Why Don Imus Shouldn't Be Fired
By Prorev.com Editor Sam Smith
AL SHARPTON and others who want to dump Don Imus for saying something ethnically rotten about black women - heretofore
considered the exclusive province of black men, especially comedians and movie makers - suggests that they haven't been
watching the show much.
Imus has been cruel and insensitive towards a lot of people. His producer Bernard McGuirk has parodied New Orleans mayor
Ray Nagin and an Irish cardinal (while wearing a folded Fedex envelope as headgear). Another regular has played the role
of a pompous and stupid Jerry Falwell.
It is gutter humor and some of it pretty lousy. Imus deserves to be scolded, berated and called on it when it gets out
of hand. You just don't want to fire him as well.
Here's why: Imus and is crew are one of the few real things on TV. It's not pretty, it's not nice, but it is revealing
and at times even refreshing relief from the normal fantasies of the tube.
Imus is like the girl who had a little curl right in the middle of her forehead: "When she was good, she was very, very
good and when she was bad she was horrid."
So why not settle for the normal sanctimonies, pomposities and hypocrisies about our state of being as can be easily
viewed elsewhere? Simply because we grow individually and as a people not based on our allegiance to some enunciated and
prescribed perfection but by the incremental correction of the myriad imperfections that plague us.
Mark Twain said that sins were not to be tossed out the window but eased down the stairs one step at a time. The same
goes for Don Imus.
This is not, to be sure, the currently approved method of dealing with degradations of others whether for their color,
sex or physical shape. We take great comfort in rules even as we fail to notice that they are not working. We pretend
that the average of human behavior is far higher than it actually is. And we assume that those who say the right thing
also do the right thing.
For example, where did Imus get the nefarious expression? Probably from some black male comedian or a movie celebrating
ghetto culture - including the mistreatment of women.
As the black blog Knock the Hustle put it, "Should he be fired for calling black women 'ho's?' Why? We do it all the
time. We get some irrelevant has-been like Imus? We hail Stern as a genius because he has a black female side-kick for
doing the same thing. We give all manner of folks passes for similar language whenever it suits our odd peculiars,
particulars and assorted pecadillos."
And how does Imus' offense compare in seriousness with the number of blacks being forced out of their homes by white
liberal gentrifiers who would never think of using the term 'ho'? Or the number of young blacks killed as a result of a
massively cruel and ineffective war on drugs? Is ethnic eviction or ethnic eradication a greater or lesser offense than
an ethnic slur? If so then why don't we treat it as such?
Then there's the point raised recently by Bacardi L. Jackson: "How does a white man who signed the deeply disparate
crack-cocaine bill into law, introduced a devastating crime bill that further entrenched the prison industrial complex
at the expense of black communities and black political power everywhere, oversaw the murder of more people on death row
during his presidency than any president in the history of our country, completely dissed and dismissed our sister Lani
Guinier, who would have been an amazing Attorney General for our country and for our community, purely for the sake of
political expediency, get to be donned the 'First Black President'"? Is our loyalty so easily spawned because one acts
like a 'pimp,' plays the saxophone and visits a few pulpits?"
Imus is clearly one of the most imperfect individuals one is likely to find either on or off the tube. But it is not an
imperfection honed to a perverse art as with Rush Limbaugh or Howard Stern. What you see are the real failings of a real
man and a real ex-addict who also, incidentally, displays some unexpected virtues. The same host who spoke of "ho's" was
probably Harold Ford's biggest national booster in his race for the U. S. Senate. How does one fit that into a
simplistic racist stereotype?
Imus also is environmentally conscious, is truly concerned about the treatment of American war vets and does some of the
most interesting interviews with public figures to be found anywhere, in part because his very insensitivity leads him
to ask questions others would be too polite to ask.
In a better world we would all treat each other with friendship, respect and as a member of the family. But this is not
where we are as a nation. It's not nice that this is the case but it does no good to hide it behind the drapes of
liberal sanctimony. It is far better to get all the cards on the table and deal with them rather than pretending they
are not there.
Language actually provides a warning sign and serves as an inter-cultural safety valve. Paul Kuritz, in an article on
ethnic humor in the Maine Progressive, pointed out that "as early as 1907, the English-speaking rabbis and priests of
Cleveland united to protest the Irish and Jewish stage comedians. . . The suppression of crude ethnic humor both
accompanied the economic exploitation of the lower-class work force and paralleled the dismissal of the lower classes'
tastes as 'offensive' to the newly refined sensibilities of upwardly-mobile second and third generation Americans."
