National Center for Public Policy Research

Right-Wing Reaction to Don Imus

Some on the Right voiced criticism of radio host Don Imus, whose slur against the Rutgers women’s basketball team led to his firing from CBS radio and MSNBC. Jerry Falwell, who was frequently mocked on the show, called Imus’s comments “the most demeaning thing possible.” “He has built his career on saying outrageous, indecent, racist, even blasphemous things,” wrote Tom Minnery of Focus on the Family, adding that Imus also targeted Focus founder Dobson. Michael Steele, the former Senate candidate and new chairman of Newt Gingrich’s GOPAC, said Imus should be fired and criticized John McCain for supporting the talker.

But many right-wing commentators defended Imus or used the controversy to push their own agendas. Quite a few decided to attack Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton as “race hucksters” (columnist David Limbaugh) or “nappy-headed demagogues” (Yale Kramer for the American Spectator). Mychal Massie, a spokesman for the right-wing Project 21, described the firing of Imus as a “lynching” and accused Jackson, Sharpton, and other Imus critics as “race-baiters” who “are today fomenting unrest and belching racial bile.”

Others used the opportunity to change the subject to their own issues and suggested that Imus critics are hypocritical for not making the same connections. John Berlau of the Competitive Enterprise Institute charged that “Imus’s insensitive remarks pale especially in comparison to disparaging comments and cruel recommendations made time and again by leaders of environmental groups.” Alveda King, director of African-American outreach for Frank Pavone’s Priests for Life and a frequent religious-right speaker, declared in a press release, “Yes, Don Imus's apologies are necessary. But I demand the same from every public figure who has ever said that babies in the womb are not persons.”

And a few commentators and activists have suggested that critics of Imus are ignoring “anti-Christian” references in the media. Catholic League President Bill Donohue complained about the lack of interest in his campaign against a Manhattan boutique hotel’s display of a “chocolate Jesus” sculpture and concluded, “In other words, Catholic bashing is humorous and an exercise in liberty. Racism is awful. Bigotry, then, is neither good nor bad—it just depends who the target is.” Syndicated columnist Cal Thomas also decried a supposed “double standard”:

Why aren't these keepers of the First Amendment flame coming to the defense of Don Imus? It's because they have a double standard. Evangelical Christians, practicing Roman Catholics, politically conservative Republicans, home-schoolers and others not in favor among the liberal elite are frequent targets for the left. Anything may be said about them, and frequently is. But if someone insults the left's "protected classes," be they African-Americans, homosexuals or to a lesser extent, adherents to the religion of "global warming," they must be silenced and punished.

According to former House Majority Leader Tom DeLay, “The message of the ongoing Imus scandal is simple: verbal offenses against anyone other than conservatives or Christians or Jews, will be treated as crimes, and Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton are the judge and jury.” And Star Parker, author of “Uncle Sam’s Plantation,” warned that Congress is considering extending violent-hate-crimes protections to gays and wrote, “With the passage of this so-called hate-crime bill, pastors will be intimidated to condemn homosexual behavior from their pulpits. Is this the freedom we want?”

Finally, a few right-wing commentators tried to make Imus a symbol of white-male victimhood. MSNBC’s Pat Buchanan decried the “Imus Lynch Party,” writing, “The issue here is not the word Imus used. The issue is who Imus is -- a white man, who used a term about black women only black folks are permitted to use with impunity and immunity.” In a Human Events column, Mac Johnson declared that “Apologizing to Al Sharpton Was Imus’s True Racist Act” and speculated,

Now think about how stupid and racist all this is. Were Chris Rock, in the heat of a comedic diatribe, to call someone, say, a “limp-haired slut” what would he do next? Would he ask to go on David Duke’s radio show so that Duke could accept an apology on behalf of all “white people” and then issue a suitable penance? (“Donate to my charity, Chris! You don’t look sorry enough yet.”) Somehow, I don’t think so.

And Rebecca Hagelin, vice president of the Heritage Foundation, attacked “the tentacles of radical feminist thought” that she claims are “poisoning the image” of white males through the media and Title IX sports programs. “The white, Anglo-Saxon male, the young teenage guy, is probably the most discriminated against kid on the face of the earth right now,” she declared on “The O’Reilly Factor.”

