudity. If this is regarded as OK 364
days of the year, it’s a little inconsistent to get offended on
the 365th day.
Inconsistency
in such matters is not a trivial failing. A rule selectively enforced
is not a rule – it’s an arbitrary display of power; it’s political
pandering. And arbitrary displays of power – even wrapped in righteous
rhetoric – have a nasty way of backfiring.
If we need
to be outraged, let’s take a look at some real shock jocks – whose
words drive policies that really endanger the country:
Michelle MALKIN:
And really, the reaction to the suicides should be, "Boo-freakin-hoo."
(about the suicides of detainees at Guantanamo Bay, June 12, 2006).
To put this
remark into context – Malkin is on record (incessantly) denying
the existence of torture or abuse in US prisons, arguing that civil
liberties are not sacrosanct, that foreign nationals are rightly
to be interned in war time without probable cause, and that military
tribunals for prisoners are pure necessity.
She
actually wrote a book defending the internment of over a 100,000
Japanese Americans in WW II, which a group of historians found to
be "a blatant violation of professional standards of objectivity
and fairness."
Or,
take Pat Robertson: "You know, I don't know about this doctrine
of assassination, but if he thinks we're trying to assassinate him,
I think that we really ought to go ahead and do it." Christian Broadcast
Network, 8/24/2006 broad cast of the 700 Club.
Robertson was
advocating assassination of the Venezuelan president, Chavez – a
statement that actually might be outside free speech protection,
since it can be seen as an incitement to action.
But I didn’t
see anyone getting him off the air.
April
14, 2007
Lila Rajiva
[send her mail] is the
author of The
Language of Empire: Abu Ghraib and the American Media (MR
Press, 2005) and with Bill Bonner, the forthcoming Mobs,
Messiahs and Markets, (Wiley, 2007). Visit her
blog.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
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