Kuritz, a third-generation Slovak, was arguing that the real problem with a recently fired French-Canadian radio host
was not that he had made fun of his own culture but that the full panoply of ethnicity was not also represented on the
air. This would have allowed all these groups to experience what anthropologists call a "joking relationship," helping
to reduce tensions between potentially antagonistic clans. Said Kuritz, "As a general rule of thumb, an attempt to
suppress speech as 'offensive' or 'disempowering' is not a signal to lessen the amount of talk, but to increase the
amount."
Today, interethnic joking is mainly found in rough-and-tumble environments such as the modern vaudeville of comedy clubs
or in sports and politics, but is frowned upon by those whose social status leads them to presume that manners create
reality. The problem is that under the latter ground rules, words often disguise feelings, sidetrack action, and no
longer serve to keep tension and hate apart. It is paper wrapping around something still extremely unpleasant.
The irony is that even as standards of interethnic language are enforced, the actual state of those allegedly being
protected is being increasingly ignored. Poverty, education, fair voting, healthcare and housing deserve far more
attention than some ugly phrase uttered by Don Imus. Yet the less we do about real issues, the more time we seem to
spend worry about what people say. And the funny thing is, if we would take care of the things that really matter, the
language would take care of itself.
*************
AN IMUS INTERVIEW
[This is an example of the flip side of Don Imus' crude insensitivity: it sometimes gets at the truth. From an interview
with Senator Chuck Schumer]
Imus: Have you been aware, even since 1981, of the state of treatment that veterans have been receiving throughout the
Veterans Administration hospitals?
Schumer: Yes, it's gotten much worse in the last seven or eight years because the funding was just cut, cut, cut, cut,
cut. I get stories all the time of veterans wounded in Iraq, they get good treatment over in Iraq . . . The Veterans
Administration has just been decimated in terms of funding and it's unbelievable because . . . we ask these people to
serve us and in the DoD part, at least in Iraq, and initially when they are wounded from all reports they are treated
well, after that they are just sort of forgotten about and the VA is just in terrible shape, terrible shape . . . It's a
little like FEMA with Katrina. They put the wrong people in charge. They don't really care.
Imus: Senator Schumer, you're not suggesting to me that this is something that just happened under the Bush
administration. This has been going on since Korea, since the second world war.
Schumer: It's been going on for a while, but what happened with the Iraq and Afghanistan wars is that the system got
completely overloaded and it really broke down.
Imus: We've known for years, certainly since 1981, that the care and the way that these veterans have been treated to a
large degree, not because it's the people's fault - most of them, the doctors and nurses particularly at the Veterans
Administration - but for a variety of reasons, in many cases, their treatment and care has been woefully inadequate. The
bureaucratic red tape has been a nightmare for a lot of these people, and that's been going on for years, and my
question is why haven't any of you ever done anything about it?
Schumer: Well, we've tried. I've been fighting since I got to the Senate for full funding for the veterans, and we
didn't do any oversight. That's the real problem here . . . I'll tell you one other thing that will happen. We'll get
full funding for the VA this year, for the first time. We did actually, to show you a little bit that this isn't just
catching up to the crisis, we did a budget in early January . . .
Imus: Let me interrupt you for a second, but this is nonsense, Senator Schumer. I want to be respectful, but you can't
possibly be serious and suggest - I mean I'm not a fool. You can't suggest to me that because the Democrats are now in
power that something is going to be done about Walter Reed and about the mess in the Veterans Administration and all of
this, and that if the Democrats hadn't taken control of Congress that nothing would have been done. That's preposterous;
of course it would have.
Schumer: Well, something would have been done if the story would have gotten out . . .
Imus: Here's another question. Have you ever been over to Walter Reed?
Schumer: Ahh, not in a while, no.
Imus: How long has it been since you've been over there?
Schumer: Oh, before Iraq.
Imus: So, before Iraq since you've been over to see the soldiers. So, we have elected you - first in the Congress and
now in the Senate - and you've got a bill now to do something we'll get to in a minute; but you haven't even been to
Walter Reed Hospital.
Schumer: No, no, no. But I have visited regularly the veterans' hospitals throughout my state. That's where I have
focused on . . .
*************
FROM UNDERNEWS
FROM THE PROGRESSIVE REVIEW
EDITED BY SAM SMITH
Since 1964, Washington's most unofficial source
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