Nosferatu wrote:... Dave Chapell or Carlos Mencia? ... fire them.
Dave Imus should not have been fired.
Talk about a double-standard.
As I've said before: there are others who also need to held accountable, but that doesn't acquit Imus!
Nosferatu wrote:GET OVER IT.
SHOVE THE RIGHTIOUS CONDEMNATION WHERE ONLY YOUR PROCTOLOGIST CAN FIND IT.
Hmm, an insult (all-caps, no less!).
Allow me to make the point yet again:
Insults are one thing.
Racial insults are quite another.
Racially-inflammatory language has
no place in our society. And yes, I'm including minority entertainers in that statement - it applies to
everyone.
TIGERassault wrote:"Nappy-headed hos"... racist?
Excuse me for asking, but how in the hell is that racist?!
It's racist because of the historical and cultural significance of the terms, it's racist because of who it was directed at, but most of all it's racist because of the way it was said.
If you still don't think it's racist, go ask the next african-american you see - they'll probably be tactful about it, but they'll be clear about how racist those phrases are.
As I said earlier, this issue is one I take seriously. I attended a mixed-race church growing up and had a couple of black friends, so I thought I was pretty aware of racial issues. Not so.
It wasn't until I spent a year teaching in a 99% african-american inner-city school that I finally learned a lot (sometimes the hard way) about the culture, and how terms like "nappy", "ho", and "jigaboo" are perceived.
Those terms don't mean much to white society - they're associated with stand-up comedians, as jocular terms - but they are seen very differently in black culture,
especially when coming from a caucasian.
[Note: I heard on the tv this morning that this was not the first time Imus, or someone on his show, has used racial slurs. Does anyone know anything about this?]
P.S. It's not a matter of overly-sensitive people needing to "get over it", it's a matter of companies' ethical responsibility to watch how their on-air personalities are representing themselves.
It doesn't matter what you think of Don Imus or Al Sharpton or whoever... racism is still a big problem in America, and until people take some responsibility for the way
we talk about people not like ourselves, that's not going to change.