Pot Meets Kettle When GOP Talks Racism
Race-baiting lowlights from Rush Limbaugh and Pat Buchanan, two of the pundits who say Sonia Sotomayor is racist.
By Joe Conason
Jun. 05, 2009 |
Whores and politicians become respectable if they stick around long enough, as someone once observed, and the same is plainly true of media personalities – especially in a culture that never pauses long enough to remember anything. Where amnesia is the rule, there can be no accountability for the likes of Rush Limbaugh, Glenn Beck, Patrick Buchanan and the rest of the broadcast mob denouncing the “racism” of Sonia Sotomayor. If anyone remembers who they are and what they have said over the years, their complaints about the Latina Supreme Court nominee will only elicit raucous laughter.
Who are these guys – with their long and sordid histories of encouraging white paranoia and ethnic division – to call her a racist?
In Washington media circles, Pat Buchanan is a well-liked and avuncular figure, presumably owing to his personal qualities rather than his crank politics, but for him to be encouraged to pontificate endlessly on the subject of race on television is worse than ludicrous. The late William F. Buckley Jr. expelled Buchanan from the pages of the National Review many years ago for his crudely anti-Semitic rants, which included a very unattractive tinge of admiration for Hitler. (Prejudice against Jews, unlike some other forms of bigotry, is anathema to most conservatives.) So obnoxious was Pat’s blustering bully-boy attitude that he became intolerable even to the intolerant.
As for racism, where to begin with him? Discussing Sotomayor on MSNBC, Buchanan accused her of adopting the same attitudes that had kept blacks down in old Dixie. “Her entire career is based on advancing people of color, which is done at the expense of white people,” he cried in that familiar high-pitched whine. “That was what was done in the South. They’re doing it now to white males now…”
Except that Pat didn’t mind so much when “they” were doing it to black folks in the South. He explicitly supported the race-based “Southern strategy” of his old boss Richard Nixon, whom he advised to avoid meeting with Coretta King one year after the murder of her husband, Martin Luther King Jr. In April 1969, he warned Nixon in a White House memo that visiting Mrs. King would “outrage many, many people who believe Dr. King was a fraud and a demagogue and perhaps worse … Others consider him the Devil incarnate. Dr. King is one of the most divisive men in contemporary history.”
Did Pat’s views toward blacks and other minorities mellow over the decades? More than 20 years later, he was still supporting the apartheid regime in South Africa, noting that there was nothing in our own Constitution that would preclude a white minority ruling a black majority. (Such is the color-blind jurisprudence that he would no doubt like to see on the high court. Of course, he also told Nixon to burn the Watergate tapes, a key indication of his deep respect for law and justice.)
In his memoir, “Right From the Start,” he suggested that the segregated District of Columbia of his boyhood had worked just fine:
There were no politics to polarize us then, to magnify every slight. The “negroes” of Washington had their public schools, restaurants, bars, movie houses, playgrounds and churches; and we had ours.
The story is much the same with Limbaugh and Beck, although neither of them is old enough to have developed Pat’s warm youthful memories of Joe McCarthy, Francisco Franco and Jim Crow. As Limbaugh lambastes Sotomayor for her supposed racism, Republican senators cower, believing that he is a credible critic whose opinion must be considered. His views must therefore be granted credence in the mainstream media.
But doesn’t anybody remember that Limbaugh’s overt hostility to black athletes got him kicked off the ESPN airwaves as a sports commentator? He exists to stir racial division and fury among whites, even as he complains bitterly about the “anger” he claims to perceive among those scary people of color. He built his audience with racial coding and commentary, as when he suggested that the NAACP, which has consistently advocated nonviolence for nearly 100 years, promoted rioting. “The NAACP should have riot rehearsal. They should get a liquor store and practice robberies.” He used to play the “Movin’ On Up” theme from the old “Jeffersons” TV show whenever he mentioned Carol Moseley Braun, the Illinois Democrat who was the first black woman to sit in the U.S. Senate. He used to do bits in black dialect (and maybe he still does).
But to Rush, the threat of the Sotomayor nomination is clear. Not only is she a racist, but as he said on June 4, her ascent means that all minorities will be on the warpath against white men. No longer should it be argued that minorities cannot be racist because they have no power, because America has a black president and “we’re talking now about a Supreme Court justice. The days of them not having any power are over, and they are angry, And they want to use their power as a means of retribution. That’s what Obama is all about.”
“Them”? “They”? Such generalizations and ominous warnings about an ethnic group – or “minorities,” in the knuckleheaded locution – are the essence of racist discourse. Obviously Limbaugh is blind to his own abiding prejudice and fear, but why should the rest of us have to pretend that he is anything but a bigot?
