By Enemy Central on 4.12.07 @ 12:09AM
The shock heard 'round the world.
"This event has scarred me for life," said a Rutgers player in
the Imus wars. One would have thought Imus himself might have said
that, except his visage has been pretty well scarred since at least
his earlier days in pre-rehab. But to return to that Rutgers
dribbler -- doesn't living in New Jersey leave lifetime scars?
Wouldn't losing to Tennessee in the NCAA women's final have added a
few new ones? What about the many days during which she and the
rest of humanity were kept blissfully in the dark about what Imus
had said back on April 4th? Wouldn't not knowing have created even
more scars than knowing now has?
The scar campaign may extend beyond the lone voice quoted above.
A report in Newark's Star-Ledger hints at
the scale of hurt being felt: "Ten young women whose lives were
disrupted when a man they did not know maligned them..." At this
rate, Imus will be lucky to be sentenced as a mere sexual predator.
But the greater tragedy is that he's off the air as the Duke
lacrosse story is resolved and no one will ask him to weigh in
against the discredited accuser or to offer congratulatory words to
the Duke defendants as they resume their quiet lives of books,
seminars, and poetry readings at the Phi Beta Kappa house.
Perhaps the most profound insight during the recent
unpleasantness came from the Washington Post censor who defended hip-hop as an "African
American art form" yet with every fiber in his being called on
every last one of us to "banish that hateful word 'ho' from the
language." So there goes Christmas. Will Santa Claus be charged as
a repeat offender?
We'll know soon enough, once Obama Barack interrupts his run for
student body president to demand Santa's resignation.
People power remains the name of the game. Although major
Democrats refuse to engage us in debate, Mr. F.S. Lewis of Roswell,
Georgia, has written in to request a "fair and balanced
presentation of the Don Imus situation." It would include "a slow
on the air reading of some current rap music lyrics." Sorry, F.S.
Lewis. We prefer C.S. Lewis. Or T.S. Eliot, if nepotism is a
concern.
Chicago's lone conservative Jack Hughes does Ben Stein one
better to say that "just about any week a person could nominate Al
Thurmond Sharpton for Enemy of the Week and be right on target...
but this week the nominee is the person who groveled before
Preacher Al -- Don Imus." But what about those who groveled before
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad? It really wasn't their fault, our faithful
friend Sir Donald Parnell informs us, but that of the Rt. Hon.
Desmond Browne, who serves as the Secretary of State for Defence in
the United Kingdom. Brownie's crime? "Dragging a once proud
institution, the Royal Navy, into the tabloid, 'Oprah' filled
sewers of modernity by allowing the sailors and Marines held
hostage [in Iran] to sell their noninspiring story to the
tabloids..."
Still, we rather like the Hon. Browne's job description -- just
what we have in mind in dealing with the seditious menace of one
Nancy Pelosi plus one Tom Lantos. Those two claim they're simply
enforcing a Democratic foreign policy. Well, others can play this
came as well. We can start with Condoleezza Rice and (sorry, Bob
Gates) rename her position, Secretary of State for Defense in the
United States. Then we'll expand Dr. Rice's resume further, as she
also becomes Republican Speaker of the House and Chairman of the
House Committee on Foreign Affairs. Right before Nancy and Tom file
a grievance with President Ahmadinejad's ethics council, Dr. Rice
will draw on the conflict resolution advice of Democratic poet
laureate emeritus Bob Dylan to ask them, "How does it feel?"
At which point we'll intervene to ask Tom and Nancy how it felt
to win this week's EOW medal? And they'll respond in one of three
ways: See you on Imus, see you in Tehran, or see you in hell. Oh,
well.
Send your Enemy of the Week nominations to Enemy Central
c/o editor@spectator.org.
topics:
Foreign Policy, Nancy Pelosi, Books, Iran, Africa