The Original Sin of the United States Re: McNabb and Limbaugh Re: Raceism L3

2003-11-13 Thread John D. Giorgis
At 12:20 PM 11/6/2003 -0600 Dan Minette wrote:
 At 09:57 AM 10/28/2003 -0600 Dan Minette wrote:
 Well, that slaughter started well before the US existed, so it did come
 first.  But, I was thinking how racism is written into the Constitution.

 Which also applies to the Native Americans, no?

Is there an explicit mention of Native Americans in the constitution?

Yes.

Albeit in a less dehumanizing way than assigning them 3/5 of a peronhood or
to slavery - it ratherly simply states that if they are not taxed then they
are not citizens of the United States.

Anyhow, the reason I consider our treatment of Native Americans to be the
United States original sin is as follows:

The sin of slavery was at least a *choice* of the United States as an
entity, inasmuch as it was written into the Constitution.   In Catholic
original sin theology, original sin is not _your_ *first* sin.   Rather
it is the sin of our ancestors, a sin upon which we owe our very existence,
and a sin which has produced a debt that can never be repaid. 

All of these aspects, with the possible exception of the last one being at
least arguable, apply much more directly to the treatment of Native
Americans than to slavery.

The mistreatment of Native Americans both intention and unintentional (such
as in the case of certain diseases) was carried out in large part by
predecssors of the United States - although admittedly the sins were then
perpetuated by the United States long after slavery was abolished, the
origins of eliminating the Native Americans came long before the United
States.

Secondly, without the elimination of the Native Americans the United States
is never reallly the United States.  Without elimination of the Native
Americans there is no Manifest Destiny, and without Manifest Destiny the
United States may never become the dominant nation in the world.I think
that in large part the US owes its national greatness to the richness of
its geography - which was seized from the Native Americans.

Lastly, far too many Native Americans have been killed for the wrongs the
United States has committed against the Native Americans to every be
rectified in any meaningful sense.The First Peoples of the United
States in almost all cases will be a tiny minority in their own lands in
every sense - cultural, lingual, and political.   There's no way to turn
back the clock.

If we are to map US history into Christian Theology, I would say that the
Civil War is a much closer parallel to the United States' crucifixtion.   

JDG
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Re: McNabb and Limbaugh Re: Raceism L3

2003-11-06 Thread John D. Giorgis
At 09:57 AM 10/28/2003 -0600 Dan Minette wrote:
Well, that slaughter started well before the US existed, so it did come
first.  But, I was thinking how racism is written into the Constitution.

Which also applies to the Native Americans, no?

JDG
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Re: McNabb and Limbaugh Re: Raceism L3

2003-11-06 Thread Dan Minette

- Original Message - 
From: John D. Giorgis [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, November 06, 2003 11:51 AM
Subject: Re: McNabb and Limbaugh Re: Raceism L3


 At 09:57 AM 10/28/2003 -0600 Dan Minette wrote:
 Well, that slaughter started well before the US existed, so it did come
 first.  But, I was thinking how racism is written into the Constitution.

 Which also applies to the Native Americans, no?

Is there an explicit mention of Native Americans in the constitution?

Dan M.


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RE: McNabb and Limbaugh Re: Raceism L3

2003-11-06 Thread Miller, Jeffrey


 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On 
 Behalf Of Dan Minette
 Sent: Thursday, November 06, 2003 10:21 AM
 To: Killer Bs Discussion
 Subject: Re: McNabb and Limbaugh Re: Raceism L3
 
 
 
 - Original Message - 
 From: John D. Giorgis [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Thursday, November 06, 2003 11:51 AM
 Subject: Re: McNabb and Limbaugh Re: Raceism L3
 
 
  At 09:57 AM 10/28/2003 -0600 Dan Minette wrote:
  Well, that slaughter started well before the US existed, so it did 
  come first.  But, I was thinking how racism is written into the 
  Constitution.
 
  Which also applies to the Native Americans, no?
 
 Is there an explicit mention of Native Americans in the constitution?

Maybe in the Apocrypha

-j-
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Re: McNabb and Limbaugh Re: Raceism L3

2003-11-06 Thread Dan Minette

- Original Message - 
From: Miller, Jeffrey [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, November 06, 2003 12:44 PM
Subject: RE: McNabb and Limbaugh Re: Raceism L3



 Is there an explicit mention of Native Americans in the constitution?

