Post from Hughes for America:
Don Imus and free speech
Bad? Brilliant?
You can rate this post.
Register or login now and
tell us what you think.
In response to something I wrote about the Don Imus saga Friday, Matt, a journalism graduate school friend of mine, replied and made his case quite succinctly. Another friend, Karl, weighed in, as did I. With our back-and-forth in mind, I'd like to add some detail to my point-of-view. If I may make so bold, Matt's entire argument can be summarized in his own words: "By calling for (and ultimately causing) the firing of Don Imus, it sets a bad precedent for free speech." I disagree, and, though I am as firm a defender of free speech as he, I would like to take this argument in a different direction, speaking to both the issues of our freedoms and the role of the people-powered movement in the debate.

Before I do that, however, I'd like to address another of Matt's central assertions, the importance of Al Sharpton and Jesse Jackson in determining Imus's eventual fate. Matt wrote, "What happened here was a vast minority of people took full use of the media resources around them (in this case, Rev. Al and Jesse Jackson) and created a situation where there was a perceived national outcry against this particular discussion. Advertisers and corporate executives were pressured into firing Imus lest they be subject to continued protesting outside of their offices. In the face of this pressure, advertisers dropped out and corporate was forced to fire Imus." Quite simply, no.

Sharpton wasn't responsible for Imus's firing. Nor was Jackson. Nor was I. Don Imus was responsible for what happened to Don Imus. He said something both woefully stupid and incredibly bigoted, millions of people took note of the man's sad track record of similar statements, and they responded. What Imus-defenders may perceive as the start of the story - the response - only occurred because Imus so polluted the airwaves. The fault is clear: It begins and ends with Imus. Now, back to my point, about what I think is the collision between the old way of doing things and the new way of doing things. This intersection is especially apparent in the uproar surrounding Imus's statements.

Imus - and his many, many peers still gainfully employed (Glenn Beck, Bill O'Reilly and Rush Limbaugh, for instance) - represent what I'll call "active assholery". In the past, active assholery was met only with what I'll call "passive participation" or, worse yet, nothing at all. In other words, people like Beck would enjoy free rein to pollute the airwaves with all manner of hate speech, while the rest of us had to sit there and take it. If you don't like my choice of phrase, why not use Matt's chosen frame, the free market model? There, our choice was easy: Listen, or don't. Take it, or ... take it. Even the most aggressive tools at our disposal were anything but.

I'm not interested in capitalism winning out. I'm interested in democracy winning out. Expect the market to take care of people like Imus? If that's the case, the market has been doing a terrible, terrible job. In my model, on the other hand, active assholery meets active participation. When confronted with the Imuses and Becks of the world, we no longer have to take it. We can, and should, do something about it. And I fail to see why their rights to speak out trump ours. Referring to the Imus matter, Matt wrote, "The way it was done, in my opinion, subverts that Constitution and opens up a whole different discussion about what free speech truly is." Not so. What would have subverted the Constitution would have been to embrace the old model, to do nothing. By taking back our rights, we actively embraced all that's good about that brilliant document.

Thinking about it through this frame, I see nothing at all wrong with contacting journalists, their employers or their corporate partners and voicing our concerns. How is that different from contacting our elected officials? Sure, the outcome may not be the same, but the intent often is: Seeking responsiveness and the awareness of a particular point-of-view. By likening what happened to Imus to what he believes could happen to me, Matt does a tremendous disservice to his argument. Why? Because, at the core, we're not talking about punishing speech with which people don't happen to agree. We're talking about fighting back against what has been a steady stream of hate speech. Matt's counterexample to the Imus firing - a coordinated right-wing response to my writings - falls flat because my criticisms of those whom the right-wingers admire never, ever wade into the use of flatly bigoted language.

These are the sort of traps we face on a near-daily basis: Contact an advertiser about a prominent media personality using bigoted language and we're taking part in a partisan witch hunt, but make legitimate criticisms of the Bush administration and face ouster simply because we said something with which conservatives disagree. See the problem? As a progressive, I've become used to being confronted regularly with these sort of false equivalencies. And when we're not being held subject to such scrutiny, we're being barraged with muddying arguments like those now being made about rappers' use of the word "ho". This is why, I'm sure, someone will accuse me of being a hypocrite for writing something like this in the past. You told people to change the channel. We're telling you to change the channel. What's the difference? But what I wrote about then - content with which one disagrees - bears no similarity to what I'm writing about now, truly bigoted content.

