I've shed exactly zero tears for Don Imus. The shock jock deserved to be fired for his latest incredibly insensitive, probably racist comment alone. That it was one in a long line of related comments dotting his career only bolsters my feelings. Still, the situation raises some important issues about
race, so at least in that sense the discussion about the incident is healthy.
Perhaps the most often-used defense of Imus has involved assessing blame not on Imus for his comment but on the hip-hop artists who have thrown around terms such as 'ho,' 'bitch' and the N word so much in their songs that some seem to have forgotten that they aren’t OK – especially if you're an aging white man. But that argument has no bearing on the Imus situation. Of course he's aware of pop culture and hears these words tossed around on radio everyday. Of course even Don Imus is influenced by what he hears on his medium. Of course he's ALLOWED to say things like this; he just should have known better.
But to hear the Revs. Jesse "Hymietown" Jackson and Al "Crown Heights" Sharpton lead the call for Imus' head, it almost made me want to take Imus’ side. How nauseating! Is it not the height of hypocrisy? It's a shame for right-minded people who were disgusted by Imus’ comments to have to keep company with these two.
I recall interviewing a guy a few years back in front of Madison Square Garden who was protesting the war in Iraq. He was wearing a kipah, and as we spoke, some folks carrying anti-Israel placards passed by chanting against the Jewish state. I asked him if it irked him to be marching side by side with them. He said: “The fact that I have to march with people who stupidly carry signs about ending the occupation and who misunderstand the settler movement saddens me. But I’m driven to cooperate with whoever is out there to help me get rid of Bush, this stain on America.”
I'm feeling basically the same way about Sharpton and Jackson. I don't like the guys, but they're right on this issue. Just imagine if Imus had made a similar comment about a group of Jewish girls.