There are other minor actors on the same stage, including Glenn Beck and Tucker Carlson, whose antics over the Sotomayor nomination have exposed their prejudice or hypocrisy. Beck, whose penchant for racial “humor” concerning Hispanics is notorious, is among those whining constantly about the “racist” nominee. Carlson, who used to despise anyone who used that term in debate, now uses it to describe her. Then again, he once said critics of Limbaugh should “lighten up.” So what if Rush once told an African-American listener to “take that bone out of your nose”? After all, Rush was only “telling jokes” that were “pretty amusing.”
The campaign against Sotomayor will not relent nor will the distortions of her words and views cease. But the sources of malicious nonsense ought to be assessed for who and what they are, in historical context – and dismissed as relics of a past that America at long last left behind on Election Day 2008.
http://www.salon.com/opinion/conason/2009/06/05/sotomayor/
Reader Comments (1)
I sent Doug Greenlaw an e-mail with reference to his incredibly badly researched apology in support of the last administration. His web site would not accept it - so I sent a copy to John Lane.
I liked your piece, however, the main reason for not using torture as an interrogation technique is that it does not work. This has been known in the Western World since the early 1960's. I have attached a copy of my missive if you would care to read it.
Doug Brand
Dear Mr. Greenlaw,
I respect the fact that you gained certification as a Jungle Expert without going through “advanced interrogation techniques”. I was not so lucky.
The courses arranged for Special Boat Service Officers and Marines, (the fail rate exceeded 70%). All personnel had to be volunteers with additional recommendations from Commanding Officers and unit commanders. (All personnel had to have completed at least one tour in a Commando unit). If you were lucky enough to survive the selection process, you spent the next year doing modular training before you could be passed for Special Boat Service duty. One of the final exercises (of which there were many) was Escape and Evasion – Of course this was rigged so every one was captured. This was the program on which the SERE program was based. It was also before the course was toned down by Safety Regulations. I was interrogated for 60 hours which included all the usual techniques (blindfolding, white noise, sleep deprivation, stress positions, water torture, disorientation, humiliation etc.) It took me the following 72 hours before I could rationally believe it was only an exercise.
I suppose waterboarding sounds much more civilized than “water torture” However, it is not the name but the process which is under review. Anyone who has actually gone through this “technique” will tell you unreservedly that no matter what your beliefs, or whether it is an exercise or a real interrogation, You believe it is for real and you really are drowning. I can assure you that Islamic terrorists from arid regions or home grown terrorists in the USA will react in exactly the same manner. They will tell you what they think you want to hear in order to make you stop. Not exactly a reliable method (except of course in “24 hours”)
Also how do you signal that you have had enough and are willing to talk with both your hands and feet secured to the board and you are drowning?
When I went through Interrogation Training (1965) (to qualify for the Joint Interrogation Unit) it was drummed into us that any shape or form of torture would not garner any useful information and its only use (apart from sadistic pleasure) was to gather confessions from suspects, against their will.
The FBI had it right.
No matter what the CIA has said or done to justify their amateur and unproductive actions, they are doing what they do best, Lie. For example, how many hours of taped evidence did they destroy? I assume that you have concrete evidence that only 3 people were waterboarded, or are you relying on the CIA's account?
I also had first hand experience of Saddam Hussein's Mukhabarat when I was captured trying to escape Iraq after the Kuwait invasion. I held in isolation in the 52nd Street center of Iraq's Counter Intelligence headquarters in Baghdad. No proof of my existence was acknowledged by the Iraqi Government for nearly 10 months. I underwent 27 sessions of interrogation. Their object was to get me to confess to spying for the CIA and Mossad.
I was released in June of 1991. I was not hanged as I expected and I did not confess, unlike poor Farrad Bazoft, the reporter from the Manchester Guardian who after his coerced confession, shown on Iraqi TV in the Spring of 1990, was immediately hanged and his body dumped outside the British Embassy in Baghdad like a piece of garbage.
But why are we trying to justify our actions no matter that 9/11 did occur. Did that give us a license to behave like the terrorists who carried out the destruction of the twin towers?
Our representatives, on behalf of all Americans, presided over the Nazi war trials in Nuremberg and had a considerable role in drafting the Geneva Convention. We are supposed to set an example to rest of the World. We cannot just disregard the Geneva Convention if it becomes “inconvenient”. This convention was created to outlaw the brutality instigated by the Third Reich and Japan. Torture is a war crime.
Waterboarding is by any definition, torture, as are the other “advanced interrogation techniques” carried out in Abu Ghraib, Afghanistan, Guantanamo Bay and the various secret sites set up by the CIA, (in order to be deniable) around the globe. It cannot be wallpapered over or hidden behind “advanced interrogation techniques”. There is no middle ground.
I also have severe doubts about your statement alleging the members of your Jungle Training Course who underwent interrogation, ended up laughing about the experience.
Douglas Brand
Captain MC RM (ret.)