By David Hogberg on 4.5.04 @ 12:06AM
A racial code word the press would prefer to ignore.
As the presidential campaign unfolds, conservatives will no
doubt have numerous gripes -- many of them legitimate -- about
mainstream media coverage of the candidates. Witness the recent
åspate of stories complaining about the negative tone of the
campaign that appeared only after the Bushies unleashed attack ads
on John Kerry. The previous three months in which no Democratic
candidate for the nomination could utter the word "Bush" without
ranting and raving, well, that was just the normal happenings of a
primary campaign.
Media bias is sometimes found not only in what makes it into
print but also what doesn't. This is evident in the campaign theme
of "outsourcing." There probably isn't a Democratic politician who
hasn't used the term to attack President Bush, and this has
resulted in a flurry of news stories about the subject. But in all
the media coverage, have you heard anyone refer to outsourcing as a
"racial code word"?
For the uninitiated, racial code words are words politicians
(usually Republicans) are accused of using to supposedly help them
win votes by raising whites' fears of minorities. According to
pundit Clarence Page, racial code words include terms like "states'
rights," "crime in the streets," and "welfare queens." Congressman
Jesse L. Jackson, Jr. has even suggested that "tax-and-spend
liberals" qualifies. The concept was trotted out again during the
controversy over the University of Michigan affirmative action
cases early last year. In a column in AsianWeek, Phil
Tajitsu Nash lamented that "President Bush is continuing to use
racial code words...such as 'quota.'" Earlier this year, Howard
Dean similarly tagged President Bush:
"The President used the word 'quota' five or six
times.…the word 'quota' every politician and every pollster
in America knows is a race coded word deliberately designed to
appeal to people's fears that they may lose their job, or their
place at [a] university to a member of a community of color."
Whether or not one agrees with Dean, it is no stretch to argue
that his description of "quota" can be applied to "outsourcing."
Outsourcing also raises people's fears that they may lose their job
to a member of a person of color. The only real difference is that
it is a member of another nation.
INDEED, TO THE EXTENT that outsourcing is a racial code word, the
code isn't all that secretive. An organization calling itself Make
America Work For Us, which is affiliated with the 527 group
Media
Fund, is running an attack ad that begins, "During the past
three years, it's true that George W. Bush has created more jobs.
Unfortunately, they were created in places like China." As the
commercial proceeds, the camera pans out to reveal a factory
covered with Chinese symbols. One can only imagine the outrage that
would occur if a conservative group had run such an ad.
Groups on the left, however, are certain to be given a pass.
Last month the AFL-CIO began a "Show Us the Jobs" bus tour in the
Midwest. The AFL-CIO's press release announcing the tour claims, "The
government is one of the largest exporters of American jobs...and
the government is responsible for outsourcing its own jobs." Did
any reporter covering this tour ask its organizers whether they are
playing on American workers' fears of foreigners? Yeah, right.
One obvious reason why such questions won't be raised is liberal
bias in the media. Most reporters likely believe that racism is
largely the purview of Republicans. Plus, outsourcing is an issue
that helps the Democrats and hurts the GOP, so why upset the apple
cart?
A slightly less obvious reason is that there are no organized
pressure groups in the U.S. devoted to fighting for outsourcing.
Thus, no one is bringing to the attention of the media that
outsourcing is a potential racial code word. By contrast, there are
pressure groups in the U.S. that fight for policies like welfare
and affirmative action, and so have a vested interest in promoting
the racial-code-word criticism.
WHETHER THE RACIAL-code-words charge is helpful to policy debates
in the U.S. is an open question. There are legitimate criticisms to
be made of policies like affirmative action and welfare, and
dismissing criticism of them as racially motivated is probably
myopic. Yet if the mainstream media will draw attention to the
political right's use of words that supposedly appeal to people's
racial fears, fairness demands that they focus on the political
left's use of a word that appeals to people's xenophobia. Of
course, conservatives learned long ago not to expect fair treatment
from the mainstream media.
topics:
Mainstream Media