Category Archives: Political Correctness

Goon Meets Supercilious

Journalism, Media, Neoconservatism, Political Correctness, Pseudo-intellectualism, Republicans, The Zeitgeist

Put evil and supercilious together and what do you get? “Parker Spitzer,” the new current-events program CNN is about to launch staring Eliot Spitzer, whose most elevated job was as a John, and Kathleen Parker, a pseudo-intellectual in the Peggy Noonan and David Brooks mode, also a member of the “Soft Left (otherwise known as Conservatives).”

This just goes to show that statists, and individuals with low moral character and banal ideas will always have a prime place on American TV and in its restricted market place of ideas.

The Rod Of Sherrod

Crime, Journalism, Media, Political Correctness, Propaganda, Race, Racism

Beware. Saint Shirley Sherrod is back. “The most celebrated public servant in the United States, and perhaps the world,” made a brief appearance with the Secretary of Agriculture, TOM VILSACK. He was modeling the proper obsequious mannerisms to be adopted, and concessions to be made, with an aggrieved minority:

“I continue to take full responsibility for it. I — I will take it for as long as I live. This was, you know,…– I — I disappointed the president and I disappointed this administration. I disappointed the country. I disappointed Shirley.
I have to live with that. And I accept that responsibility. That’s what happens when you have this kind of position. My only hope is and my belief is that despite this difficulty, despite the challenges and the problems that we’ve seen and that poor Shirley had to go through, maybe, just maybe, this is an opportunity for the country to have the kind of conversation that Shirley thinks we ought to have.

Nothing could be quite as bad in modern-day America as disappointing Shirley—or the prototypical Shirley. “The acme of ethics in American is a black woman who has graduated from hard-core to soft bigotry. … if an African-American rejects her birthright, and demonstrates less prejudice toward whites than is her right—she is up for beatification.

When it comes to a racial celebrity like S. Sherrod, a CNN Activist doesn’t probe her interviewee. As the moron MALVEAUX demonstrates hereunder, the racial activist will ask soft, rhetorical, suggestive questions, the answers to which are guaranteed to yield the lesson the likes of MALVEAUX want you to take away from their little agitprop session (“it sounds like you don’t have a lot of faith in the Agriculture Department changing when it comes to racism and discrimination?”). The activist’s facial expressions say it all; when a mediocrity and a mezzanine-level racist such as Sherrod presents herself to you, you must ooze empathy and beam like Moses must have before the burning bush.

Not even a cub journalist on a high school newspaper would conduct the kind of reverential love-in MALVEAUX conducted with “the former administration official [who] tells me how she feels now about her ouster and whether there is a culture of racism within the government.”

(Aside: note Sherrod’s reference to her fears: “of white people, or I’m afraid of Hispanic people or Native Americans.” Ms. Sherrod: whites are petrified of black crime, given that blacks commit most violent crime in the country. Can that small fact form part of the discussion about race that you have prescribed? Or is that pesky truth proscribed? On second thoughts, don’t mind me, Shirley. I’ll back away bowing if you don’t approve.)

SUZANNE MALVEAUX, CNN CORRESPONDENT: Tell me a little bit about today. What was that like to come face-to-face with your former boss, Secretary Vilsack, today?

SHERROD: The second day when he said, “I stand by my decision,” that hurt. So I just needed to have some closure, I guess, and hearing exactly what happened. And he did explain what happened that day he was traveling. He explained that they made a lot of mistakes dealing with me and they had — they are trying to correct those within the department. They are putting new things in place so that that won’t happen to others.

So if what happened to me will keep others from having to go through that, hopefully, in the future, then I guess that’s a good thing.

MALVEAUX: You said before, though, that they were changing the process, but you didn’t be — you didn’t want to be the one to test it.

SHERROD: Right.

MALVEAUX: it sounds like you don’t have a lot of faith in the Agriculture Department changing when it comes to racism and discrimination?

SHERROD: If the secretary is the only person I had to deal with as we move forward, then it probably would be fairly easy. I think he is very sincere about dealing with the issue of racism in the agency, but if — like I said, if he was the only one to deal with it probably wouldn’t be an issue right now, but that’s — that has been going on — racism in this agency has been going on for more years than I — than I’ve been in this world. It’s systemic. And, you know, so, I would deal more — I would deal with more than just Secretary Vilsack.

