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Recently,
I made an online comment about Michael Myers’
Washington Post article about the Don Imus affair. A
comment on a comment on a comment. I live in a small
country town. I keep busy.
I noticed
that many of the other commentators could not seem to
see that punishment by the market is very different from
passing laws against racist and sexist expression.
What’s racist? World War II movies that stereotype the
Japanese? Breakfast at Tiffany’s, with its truly
ugly depiction of Holly Golightly’s Asian landlord?
Ninety-five percent of everything is sexist. Extreme
Makeover is sexist. You like it? Tough.
Notice the
knee-jerk repetition of the phrase, “it’s the law.” No
smoking. It’s the law. Don’t drink and drive. It’s the
law. Buckle up. It’s the law. I buckle up because
smashed brains make such a mess, not because it’s the
law.
I’m proud
to live in a society that took Imus down. Media
types will now think twice about spouting whatever
bubbles up from the sewer of their own subconscious,
just as plainer folks hesitate to tell the boss, “I
don’t like your face.”
But we can ban all annoying, dangerous or stupid
behavior—from bad breath to bad marriages. With the
magic words, “It’s the law,” together we can make a
perfect world.
This is
a comment on a comment on a comment. O.K., I need a
life. Imus needs a life and new income sources. We’re
free to comment and take the consequences.
There is a
difference between markets’ control of behavior,
listener- consumers who vote with their wallets, and
government control of behavior. If we don’t get that
distinction, we won’t be free for long. |