Maybe in the Apocrypha

You mean it is in the origional constitution, but taken out by
revisionists. :-)

Dan M.


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RE: McNabb and Limbaugh Re: Raceism L3

2003-11-06 Thread Miller, Jeffrey


 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Dan Minette
 Sent: Thursday, November 06, 2003 11:03 AM
 To: Killer Bs Discussion
 Subject: Re: McNabb and Limbaugh Re: Raceism L3
 
 
 
 - Original Message - 
 From: Miller, Jeffrey [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Thursday, November 06, 2003 12:44 PM
 Subject: RE: McNabb and Limbaugh Re: Raceism L3
 
 
 
  Is there an explicit mention of Native Americans in the 
 constitution?
 
 Maybe in the Apocrypha
 
 You mean it is in the origional constitution, but taken out 
 by revisionists. :-)

Exactly.  Once they realized that the Masonite Revolution wasn't going to take hold, 
they went back and scrubbed all the copies.  

-j-
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Re: McNabb and Limbaugh Re: Raceism L3

2003-11-06 Thread Dan Minette

- Original Message - 
From: Miller, Jeffrey [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, November 06, 2003 1:19 PM
Subject: RE: McNabb and Limbaugh Re: Raceism L3




 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Dan Minette
 Sent: Thursday, November 06, 2003 11:03 AM
 To: Killer Bs Discussion
 Subject: Re: McNabb and Limbaugh Re: Raceism L3



 - Original Message - 
 From: Miller, Jeffrey [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Thursday, November 06, 2003 12:44 PM
 Subject: RE: McNabb and Limbaugh Re: Raceism L3



  Is there an explicit mention of Native Americans in the
 constitution?

 Maybe in the Apocrypha

 You mean it is in the origional constitution, but taken out
 by revisionists. :-)

Exactly.  Once they realized that the Masonite Revolution wasn't going to
take hold, they went back and scrubbed all the copies.

And, if you vidiotaped the series Scrubs and reassembled it according to
The Code you would find a complete doumentary on this.

Dan M.


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Re: McNabb and Limbaugh Re: Raceism L3

2003-10-28 Thread Dan Minette

- Original Message - 
From: John D. Giorgis [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, October 23, 2003 9:09 PM
Subject: Re: McNabb and Limbaugh Re: Raceism L3


 At 04:34 PM 10/19/2003 -0500 Dan Minette wrote:
 First of all, I'm 99% sure we agree that slavery was the original sin of
 the US,

 Just for the record, I disagree.The decimation of the Native
Americans
 is the original sin of the United States.

Well, that slaughter started well before the US existed, so it did come
first.  But, I was thinking how racism is written into the Constitution.



 But the reasonable conservative viewpoint is not just that McNabb is
 overrated which I think is a wrong viewpoint, but I must admit that
it
 is reasonable just because of its prevalence amongst the pro football
 punditry class but it is also that the media wants to see black QB's
do
 well, and thus the media  is less quick to turn on McNabb with criticism
 because he is black than they would be if McNabb were white.i.e. to
 argue that the racism of the media means that if McNabb were white like
Jon
 Kitna, people would have called him overrated much faster than they have.

Nah, overrated means more than that.  It means he was never very good to
begin with, he was just the media's darling because he was black. The
reason he got MVP votes is that he his black...it is clear that a white
player deserved better.   So, all the black QBs that didn't rate as high as
he did were worse; only white QBs could be better.

Further, you now need to assume that there is a liberal sportswriter push
of the liberal agenda.


 Moreover, the very timeline of the current situation backs up Gautam's
 thesis. ESPN's NFL Countdown, while a live show, is a *rehearsed*
live show.   At no point in the rehearsal nor at the live taping did
anyone at
 ESPN express shock or dismay at Rush's comments, including two black
former NFL Players on ESPN's panel.

The network knew what they were getting with Rush. I'm sure that they
wanted his target demographics.  I can imagine how people who's expertise
is sports would like to focus on why Rush is wrong in sports instead of
getting in a political debate with him. Did you really expect two jocks to
have the guts to go toe to toe with one of the most successful ranters of
the 20th century?

