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Friday, April 13, 2007
Pat Buchanan :: Townhall.com Columnist
The Imus Lynch Party
by Pat Buchanan
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The hypocrisy here was too thick to cut with a chainsaw.

What was the term the I-Man used? It was "ho's," slang for whores, a term employed ad infinitum et ad nauseam by rap and hip-hop "artists." It is a term out of the African-American community. Yet, if any of a hundred rap singers has lost his contract or been driven from the airwaves for using it, maybe someone can tell me about it.

If the word "ho's" is a filthy insult to decent black women, and it is, why are hip-hop artists and rap singers who use it incessantly not pariahs in the black community? Why would black politicians hobnob with them? Why are there no boycotts of the advertisers of the radio stations that play their degrading music?

Answer: 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.

Whatever Imus' sins, no one deserves to have Al Sharpton -- hero of the Tawana Brawley hoax, resolute defender of the fake rape charge against half a dozen innocent guys, which ruined lives -- sit in moral judgment upon them.

"It is our feeling that this is only the beginning. We must have a broad discussion on what is permitted and not permitted in terms of the airwaves," says Sharpton. It says something about America that someone with Al's track record can claim the role of national censor.

Who is next? And why do we take it?

I did a bad thing, but I am not a bad person, says Imus. Indeed, whoever used his microphone to do more good for more people -- be they the cancer kids of Imus Ranch, the families of Iraq war dead now more justly compensated because of the I-Man or the cause of a cure for autism?

"We know of no spectacle so ridiculous as the British public in one of its periodic fits of morality," said Lord Macaulay. Unfortunately, Macauley never saw the likes of the Revs. Sharpton and Jackson.

Imus threw himself on the mercy of the court of elite opinion -- and that court, pandering to the mob, lynched him. Yet, for all his sins, he was a better man than the lot of them rejoicing at the foot of the cottonwood tree.

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About The Author
Pat Buchanan is a founding editor of The American Conservative magazine, and the author of many books including State of Emergency: The Third World Invasion and Conquest of America .
 
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Support for Imus is everywhere
To all the Jack doodles:
Hey, if you don't like him, don't listen.
Those girls really didn't deserve to be made fun of, no one really does, its just dumb, but that’s what we do in this country and we are all a party to it in one way or the other.

He didn't make those comments to those girls. They don't listen to his show, probably didn’t know who he was. No one was going to take it literally and bother them about it the next day, except maybe just to tell them some old coot was being a loser, at which point, being respectful and proud human beings, they could just get on with their lives.

But you can't get on with your life if its become a media spectacle being blared all over the place. And they became a party to something unfair, opportunistic censorship. We might all want to do this, but it isn't right. And its a waste of time when its just some curmudgeon exploiting one group of so many people to be genuinely funny. In my generation, it doesn't matter what group, its all fair game to them; South Park, Mind of Mencia, Chapelle...it isn't fair for one group to have immunity.

I would think would be the last place I'd ever sign up to, a conservative site called TownHall (or anything that references "Town Hall" for anything other than a videogame), I tend to lean "left" on most things.
But I'm looking for closure on the current void in the airwaves, and can't find it anywhere, my own soul's void ever widening.
I do respect Pat Buchanan and his opinions, especially on McL Group, though I mostly disagree with him.

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/DonImusFans/
this is a yahoo group that is currently my focal point for action in the name of this issue and of Imus. It was started in the wake of Imus' s termination and has good links to other fan sites that have been around.

He was someone I listened to everyday. Me a leftist-damn-near-hippee violent-video-game-playing NYC-born-and-raised colored-minority college student.(been listening since high school)
Al Sharpton doesn't represent me.

Imus Lynching
Pat,

I really appreciated your view and the Imus show is totally and sadly missed. I can't believe this has happened through over-reaction to a stupid statement.
The Rutgers Ladies Team certainly never asked Sharpton & Co for the turmoil he created which only made life worse for the team when he enterprised on a stupid remark. The voice of reason was Vivian Stringer and the Team. They the aggreived party and they were the ones who should have spoken out and speak they did. Eloquence and class was what they exuded. Ladies, you are the heros not the victims. You showed us all what class is all about.
This is certainly the big opportunity for Sharpton & Co to clean up the world and end the black on black crime of rap music but I don't see it coming.

Say Baaaby!
Shall we all sing together!
I don't care if it rains or freezes,
Al Sharpton just ain't Jesus,
bellowing from speaker of my car!
I have gone a hundred miles an hour,
running from his racist power,
spraying spittle on my pair of fuzzy dice!

Say Halleluiah!
Say Aaa-Men!
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