Who, in the long run, will be more hurt by what Imus said - Imus, or the Rutgers women's basketball team? Certainly not Imus, who, after some time in civil society's penalty box, will surely be back, perhaps on satellite radio (and perhaps, due to the attention now being paid him, at an even higher pay grade). When that happens, there's nothing in Imus's history that tells us his contrition won't be short-lived. The team, meanwhile, will, no matter what heights the women reach in their lives, always face the stigma of being called "nappy-headed hos". This goes far beyond hurt feelings and, in doing so, beyond a simple First Amendment argument. Imus hasn't lost his freedom of speech, He's lost his job. His employers terminated him not because his actions posed a First Amendment crisis; they did so because his continued employment posed a bottom-line crisis. So, in that way, what happened was a victory for the market. And democracy.


Reader Comments
  
I mus
By Democrat in Richmond, VA Apr 15th 2007 at 7:09 pm EDT
I Mus

I mus say I cannot weigh hearts, so nor can I judge “men⠀…
In order to be forgiven, what is sincerity measured in?
Imus was rightfully fired for his sexist outburst…
But my favorite rapper has said worse, in more than one verse…
The curse is we care more about others racist outburst…
But what we say to each other TRULY hurts…
We gotta get SELF straight first…
And now I mus turn my attention to our black “leaders&ac irc;€â€&brvb ar;
I mus ask where exactly is it you are you trying to lead us?
I mus question the decisions that you are making…
Is this the road Malcolm or Martin would have taken?
2007, because we lack power black masses still beg for scraps…
When whites say something wrong we beg them to take it back…
The power of racism is NEVER reticent…
What Garvey said is forever evident…
“POWER is the only argument… â€
So my time is not spent arguing with racist intent cause I know just what Garvey meant…
We hold what whites say about us in such esteem…
We seem not to focus on how much we affect each other’s SELF esteem…
Imus in effect said black women are hoes…
But too many black men show black women that they believe this is so…
If actions speak louder than words…
Then right now too many of us are going unheard…
I know from whence these words and actions came…
Yet I still wince when WE call each other out our name…
Imus said things he will regret for some years to come…
One can only hope it is not just from his lost of income…
In some ways I’m glad he said what he said…
What has been shown is that prejudice is not dead…
But instead it also shines light on the SELF hate in black’s OWN heads…
In the end I’m not as hard on Imus as I am on US…
The truth hurts but I just say what I mus…

Shophar

4/13/07
  
very good points
By Jolene42 Apr 15th 2007 at 11:39 pm EDT
And I still say Imus, gross and disgusting as his speech was and often has been was scapegoated. The suits at CBS, MSNBC, and all those advertisers knew all along who he was and what he might say at any given moment. That is why they paid him. We really do need to do as My Vote says and boycott those companies even tho they pulled their advertising. They are the real villians here. (This is not said in defense of Imus)
Re: very good points
By AnneK Apr 16th 2007 at 8:41 am EDT
In fact, you DO realize, don't you, that much like a stand-up stage performer, Imus's show personality was not the man himself, but rather a "character" that he was paid to play on the radio. It was a staged, scripted, show that the suits decided was worth some airtime.
So, with that in mind, if you find a TV show offensive, do you blame the actor? The writer? or the producer and sponsors? Where does the real blame lie?
  
If this is the case why stop at Imus
By Timothy Erfourth Apr 16th 2007 at 9:17 am EDT
If what you state is true, why arn't you going after the record companies who promote the artists who spew this type of racist and sexist garbage onto to airwaves? And what about all the "Pop" stations that play it on a regular basis? You say that you have to seek out comedy central and can turn it off if you wish, the same was true about Imus.

You are promoting a double standard and it will push moderate voters to the Republican side. This is a battle won that may help to once again lose the war.

Imus's apoligy should have been accepted and he should have been used to promote the cause.