And, we don't even know if he brought up liberal media bias in the
rehearsals.

 On Monday following the game, there was again very little notice taken of
 Rush's comments despite the fact that many people had no doubt by
then
 had the opportunity to review them, and any journalists watching ESPN's
 show would no doubt have had the opportunity to write about them in their
 Monday columns.

Rush being racist isn't really news.  Its been going on the air waves for
almost two decades.  If you want, I can see if he was an obvious racist all
the way back in high school.  My father in law went to high school with
him.



 Indeed, let us consider who objected to these comments. *Al Sharpton*
 objected to the comments.   *Howard Dean* objected to the comments.
 Democratic Presidential Candidate *Wesley Clark* objected to the remarks.
I heard of it two ways: listening to sports radio in my car and listening
to ESPN's   I'm not exactly sure about the sequence. On ESPN, there was
breathless coverage during the baseball playoffs. The feeling seemed to be
that the buzz would continue to drive ratings up.  I then heard about it on
sports radio, where they quoted a sports columnist on it and said how
stupid Rush was.  This is in a _very_ conservative city, BTW.

They got a fair number of calls on this subject.  Most talked about how
stupid Rush was; I don't remember anyone defending him.

The real problem that I see is to have a Limbaugh hijack a pregame show for
his rants.  How would you like it if Jesse were a guest commentator and
used the show as a platform for his rants? Finally, do you really think
that the fact
that Rush was in the process of being outed as a druggie had nothing to do
with his resignation?

  Pretty soon, Jesse Jackson was threatening a boycott of ESPN and even
 ABC/Disney.

Right, just like the SBC boycott.  That didn't bother me; Jesse has a
smaller following than them.  No one wins against mouse, not even moose and
squirrel.


Dan M.


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Re: McNabb and Limbaugh Re: Raceism

2003-10-26 Thread Bemmzim
In a message dated 10/23/2003 9:51:37 PM Eastern Daylight Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
writes:

 I dunno. it seems very weird to me that in wondering if somebody is a
 racist that the second question one would ask is does he 
 give money to
 black colleges?

Just an example. I'm still waiting for evidence that would counter his public 
utterannces. 
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Re: McNabb and Limbaugh Re: Raceism

2003-10-26 Thread Bemmzim
In a message dated 10/23/2003 9:54:22 PM Eastern Daylight Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
writes:

 This is one of the most infuriating comments that I have heard from many
 sources regarding this whole thing   what is the point of appealing in
 code to somebody in this instance?   i.e. for what reason would Rush
 decide to appeal in code in his fourth appearance on an 
 ESPN Pregame show?

To stir up controversy. To push his agenda that the media is favoring blacks. To 
subtly reinforce beliefs that blacks are inferior intellectually. To suggest that 
racism is not a real problem in need of remedy but simply an invention of the liberal 
media. 
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Re: McNabb and Limbaugh Re: Raceism L3

2003-10-23 Thread Deborah Harrell
--- Dan Minette [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
massive snippage 

 So, in short, while you could argue that PC has been
 used to attack very
 reasonable conservative positions, that dog doesn't
 hunt with Rush.

Dear Dan,
Pleez git yer frases right - it's that dog don't
hunt!

Debbi
who agrees with most all else what you wrote in that
there post  ;)

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Re: McNabb and Limbaugh Re: Raceism L3

2003-10-23 Thread Jan Coffey

--- Deborah Harrell [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 --- Dan Minette [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 massive snippage 
 
  So, in short, while you could argue that PC has been
  used to attack very
  reasonable conservative positions, that dog doesn't
  hunt with Rush.
 
 Dear Dan,
 Pleez git yer frases right - it's that dog don't
 hunt!

Wel what do you expect? Time, Newsweek, NYT, etc. have all been using slang
phrases in headlines, but correcting the grammer.

Like this week's NW, Rush, in a world of pain, The phrase is in a world of
hurt. They mean completly different things, the subtle pun would have
actualy been funny if they had got the phrase correct.

It's kind of like when someone outside the know tries to act like they are
down. Steve Martin makes a living out of that these days.



