Juan Williams deserves a TON of credit for telling the truth about National Public Radio.
Williams committed the simple sin of saying out loud what the rest of the elitist, fully white, upper middle and upper class editorial boards of NPR wouldn't dare say in public, but probably do well behind closed doors. (Even more telling is that Williams was the only black correspondent.)
Who will this brouhaha hurt the most? At the very least, moderate Muslims who have been yearning to break free from the stereotype of fundamentalist militancy have been pushed back into a corner - the ones who want to prove that the abaya, hijab or burqa, or the four fingers of beard the men must wear, is no way linked to the more malignant strains of Islamic worship - and assure them that while their religion is Islam, their nationality is American. Thanks to NPR's firing of Williams, that conversation gets drowned out by clueless upper-class twits.
But the real hurt that will come will be on NPR itself. When free speech is determined by an unelected upper echelon of white elitists, and that money comes from public taxpayers, a new Congress will be loathe to fund an entity whose primary focus is to make sure the right words come out of the right mouths, and any word not in the Approved Vocabulary of NPR will be grounds for immediate termination. Congress defunding NPR would force it to pledge even more from its listeners, and if you don't have the money, your license to broadcast gets ripped up and tossed out in the trash.
Williams should keep on talking about his now-ex-colleagues, how they love to insult those who aren't like them, and then tell the public to avoid donating a thin rusting penny to their organization because they are malignant narcissisists who only care about their own ideology and not giving a complete story. Oh, and donations from well-heeled, like-minded people.
Williams did everyone - including Muslims - a favor by pulling back the curtain on the narrow minds of NPR, who proved to the nation that the antidote to curtailing free speech is even more free speech - and that political correctness is worse than any nuclear weapon on the planet.
10/21/2010
10/02/2010
Yes, character destruction HAS become a spectator sport
Thanks to the Internet and a 24-hour gossip culture, destroying character and lives has become a huge spectator sport.
Tyler Clementi didn't have to take his own life because his sexuality was not like others. He could have taken the hard-core militant activist route, enlisting the hardest and most in-your-face groups like Queer Nation and ACT-UP to protest Rutgers 24-7, giving the nightly news cycle fresh meat for months upon end, and only after Rutgers acquiesed to their demands, the matter would have died down. But Clementi didn't pursue that avenue, because he didn't want to bring attention to his sexuality and plight that his roommate was recording his trysts: He ended up bringing attention to himself anyway by ending his life because he just couldn't take the ridicule anymore.
His roommate recorded the most private of his activities, and that alone merits the strongest punishment one can mete out, namely imprisonment and a very stiff fine. But tangentially, others will feed off this unnecessary suicide for their own ends and desires.
And it isn't just gay teenagers that feel the ridicule and scorn of the mediocre. If you're the wrong race, possess smarts that go beyond which dress to wear, which libation to drink, which social group to socialize with, you might as well be from Siberia.
I endured the same character-destroying ridicule all throughout Boston Latin Academy. The eighties were a ripe time, fueled by teenage movies that emphasized being popular über alles and shifting those who didn't fit the grand scheme of cliquey things into a social Siberia. It diminished, certainly as we all grew and headed towards our senior year, but it's the viciousness and disdain that still leaves fresh scars. It's the reason I never went to either of my semi-formals, proms and none of my reunions. It's the reason why I dumped 10-12 people off of my Facebook friends list when Phoebe Prince took her own life in February.
Solving the problem of bullying in all its forms is not simple. Neither passive so-called "tolerance and understanding" nor reactionary zero tolerance is the answer. The answer comes somewhere in the middle, beginning with the bullied standing up to their tormentors, parents making sure they monitor their children and getting involved when bullying starts, teachers intervening without retribution from their superiors, and administrators not hiding behind law and political correctness.
Tyler Clementi didn't have to take his own life because his sexuality was not like others. He could have taken the hard-core militant activist route, enlisting the hardest and most in-your-face groups like Queer Nation and ACT-UP to protest Rutgers 24-7, giving the nightly news cycle fresh meat for months upon end, and only after Rutgers acquiesed to their demands, the matter would have died down. But Clementi didn't pursue that avenue, because he didn't want to bring attention to his sexuality and plight that his roommate was recording his trysts: He ended up bringing attention to himself anyway by ending his life because he just couldn't take the ridicule anymore.
His roommate recorded the most private of his activities, and that alone merits the strongest punishment one can mete out, namely imprisonment and a very stiff fine. But tangentially, others will feed off this unnecessary suicide for their own ends and desires.
In the coming days the pundits will pontificate, the politicians will politic and the advocates will advocate -- all trying to twist and turn the private hurts of Tyler into whatever fits their agenda.
And it isn't just gay teenagers that feel the ridicule and scorn of the mediocre. If you're the wrong race, possess smarts that go beyond which dress to wear, which libation to drink, which social group to socialize with, you might as well be from Siberia.
I endured the same character-destroying ridicule all throughout Boston Latin Academy. The eighties were a ripe time, fueled by teenage movies that emphasized being popular über alles and shifting those who didn't fit the grand scheme of cliquey things into a social Siberia. It diminished, certainly as we all grew and headed towards our senior year, but it's the viciousness and disdain that still leaves fresh scars. It's the reason I never went to either of my semi-formals, proms and none of my reunions. It's the reason why I dumped 10-12 people off of my Facebook friends list when Phoebe Prince took her own life in February.
Solving the problem of bullying in all its forms is not simple. Neither passive so-called "tolerance and understanding" nor reactionary zero tolerance is the answer. The answer comes somewhere in the middle, beginning with the bullied standing up to their tormentors, parents making sure they monitor their children and getting involved when bullying starts, teachers intervening without retribution from their superiors, and administrators not hiding behind law and political correctness.
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