Like Elvis Presley before him, the demise of Michael Jackson has
engaged the entire world, and the parallels are spooky. Both Presley and
Jackson lived isolated, somewhat bizarre lives, eventually destroying
themselves with drugs administered by doctors on their payrolls. This was a
proven fact in Presley's case; there is strong evidence in Jackson's.
But while Presley was mourned primarily as a great entertainer,
Jackson is being sold by his supporters as much more. In fact, if you listen
to Al Sharpton and Jesse Jackson, the troubled singer was the second coming
of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. At Jackson's memorial service earlier this
week, Sharpton put forth that Jackson brought blacks and whites together,
teaching us all how to love.
Wow, who knew?
A Pew Research poll shows that African-Americans are far more
interested in the Jackson story than are white Americans, and some speakers
at the memorial referred to Jackson as a black icon. But how can this be?
Jackson bleached his skin to make it lighter and presumably paid white men
to donate sperm for his three in-vitro children, at least two of whom were
carried to term by a white woman.
Does that sound like a black icon to you? What is really going
on here?
My colleague Bernard Goldberg says this is an example of a
minority group sticking together, rallying around one of their own. It is
true that many African-Americans celebrated the acquittal of O.J. Simpson of
murder, as well as a jury finding Jackson not guilty on child molestation
charges. I guess it's natural to root for the home team, especially when
history has been brutally unkind. Black Americans well understand the
injustice of the past.
But the truth is that Jackson's contribution lies in
entertainment and little else. He is not a role model. His admitted conduct
with children is simply unacceptable for any adult. His use of cosmetic
surgery is troubling to say the least. And the enormous amount of money he
spent on prescription drugs speaks for itself.
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