=
_
   Jan William Coffey
_

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Re: McNabb and Limbaugh Re: Raceism

2003-10-23 Thread John D. Giorgis
At 10:02 PM 10/14/2003 -0400 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
How are we so certain that Rush is not racist? Does he have a personal
history of supporting racial equality? Does he give money to black
colleges? speak out for racial equality? I'm not saying he is a racist but
it is glib to say he is not. 


I dunno. it seems very weird to me that in wondering if somebody is a
racist that the second question one would ask is does he give money to
black colleges?

JDG
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Re: McNabb and Limbaugh Re: Raceism

2003-10-23 Thread John D. Giorgis
At 01:12 PM 10/15/2003 EDT [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Rush did something that I believe can fairly be described either as racist
on 
its face or attempting to appeal in code to those of his listeners and 
followers who are themselves racists. 

This is one of the most infuriating comments that I have heard from many
sources regarding this whole thing   what is the point of appealing in
code to somebody in this instance?   i.e. for what reason would Rush
decide to appeal in code in his fourth appearance on an ESPN Pregame show?

JDG
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Re: McNabb and Limbaugh Re: Raceism L3

2003-10-23 Thread John D. Giorgis
At 04:34 PM 10/19/2003 -0500 Dan Minette wrote:
First of all, I'm 99% sure we agree that slavery was the original sin of
the US, 

Just for the record, I disagree.The decimation of the Native Americans
is the original sin of the United States. 

Yes, he just gave one example, but it wasn't an off the cuff remark; he
planned to bring it up.  Since McNabb is just one of several high ranked
black quarterbacks, it would be hard to explain why you think all the other
black QBs deserve their reputations, but not McNabb.  The only consistent
reason for this viewpoint that I can think of is the belief that the old
days, when all the QBs were white, was a reflection of the natural order of
things.  You know, the inherent intelligence of whites and the inability of
whites to regard a black man as a leader, and all that other nonsense.

So, in short, while you could argue that PC has been used to attack very
reasonable conservative positions, that dog doesn't hunt with Rush.

But the reasonable conservative viewpoint is not just that McNabb is
overrated which I think is a wrong viewpoint, but I must admit that it
is reasonable just because of its prevalence amongst the pro football
punditry class but it is also that the media wants to see black QB's do
well, and thus the media  is less quick to turn on McNabb with criticism
because he is black than they would be if McNabb were white.i.e. to
argue that the racism of the media means that if McNabb were white like Jon
Kitna, people would have called him overrated much faster than they have.  

Moreover, the very timeline of the current situation backs up Gautam's
thesis. ESPN's NFL Countdown, while a live show, is a *rehearsed* live
show.   At no point in the rehearsal nor at the live taping did anyone at
ESPN express shock or dismay at Rush's comments, including two black former
NFL Players on ESPN's panel.

On Monday following the game, there was again very little notice taken of
Rush's comments despite the fact that many people had no doubt by then
had the opportunity to review them, and any journalists watching ESPN's
show would no doubt have had the opportunity to write about them in their
Monday columns.

Indeed, let us consider who objected to these comments. *Al Sharpton*
objected to the comments.   *Howard Dean* objected to the comments.
Democratic Presidential Candidate *Wesley Clark* objected to the remarks.
 Pretty soon, Jesse Jackson was threatening a boycott of ESPN and even
ABC/Disney. 

If this is not evidence of a coordinated attack by the PC Police, then I
don't know what is and quite frankly, I am still waiting for The Fool
and the ACLU to start complaining about the chilling effect that all this
has had on free speech in this country  Then again, I'm not holding my
breath.

JDG
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Re: McNabb and Limbaugh Re: Raceism L3

2003-10-19 Thread Dan Minette

- Original Message - 
From: Gautam Mukunda [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, October 15, 2003 8:54 AM
Subject: Re: McNabb and Limbaugh Re: Raceism


 --- Julia Thompson [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  Did Rush go to college?  My impression is that he
  didn't, or at least he
  never came out with a degree
 
  Julia

 I have no idea, actually.  What I meant was that every
 conservative who even wants to think about racial
 issues outside of PC orthodoxies has to accept that
 this is the deal - the very first tactic that will be
 used by those who disagree with him is to call him a
 racist.  That's part of the deal.  There doesn't have
 to be any evidence or anything at all.  If you want to
 say anything about race beyond talking about the
 pervasive racism of American society and how that's
 the only explanation for every problem afflicting
 African-Americans, you will get called a racist.
 Every conservative knows it.  I think most leftists do
 to, to be honest, but it's too useful a tactic of
 intimidation to admit that.

