Jackson wrote at the time, totally inaccurately, in his column, "We know that the two women were abused."
At the outset of the case, Sharpton told Bill O'Reilly, "I think there are certainly a lot of racial factors .... where this girl has basically had a character charged in the media, there's a lot of racism that's in the air .... I think that when the prosecutors went forward, they clearly have said this girl is a victim."
The relish with which both Jackson and Sharpton embraced the portrayal of this clearly problematic young woman as a poor, divorced mother trying to put herself through school was not only a disservice to justice, but a disservice to the girl and to blacks.
So are these two the ones that we are going to put in charge of the First Amendment? Are they the ones who are going to determine what can or can't be said and who will set our standards for civility?
Yet, somehow, two charlatans on one case have been transformed into high priests of virtue on another.
The House will soon consider HR 1592, the Local Law Enforcement Hate Crimes Prevention Act of 2007. The legislation will expand the scope of and funding to prevent so-called hate crimes.
Hate-crime legislation does not prevent a single violent act that is not already prohibited by law. What it does is provide a venue to politicize law by opening the door for politicians to control words and thoughts of private citizens to predetermined political ends.
Did anyone notice, for example, outrage from Jackson or Sharpton about Harry Belafonte's remarks calling Condoleezza Rice and Colin Powell "house slaves"?
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?
Politics cannot fill the vacuum left when individual citizens abandon personal standards of decency and morality.
George Washington had it right. "... Let us with caution indulge the supposition that morality can be maintained without religion ... It is substantially true that virtue or morality is a necessary spring of popular government."
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