MALVEAUX: is there a deep culture of racism inside of the department?

SHERROD: Yes.

MALVEAUX: Only — only the Agriculture Department?

SHERROD: It’s not just the Agriculture Department. I’ve run into others as I’ve traveled through the airports. And I remember the first week when I was on my way home in the Atlanta airport and young women, young African-American women who work in other agencies — CDC, one of them — and she talked about what she’s dealing with and it was the same kind of thing.

You know, so it’s not just the Department of Agriculture. It’s the one we know about the most, but there are issues with minorities in other agencies of the government.

MALVEAUX: Some people look at the mosque issue, and they think, maybe Muslims are being targeted. Maybe they’re the group now that’s being discriminated against and people think it’s acceptable.

SHERROD: Let’s just say that a lot of discrimination goes on in this country. It amazes me how people can think sometimes, and that’s why I say to — and why I try to say to everyone, I try to treat people like I want to be treated and then, in case somebody doesn’t want to be treated right, treat them like you want your children to be treated. And I think we would all be OK if we look at every situation like that.

My whole thing is how can we figure out in this space that we have in this United States of America, there’s enough space here for all of us. We can — we should be able to work it out.

MALVEAUX: What do you think of President Obama’s job in dealing with race relations?

SHERROD: You know, the poor president, they — he can’t speak out about anything. Unless they’re jumping all over him. I really do feel, you know, and I know he’s in a position. He’s the first black president, and people look at that.

I do think, whether it’s from him or some other way with his administration, we do have to talk about race. We need to talk about race in this country, so that we can move beyond where we are now, because we’re not in a good place.

MALVEAUX: Your life has been turned upside down, I know.

SHERROD: Yes.

MALVEAUX: Since all of this began. What has been the biggest change for you?

SHERROD: You know, and I love people, so it’s not a bad thing to be able to go out. And you think you’re not being recognized, and people come up to you, and they want to hug you or take a picture with you. I haven’t been that kind of public person, but I’m a people person.

MALVEAUX: You’ve been invited to speak before a lot of groups, obviously, about civil rights and race relations. What is the message? What do you want to tell them? What do you want them to learn from this?

SHERROD: My message hasn’t changed in 24 years. It’s so interesting that now everybody is aware of it. But you know, I’ve tried to use my life. I’ve tried to use what happened to me, and how I have been transformed. I’ve been able to see that it’s not a black or white issue; it’s a poor issue. And that as poor people coming together to work on our issues together, we can make a change.

I will say that. I said it back when — that speech before the NAACP. I will still say it today: we can get beyond this.

MALVEAUX: What’s next for you?

SHERROD: Well, I certainly want to get back to many of the letters and cards and e-mail messages and — you know, the Facebook stuff is something new. You know, I’m trying to — I haven’t even dealt with all of that. There are so many there. I need to try to get back to people who tried to reach out to me. So, that’s one thing.

I’d also like to look at finding those communities, those individuals who are seriously working on the problems of race, and try to highlight some of those. I think we need to really look at the good out there and put those examples out there, so others can see. I’d like to promote that.

MALVEAUX: Do you think that there is some fear for people to talk about issues of race? Dr. Laura, who resigned over the use of the “N” word, for example, and she says she’s not able to speak her mind, that there is a silencing or political correctness that’s going on. How do — how do you see this?

SHERROD: I didn’t see or hear what she had to say. I’ve heard others comment about it. I think it’s the way she did it. But she would have the answer to that.

I think that if this country makes it a priority, that we’re going to deal with race, we’re going to talk about it, and we’ll get beyond this, I think we can do it, you know. I think we can get to a better place with this.

Why should we want to keep this going on and on from generation — one generation after another? It doesn’t even make for a safe place for us to be in this country. If we’re — if I’m afraid of white people, or I’m afraid of Hispanic people or Native Americans, you know, it keeps us fighting each other.