In some cases, it happens exactly as you state it.  I'm sure, especially at
liberal universities, well thought out balanced conservative ideas are
shouted down as racist when they are not.  If you followed my discussion of
my Zambian daughter being told she isn't black enough because she works too
hard, you will note that I accept and acknowledge that there are problems
that extend beyond the simple effects of prejudice.

Having said that, though, I feel that this does not well apply to the
criticisms of Rush.  I've been mulling over my response to this, and find
the need to keep on expanding it in my head.  What I write will have to be
a subset of this.

First of all, I'm 99% sure we agree that slavery was the original sin of
the US, and that the obvious manifestations of blacks being second class
citizens in the US extended into the '60s.  That is not just a matter of
ancient history (heck I can close my eyes and see the TWTWTW song being
sung when the Civil Rights legislation was signed).  It is the necessary
backdrop for any discussions because there are strong links between these
facts and  present attitudes, policies strategies, etc.

The analogy I used when I discussed Neli (my Zambian daughter) and her
accusers was people dealing with an adult who has been abused as a child.
Adam rightly pointed out that white Americans can't see themselves in the
position of the therapist.  That wasn't the position I was actually
thinking of; I was more thinking about the position of the family member.
Having seen this, both personally and through Teri's work, I have a strong
feel for what being a family member in this position entails.

Part of it is an understanding of the background to the problem.  Another
part is not letting the person use their previous abuse as an excuse for
present bad behavior.  Sympathy and understanding must be present, but
cannot be turned into a license and excuse for destructive behavior.

OK, so having given my metaphor, let me look at other aspects of the
situation.  One of the first that I wish to consider is the change in the
US political landscape in 1964.  From the 1870s to 1960, the solid south
existed.  The South would not vote for the party of Lincoln.  In Texas, the
voters were referred to as yeller dog Democrats; they proclaimed that
they'd vote for a yeller dog if it ran as a Democrat.  The only real
significant exception to this was '48 when the Dixiecrat candidate, Strom
Thurmond won 4 southern states.

In '64 Johnson signed the Civil Rights bill, and the political landscape
changed.  Barry Goldwater carried the solid Democratic south, and his own
state, and that's all.  Even though the Republican leadership went along
with the Civil Rights act, the fact that a Democratic president pushed the
legislation meant that Southerners now decided that, even though the
national Republican party was the party of Lincoln, it was still the lesser
of two evils...because they didn't push civil rights.  Local Democrats
could show that they voted against Civil Rights, and thus preserve their
own hides.

Nixon saw this, and he wasn't stupid.  He devised his Southern Strategy
to go and get these votes.  While Wallace got most of them instead, this
strategy has been part of the Republican party overall strategy every
since. Now, this cannot be said overtly, because no one can come out and
say they are against civil rights.  So, code phrases have been developed.
State's rights is the classic one.  The apologists for the Confederacy
insist that the war was about state's rights.  The supporters of
segregation claimed it was not anti civil-rights, but pro states rights.

Now, that doesn't mean that anyone who thinks that the balance in federal
and state power needs to be shifted more towards the states is racist.
There are indeed, principled arguments for this, that are not at all
racist.  What it means is that the use

Re: McNabb and Limbaugh Re: Raceism

2003-10-15 Thread Gautam Mukunda
--- Julia Thompson [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 Did Rush go to college?  My impression is that he
 didn't, or at least he
 never came out with a degree
 
   Julia

I have no idea, actually.  What I meant was that every
conservative who even wants to think about racial
issues outside of PC orthodoxies has to accept that
this is the deal - the very first tactic that will be
used by those who disagree with him is to call him a
racist.  That's part of the deal.  There doesn't have
to be any evidence or anything at all.  If you want to
say anything about race beyond talking about the
pervasive racism of American society and how that's
the only explanation for every problem afflicting
African-Americans, you will get called a racist. 
Every conservative knows it.  I think most leftists do
to, to be honest, but it's too useful a tactic of
intimidation to admit that.  Rush certainly should
have - he's not stupid.  If he knew his employers
weren't willing to deal with the firestorm from his
comments (which they obviously weren't) then he should
have either not made them, or resigned on principle -
none of this interfering with NFL Countdown
nonsense.  Acting all surprised that this happened is,
frankly, kind of disingenuous.  Of course he was going
to be attacked.  That's what happens, right or wrong. 
It's only worse that - in this case - he was wrong.

