Head
Strong | Guilty as charged: I don't support Imus' firing
April
15, 2007
By Michael Smerconish
Let's get the essentials out
of the way.
Don Imus said something
indefensible. He needed to be punished.
The public flogging he has
suffered, plus the two-week suspension his bosses initially announced, should
have been sufficient. I do not
believe that MSNBC (where I often appear) or CBS Radio (my employer) should
have fired him. And I cannot fathom how Al Sharpton and Jesse Jackson became
the arbiters of appropriateness, given Tawana Brawley and
"Hymietown," respectively.
Only Imus knows for sure
what was on his self-admittedly drug-damaged mind when he said those things.
His apology sounded sincere. I myself do not believe he said something racist
per se. It was a reach for a cheap laugh, not something said to be injurious to
the Rutgers women.
Ah, but the floodgates are
now open. The cyber-lynching by faceless, nameless bloggers of talk-show hosts
like me has begun.
Individuals who hide behind
the anonymity afforded by the Internet are seeking to squelch the First
Amendment right of people whose identities are readily known and who, unlike
their cowardly critics, put their names and credibility on the line each and
every day on matters of public concern. Left unconfronted, it is a dangerous
practice in the making.
The very day Imus was fired
at CBS, I was alerted to a posting on Media Matters for America, a
sophisticated Web site instrumental in stoking the flames for Imus' departure.
The posting, titled "It's not just Imus," identified me as one of
seven talk-show hosts in America who bear observation:
". . . [A]s Media
Matters for America has extensively documented, bigotry and hate speech
targeting, among other characteristics, race, gender, sexual orientation,
religion, and ethnicity continue to permeate the airwaves through personalities
such as Glenn Beck, Neal Boortz, Rush Limbaugh, Bill O'Reilly, Michael Savage,
Michael Smerconish, and John Gibson."
I have done talk radio for
about 15 years, have written two books, authored hundreds of columns, and have
appeared on every major television program in which politics gets discussed,
from The Colbert Report to Hardball
With Chris Matthews. This week alone
I was responsible for 17.5 hours of content on my own radio show, wrote two
newspaper columns, guest-hosted Bill O'Reilly's radio show nationwide, and
found time to make television appearances on The Today Show, The Glenn Beck Program, and Scarborough Country.
Needless to say, I was
anxious to see which of my words, among the millions I have offered over all
these years, have been documented by these blogger-watchdogs as
"bigotry" and "hate." What exactly puts me in a category
with the likes of Michael Savage?
Well, let's evaluate the
quality of the evidence. For me, they identified three examples:
Exhibit A. "Substituting for host Bill O'Reilly on the
April 4, 2006, broadcast of Westwood One's The Radio Factor, nationally syndicated radio host Michael Smerconish
repeatedly discussed 'the sissification of America,' claiming that political
correctness has made the United States 'a nation of sissies.' Smerconish also
claimed, several times, that this 'sissification' and 'limp-wristedness' is
'compromising our ability to win the war on terror.' "
Guilty as charged. America
is getting muzzled. Those among
us who assert their own brand of political correctness while sacrificing the
rugged individualism that has been the hallmark of our nation, are seeking to
mute the words and actions of others, make them conform to a standard of
correctness that is not just silly but also toxic. In the past, this
sanitization of that which we say and do would have been debate-worthy, but in
truth, only a minor irritant to our quality of life. But I believe that in the
post-9/11 world, these trends represent a cancer that has metastasized into the
war on terror, where it threatens our very survival. We debate the comfort
level at Gitmo while Nick Berg gets decapitated. We've become sissies in that
regard.
Exhibit B. "On the Nov. 23, 2005, broadcast of The
Radio Factor, while guest-hosting,
Smerconish took issue with a decision by the New Jersey Sports and Exposition
Authority to provide a designated prayer area at Giants Stadium. The decision
was in response to a Sept. 19 incident involving the FBI's detention and
questioning of five Muslim men who were observed praying near the stadium's
main air duct during a New York Giants football game. Smerconish stated: 'I
just think that's [the men's public praying] wrong. I just think they're
playing a game of, you know, mind blank with the audience. And that they should
know better four years removed from Sept. 11."
Guilty. When five Muslim men
in attendance at the Meadowlands in September 2005 for a Giants-Saints game
that was also a Hurricane Katrina fund-raiser, with George H.W. Bush in
attendance, saw fit to pray in an area near food preparation and air duct work,
I think it was a case of mind blank. That's a form of terrorism in itself.
Exhibit C. "On the Nov. 23, 2005, edition of The Radio
Factor, Smerconish interviewed Soo
Kim Abboud, author of Top of the Class: How Asian Parents Raise High
Achievers - and How You Can Too. . .
. Smerconish asserted that "if everyone follows Dr. Abboud's prescription
. . . you're going to have women who will leave the home and now get a
great-paying job, because you will have gotten them well-educated.' He
continued, 'But then they're not going to be around to instill these lessons in
their kids. In other words, it occurs to me that perhaps you've provided a
prescription to bring this great success to an end.' "
My favorite - and truly an
assertion that shows how asinine this situation has quickly become. Guilty!
Two Philadelphia-area Asian
sisters wrote a great book explaining the success of their upbringing. The
bottom line was their parents' hands-on approach. I not only hosted them on the
air, but also honored them at a book club meeting with several hundred
attendees. It occurred to me that if their advice were followed, it would
create more "high achievers" with better educational opportunities
and job offers, which would, ironically, take them out of the home where they
could instill those same values to their own children. But now, that insight is
sexist.
How long before they start
burning my tapes?
Head
Strong |
To read "It's Not Just Imus," by Robert Dietz and
Dan Mayer of MediaMatters.org, go to http://go.philly.com/media
Michael Smerconish's column appears on Thursdays in the
Daily News and on Sundays in Currents. He can be heard from 5:30 to 9 a.m.
weekdays on "The Big Talker," WPHT-AM (1210). Contact him on the Web
at http://www.mastalk.com.