[SNIP]

Have moment? Do voice your displeasure with activist SUZANNE MALVEAU who masquerades as a journalist on CNN. (Email her or her bosses. Use this post, as well as essays written on this site about fellow activist A. Cooper, to make your case.)

Naughty Laura

Free Speech, Journalism, Media, Political Correctness, Race

The difference between the racial transgressions of broadcasters Don Imus and Dr. Laura Schlessinger is that Imus’s “nappy-headed hos” utterance was used to describe the black Rutgers women’s basketball team that he was admiring at the time. Dr. Laura was not describing or addressing blacks when she rattled off the “N” word yesterday on her radio show; she was merely describing the way other blacks use the word liberally. Evidently, you are not even allowed to use the words in reporting on another’s use of it.

Given the level of language policing under which we all labor, it took me some time to locate Dr. Laura’s verbatim words. News reports must have redacted even the indirect use of the word. Here’s the account via ABC.com. Note the childish blanks in “n****r”:

“Schlessinger ignited a firestorm of criticism after Media Matters posted audio from a Tuesday conversation she had with a black female caller. The caller was complaining about her white husband’s friends and their use of the N-word. In response, Schlessinger said:

‘lack guys use it all the time. Turn on HBO and listen to a black comic, and all you hear is n****r, n****r, n****r. I don’t get it. If anybody without enough melanin says it, it’s a horrible thing. But when black people say it, it’s affectionate. It’s very confusing.

When the caller said she was appalled by Schlessinger’s use of the N-word, the radio host demurred, ‘Oh, then I guess you don’t watch HBO or listen to any black comedians. My dear, the point I am trying to make … we’ve got a black man as president and we’ve got more complaining about racism than ever. I think that’s hilarious.'”

“She then criticized the caller, saying ‘Don’t take things out of context. Don’t NAACP me.'”

[SNIP]

Laura has decided to “end her radio show.” If she wishes to “come back,” she’ll need to commence her Via Dolorosa. “It [could be] time for page two of the white-celebrity-struggling-with-racism playbook: sitting down with Al Sharpton or Jesse Jackson.”

Spontaneous Black Supremacy Syndrome, Again

Crime, Left-Liberalism And Progressivisim, Media, Political Correctness, Propaganda, Race, Racism

“You probably want to know the reason why I shot this place up,” said the latest murderer-while-black supremacist, after he went on a rampage against his (presumably) white co-workers, to the 911 dispatcher.” “They treat me bad over here, and they treat all the other black employees bad over here too. So I just took it into my own hands and I handled the problem.” he said.

There were eight bodies at Omar Thornton’s feet, two more individuals were bleeding, and dozens of co-workers cowered in terror. They probably had no inkling as to this black heart’s capabilities. My guess is that this lucky sod—fortunate to have a job in this economy—got Xmas gifts from the people he murdered, was probably listened to and sympathized with when he ranted about his love life and his various misfortunes. That’s how Americans are; kindly and naive. Now they are dead.

“You don’t need to calm me down, I’m already calmed down,” Thornton replied. “I’m not gonna kill nobody else. I just want to tell my story so that you can play it back. “You’re gonna play something on the news. You know I’m gonna be popular.”

It’s as if Thornton knew that CNN’s Soledad O’Brien, the Agony Aunt of minorities in liberal America, would audition him posthumously for her biased “Black In America” series.

For this mass murder, I blame the culprit, of course. But, also, I blame America’s many Ministries of Truth. The educrats, the bureaucrats, the god men, the “intellectuals,” the ruling duopoly, their braying bobbleheads—they have authored the narrative about this country being a racist country.

The Ministries of Truth perpetuate the lie that the dwindling honky majority is racist. The Ministries (Repbulicans are in the lead with race obsessed Beck and stupid sorts like Elizabeth Hasselbeck, who agitated against Imus) dignify and debate race baiters such as Reverends Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton as the nation’s moral arbiter.

Simpletons like Thornton are not capable of reasoning based on reality. They construct a reality based on the fantasy that the Ministries of Truth weave. Then, they act on this reality.

I accuse any and all members of the media who seconds the lie of white America’s racism of inciting to commit murder!

(Here’s the reason for the “Again” in the title.)