=
Gautam Mukunda
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Freedom is not free
http://www.mukunda.blogspot.com

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Re: McNabb and Limbaugh Re: Raceism

2003-10-15 Thread TomFODW
 I have no idea, actually.  What I meant was that every conservative who 
 even wants to think about racial issues outside of PC orthodoxies has to accept 
 that this is the deal - the very first tactic that will be used by those who 
 disagree with him is to call him a racist.  That's part of the deal.  There 
 doesn't have to be any evidence or anything at all.  If you want to say 
 anything about race beyond talking about the pervasive racism of American society 
 and how that's the only explanation for every problem afflicting 
 African-Americans, you will get called a racist. Every conservative knows it.  I 
 think 
 most leftists do to, to be honest, but it's too useful a tactic of intimidation 
 to admit that.  Rush certainly should have - he's not stupid.  If he knew his 
 employers weren't willing to deal with the firestorm from his comments 
 (which they obviously weren't) then he should
 have either not made them, or resigned on principle - none of this 
 interfering with NFL Countdown
 nonsense.  Acting all surprised that this happened is, frankly, kind of 
 disingenuous.  Of course he was going to be attacked.  That's what happens, right 
 or wrong. It's only worse that - in this case - he was wrong.
 

The reverse of this is, that conservatives who are accused of being racist 
can say they're not, they're just the victims of the PC Police. Which is a 
convenient cover for when they ARE racist. Which, I really think, Rush was in this 
instance. If all he had said was, Donovan McNabb is overrated, no one would 
have been so upset. (I happen to think that McNabb *is* overrated.) By going 
that extra step further and assigning a far-out reason for his being overrated, 
Rush did something that I believe can fairly be described either as racist on 
its face or attempting to appeal in code to those of his listeners and 
followers who are themselves racists. 

Because, what was his point? Where the hell is this media conspiracy to 
elevate black quarterbacks? As far as I'm concerned, it has not been an issue since 
the 1988 Super Bowl. Therefore, unless he is stupid, the only point I can see 
is to stir the pot in a very irresponsible way. Because a lot of his 
listeners are angry white men who think the only reason they are not on top of the 
world is not because of their own failings but because of affirmative action for 
blacks. And they are encouraged to think this by some politicians for their 
own ends. And that is a racist belief, and to appeal to it, even by code is, if 
not racism, then a blatant and cynical use of other people's racism. Rush had 
to know this, and he had to know what would happen. For him to pretend 
otherwise is so disingenuous that even a conservative should be disgusted by it. 

This is not a debate over affirmative action or over racial orthodoxies. Even 
if not all problems are caused by racism, racism itself still exists and is 
in and of itself a serious problem. It does no good to say that reverse racism 
is to blame in a case when it clearly wasn't. For that alone, Rush should have 
been fired. He didn't even quit for the right reason - i.e., to atone for his 
error. He doesn't think (at least publicly admit) that he made an error, 
either of fact or of intent. 



Tom Beck

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www.mercerjewishsingles.org

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last. - Dr Jerry Pournelle
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Re: McNabb and Limbaugh Re: Raceism

2003-10-15 Thread William T Goodall
On Wednesday, October 15, 2003, at 06:12  pm, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
This is not a debate over affirmative action or over racial 
orthodoxies. Even
if not all problems are caused by racism, racism itself still exists 
and is
in and of itself a serious problem. It does no good to say that 
reverse racism
is to blame in a case when it clearly wasn't. For that alone, Rush 
should have
been fired. He didn't even quit for the right reason - i.e., to atone 
for his
error. He doesn't think (at least publicly admit) that he made an 
error,
either of fact or of intent.
Isn't he that crazy lying junkie guy? Where would honesty figure in his 
worldview?