See comments on the Imus controversy by People For the American Way Foundation staff and by founder Norman Lear here.

PFAW

Right-Wing Front Group Spokesman: Affirmative Action 'Hitlerian'

In lashing out at affirmative action programs in college admissions, Mychal Massie of “Project 21” warns of “the harm done to minority students who have repeatedly been told the world is out to get them after they drop out or flunk out of schools they weren't qualified to attend to start with.” According to Massie, “diversity” is “Hitlerian”:

I have repeatedly argued that the level of bigotry inherent in diversity should be glaringly obvious. It is a perverse form of Hitlerian motivations vis-à-vis attempted social engineering for no other reason than to have a color-coded campus matrix.

Massie is the host of an Internet radio show and a frequent spokesman for right-wing causes through his involvement with “Project 21,” a front group for the National Center for Public Policy Research designed to market a “new leadership for Black America.” NCPPR is perhaps most famous for allegedly laundering money between corrupt lobbyist Jack Abramoff and former House Majority Leader Tom DeLay. “Only a Rip Van Winkle, asleep for the past 50 years, would mistake Massie and his colleagues for civil rights leaders,” as a PFAW report put it.

Nevertheless, occasionally Massie’s self-promotion pays off. Earlier this month, an Associated Press story on the debate in the Virginia legislature over apologizing for slavery used Massie as a prominent source:

Moreover, an apology won't cure community ills, said Mychal Massie, with the National Leadership Network of Black Conservatives.

That will come from blacks emphasizing two-parent homes, education over fast money and personal responsibility for life choices, Mr. Massie said.

"A willing disregard for responsibility, a willing disrespect for education, ad nauseam, is not attributable in any way to slavery," said Mr. Massie, who considers an apology redundant.

"We see black leaders on every level," he said. "America has apologized."

(“National Leadership Network of Black Conservatives” is the tagline on the “Project 21” website, apparently used by mistake.)

PFAW

Spokesman for Right-Wing Civil Rights Front Group on MLK Day: 'We Have Overcame'

Project 21’s Massie attacks civil rights leaders for “dissociative falsities.” More on this laughable attempt to redefine civil rights.

PFAW

Right-Wing Black Front Group Attacks Obama

‘Project 21’ calls senator “extreme socialist liberal version” of Dan Quayle. More on this laughable group.

PFAW

The New Face of “Black Conservatives”

The American Family Association’s new service, Agape Press, offers this rather confusing article on the presidential aspirations of Sen. Barack Obama

Black Conservative: Obama Unqualified for Serious '08 Presidential Bid

A spokesman for a national network of black conservatives is casting doubt on whether the news that U.S. Senator Barack Obama of Illinois is weighing a 2008 presidential run is anything for Republicans to be concerned about. Sunday on NBC's Meet the Press, the Illinois Democrat said he is considering an '08 White House run, but will not make up his mind until after the mid-term elections.

Obama, a professing Christian, said in a "Call to Renewal" speech in June that it is time for progressives to "join a serious debate about how to reconcile faith with our modern, pluralistic democracy." However, according to David Almasi of the black conservative leadership network, Project 21, Obama's liberal stances on issues such as abortion and homosexuality are unlikely to resonate with values voters.

Actually, Obama has yet to prove himself in Washington, as far as Almasi is concerned. He says upon hearing the news that the Democrat was considering a presidential run, "the first thing that came to my mind is, what is this guy going to run on? Obama has only been in the Senate for two years," the Project 21 member notes.

What exactly is it about David Almasi that qualifies him as a “black conservative?”

Almasi.jpg

Almasi is the Executive Director of the National Center for Public Policy Research, which has been having some Jack Abramoff-related problems lately, and Project 21 is a front group created by NCPPR in an attempt to create a “new leadership for Black America.” 

If Project 21 really is the “leading voice in the African-American community since 1992,” why didn't they get one of their African-American members to make these statements?

PFAW

Report: Right-Wing Think Tanks and Advocacy Groups Funneled Abramoff Cash

Senate report implicates Grover Norquist’s Americans for Tax Reform, National Center for Public Policy Research, Daniel Lapin’s Toward Tradition, Citizens Against Government Waste, and Council of Republicans for Environmental Advocacy, founded by Norquist and Interior Sec. Gale Norton.

PFAW
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