--
William T Goodall
Mail : [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Web  : http://www.wtgab.demon.co.uk
Blog : http://radio.weblogs.com/0111221/
I have always wished that my computer would be as easy to use as my 
telephone. My wish has come true. I no longer know how to use my 
telephone. - Bjarne Stroustrup

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Re: McNabb and Limbaugh Re: Raceism

2003-10-14 Thread John D. Giorgis
At 01:15 PM 10/11/2003 -0500 Reggie Bautista wrote:
JDG wrote:
Indeed.   In fact, if ESPN had fired Limbaugh because his comments showed
an utter lack of knowledge about football and the media hyping of all
mobile QB's, be they Doug Flutie or Donovan McNabb, I probably wouldn't
have cared.To fire him, however, because the Democratic Political
Establishment in this country engaged in a coordinated assault designed to
categorize all criticisms of reverse racism as racism really sits badly
with me.

Um, Rush wasn't fired.  He resigned.  I suppose it may have had as much to
do with the fact he was planning to enter rehab as anything else

Well, yeah.   But it is clear from news accounts that ESPN made it very
clear what they wanted him to do...

JDG
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Re: McNabb and Limbaugh Re: Raceism

2003-10-14 Thread Bemmzim
In a message dated 10/11/2003 1:21:41 PM Eastern Daylight Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
writes:

 Indeed.   In fact, if ESPN had fired Limbaugh because his comments showed
 an utter lack of knowledge about football and the media hyping of all
 mobile QB's, be they Doug Flutie or Donovan McNabb, I probably wouldn't
 have cared.To fire him, however, because the Democratic Political
 Establishment in this country engaged in a coordinated assault designed to
 categorize all criticisms of reverse racism as racism 
 really sits badly
 with me.
 
It is good to see you back John. With all the bad news for the GOP I was wondering 
when you would weigh in. The thing about Rush is that he was hired to be provocotive 
and he was. But based on his history it cannot be argued that his anti-media attack 
came out with regard to a black quaterback. As you have documented, McNabb is very 
good and as your ranking shows many black quaterbacks are in the upper teir. Any fan 
with unbiased knowledge of the game would have to acknowledge this so it seems that 
there must be bias in Rush to come up with this analysis. I have seen others suggest a 
double standard because Howard Cossel did not get fired for his monkey remark. But I 
think it is personnel history rather than politics. Both men were egoists with a 
desire to create controversy. The difference is that Cossell was a legitimate champion 
of black athletes while Rush (or at least a large part of his audience) are, to be 
kind, not overly sympathetic to the plight of blacks. So when Cossel says he did not 
mean the statement as a racial slur he is believed while when Rush says it is not a 
slur it is not because it falls into his general pattern of demogogery.   
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Re: McNabb and Limbaugh Re: Raceism

2003-10-14 Thread Gautam Mukunda
--- [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 It is good to see you back John. With all the bad
 news for the GOP I was wondering when you would
 weigh in. The thing about Rush is that he was hired
 to be provocotive and he was. But based on his
 history it cannot be argued that his anti-media
 attack came out with regard to a black quaterback.
 As you have documented, McNabb is very good and as
 your ranking shows many black quaterbacks are in the
 upper teir. Any fan with unbiased knowledge of the
 game would have to acknowledge this so it seems that
 there must be bias in Rush to come up with this
 analysis. I have seen others suggest a double
 standard because Howard Cossel did not get fired for
 his monkey remark. But I think it is personnel
 history rather than politics. Both men were egoists
 with a desire to create controversy. The difference
 is that Cossell was a legitimate champion of black
 athletes while Rush (or at least a large part of his
 audience) are, to be kind, not overly sympathetic to
 the plight of blacks. So when Cossel says he did not
 mean the statement as a racial slur he is believed
 while when Rush says it is not a slur it is not
 because it falls into his general pattern of
 demogogery.   

Given the opinion polls that came out this week, the
GOP should have that sort of bad news every week :-)

Cosell used the word monkey to refer to _white_
athletes on more than one occasion, so it does seem
unfair to say that he was being racist to use it to
describe black athletes, apart from everything else.

As for any fan with unbiased knowledge - see Allen
Barra's article on Slate.  Barra is a professional
sportswriter who writes, among other places, for
_Salon_.  Rush was wrong (see
profootballprospectus.com for why) but his argument
was not, on its face, entirely unreasonable.  It
certainly wasn't racist.  Calling him a racist is
nothing more than the usual tactic of arguing that
anybody who disagrees with the PC line is a bigot.  It
happens to most conservatives in college, for goodness
sake, so Rush should have been a little better
prepared for it.

Good to see you back, Bob.

=
Gautam Mukunda
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Freedom is not free
http://www.mukunda.blogspot.com

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Re: McNabb and Limbaugh Re: Raceism

2003-10-14 Thread Julia Thompson
Gautam Mukunda wrote:

 As for any fan with unbiased knowledge - see Allen
 Barra's article on Slate.  Barra is a professional
 sportswriter who writes, among other places, for
 _Salon_.  Rush was wrong (see
 profootballprospectus.com for why) but his argument
 was not, on its face, entirely unreasonable.  It
 certainly wasn't racist.  Calling him a racist is
 nothing more than the usual tactic of arguing that
 anybody who disagrees with the PC line is a bigot.  It
 happens to most conservatives in college, for goodness
 sake, so Rush should have been a little better
 prepared for it.

Did Rush go to college?  My impression is that he didn't, or at least he
never came out with a degree

Julia
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Re: McNabb and Limbaugh Re: Raceism

2003-10-14 Thread Davd Brin

--- Julia

thanks.  It's only a minor irritation so I'll just
wait till Nick gets back.

thrive!

david b





 Thompson [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 Gautam Mukunda wrote:
 
  As for any fan with unbiased knowledge - see
 Allen
  Barra's article on Slate.  Barra is a professional
  sportswriter who writes, among other places, for
  _Salon_.  Rush was wrong (see
  profootballprospectus.com for why) but his
 argument
  was not, on its face, entirely unreasonable.  It
  certainly wasn't racist.  Calling him a racist is
  nothing more than the usual tactic of arguing that
  anybody who disagrees with the PC line is a bigot.
  It
  happens to most conservatives in college, for
 goodness
  sake, so Rush should have been a little better
  prepared for it.
 
 Did Rush go to college?  My impression is that he
 didn't, or at least he
 never came out with a degree
 
   Julia
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Re: McNabb and Limbaugh Re: Raceism

2003-10-14 Thread Bemmzim
In a message dated 10/14/2003 5:51:25 PM Eastern Daylight Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
writes:

 but his argument
 was not, on its face, entirely unreasonable.  It
 certainly wasn't racist.  Calling him a racist is
 nothing more than the usual tactic of arguing that
 anybody who disagrees with the PC line is a bigot.  It
 happens to most conservatives in college, for goodness
 sake, so Rush should have been a little better
 prepared for it.

How are we so certain that Rush is not racist? Does he have a personal history of 
supporting racial equality? Does he give money to black colleges? speak out for racial 
equality? I'm not saying he is a racist but it is glib to say he is not. What he did 
was play the race card if you will. He knew he would provoke this response. At best 
this was cynical at worst it was racist. The PC remark is as much a knee jerk 
conservative response as the PC crowd. One can criticize Rush or anyone else without 
being PC. 

By the way welcome back. I think you are right about Pedro. He is the greatest pitcher 
in the history of the game. He has such good control that he can hit Garcia on the 
back at will. He can pitch so well in a key game without losing his cool and his sign 
language skills are outstanding. He was so nice to point out that Jorge Posada had a 
fleck of dirt on his head in the 4th inning. No need to apologize for his actions. The 
Yankees would be fortunate to face him in game 7 given his success against the team in 
the past few years
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Re: McNabb and Limbaugh Re: Raceism

2003-10-11 Thread Reggie Bautista
JDG wrote:
Indeed.   In fact, if ESPN had fired Limbaugh because his comments showed
an utter lack of knowledge about football and the media hyping of all
mobile QB's, be they Doug Flutie or Donovan McNabb, I probably wouldn't
have cared.To fire him, however, because the Democratic Political
Establishment in this country engaged in a coordinated assault designed to
categorize all criticisms of reverse racism as racism really sits badly
with me.
Um, Rush wasn't fired.  He resigned.  I suppose it may have had as much to
do with the fact he was planning to enter rehab as anything else.
Reggie Bautista
Just for the Record Maru
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