Options
The Double Standard on 'Hoes'
· Friday, January 27, 2012
Remember when Don Imus saw his cushy CBS Radio and MSNBC career go up in smoke in 2007 when he tried very early one morning to make one of his fake misanthropic jokes about the Rutgers women's basketball team being "nappy-headed hoes"? Black activists demanded his firing. Advertisers fled. The corporate suits, appalled and fearful of the terrible publicity, canned him.
But if you're a black rapper, terms like this advance your career. The female rapper Nicki Minaj has a very hot new video called "Stupid Hoe." She uses that same term to snap at other women -- "We ship platinum, them b----es are shipping wood / Them nappy-headed hoes, but my kitchen good." (Don't hurt your brain trying to make sense of it.) Minaj even threw the n-word in the lyrics: "How you gon' be the stunt double to the nigga monkey?"
The video broke YouTube records by clocking up 4.8 million views in its first 24 hours on the site and 11 million over the weekend. But outrage from our elites? Hello? Anyone? So far, the silence is deafening from America's major race-card players.
Back in 2007, Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton -- the dynamic duo of racial correctness -- met with CBS chairman Leslie Moonves to demand Imus be given the boot. When they won, Jackson called the firing "a victory for public decency. No one should use the public airwaves to transmit racial or sexual degradation."
Sharpton added: "It's not about taking Imus down. It's about lifting decency up...We cannot afford a precedent established that the airways can commercialize and mainstream sexism and racism."
Sumner Redstone, chairman of the CBS Corporation board and its chief stockholder, had told Newsweek that he had expected Moonves to "do the right thing." Translation: Bye-bye, Imus.
It seems rather clear that Imus deserved some punishment, even if his dismissal might be excessive. So why were the reverends applauded universally for their activism?
Because all of their fuss wasn't about "public decency" or "degradation" or media companies "mainstreaming racism and sexism," not really. It was about race, and about how whites can't say "indecent" things about blacks, not even in jest. But blacks can use those very same words -- however they wish -- with the ugliest of intentions, if desired, with impunity. Where are Jackson and Sharpton over "Stupid Hoe" now? Cricket, cricket.
The Washington Post is running a major series this week on the self-esteem issues of black women in America. But when will the Post and other media scolds discover this song and what it says -- and shouldn't say -- about black women?
As for degrading public decency, the song has 10 uses of "bitch," 10 F-bombs and unsurprisingly, 37 uses of "hoe." The refrain, if you want to call it that, is "You a stupid hoe" -- repeated 14 times. A verb, like the word "are," was apparently not necessary. This has to be one of the dumbest, most illiterate songs ever to go viral.
Just because Minaj caused a major YouTube splash and just because the elites were silent, doesn't mean the reaction was favorable. Anyone who clicks on it quickly learns this is not a song, but a droning, rapid-fire, hip-hop headache. The video is so jumpy it could cause epileptic seizures. In the first few days, YouTube watchers gave the Minaj video about twice as many dislikes as likes -- 176,000 to 87,000.
Some commenters just nailed it: "You know, if she's trying to call someone else a stupid hoe, it doesn't help her case too much when she's on all fours, dressed like a leopard, trapped in a cage and whipping her hair everywhere."
But this is my favorite: "36 seconds in and I was losing the will to live."
Last summer, Minaj shocked many by having a breast pop out as she performed on ABCs "Good Morning America." Why the Disney-owned network put this woman on is anybody's guess. She was performing the song "Where Them Girls At," with classy morning-TV lyrics like "You can suck a d--k, or you can suck a ballsack." In her "Stupid Hoe" song, Minaj raps twice "you can suck my diznik."
Minaj is an artist for Cash Money Records, now a subsidiary of the Universal Music Group, which brags that it is "the world's largest music content company." (The French media conglomerate Vivendi did not include UMG in its NBC-Universal deal.) If one accepts these boasts, no one in the world can "mainstream racism and sexism" faster than these people. Let's see if the Imus firing squad ever says a word.
COPYRIGHT 2012 CREATORS.COM
Third-party content does not necessarily reflect the opinions of The Patriot Post.
Options
Subscribe
Accuracy in Media Editor Cliff Kincaid: "Mark Alexander is the recipient of the 2007 AIM Award for Grassroots Journalism. It is an honor to be associated with Mark and PatriotPost.US." It's Right. It's Free. Subscribe now!
The Right Opinion
- Rich Galen: Obama & Romney Tout Good News
- Edwin J. Feulner: 'Law of the Sea' Treaty: Sink It
- Arnold Ahlert: With Democrats, You're Either All In - or All Out
- Oliver North: Memorial Day 2012
- Ken Blackwell: Remarks on Religious Liberty
- L. Brent Bozell: Canada's 'Scientific' Museum of Smut
- Michelle Malkin: Obama's Land of the LOST
- Rebecca Hagelin: The 'Gay Marriage' Spin
- David Limbaugh: Obama and Leahy vs. Sir William Blackstone
- Linda Chavez: Overreach by Unions in Wisconsin
- Mona Charen: Obama's Education Hypocrisy -- Again
- Jonah Goldberg: Big Business Gets the Hollywood Treatment
Grassroots Commentary
Policy and Analysis
- Heritage Foundation Insider
- Heritage Foundation Research
- American Enterprise Institute
- Center for Strategic and International Studies
- The Cato Institute
- Hoover Institution
- National Rifle Association
- Ludwig von Mises Institute
- Citizens Against Government Waste
- National Center for Policy Analysis
- The Heartland Institute
Our Mission
"The Patriot's mission is to advocate for Essential Liberty, the restoration of constitutional limits on government and the judiciary, and to promote free enterprise, national defense and traditional American values. Our objective is to provide Patriots across our nation with a touchstone of First Principles through brief, informative and entertaining analyses of relevant news, policy and opinion from reputable research, advocacy and media organizations, so they may better support and defend those Principles, and enlist others to join our ranks." —Mark Alexander, Publisher
The Patriot Post is not sustained by any political, special interest or parent organization, and we accept no advertising. Our mission and operations are funded entirely by the voluntary financial support of Patriots like you!























mmccrindle
The two most racist men on this planet are Al Sharpton and Jesse Jackson.
Yet these same two rake in millions in donations by stoking racial hatred.
If blacks ever get wise to the fact that they've been played like fools by these charlatans, they just might realize a society that Dr. King envisioned.
It simply amazes me why any black, or any minority for that matter, would even vote for Democrats who have done nothing for them save to 'keep them in their place'.
Posted January 27, 2012 at 7:51:42 AM
Holmes Simons
@mmc: You said it!
Both of these nappy-headed hoe-faux reverends are never-ordained charlatans who miraculously have made a fortune for being in the same town at the same time as Dr. King. The content of their character is great enough to fill a latrine.
Just like the song says, they are among the last niggers in America….and two of the worst.
Posted January 27, 2012 at 1:39:02 PM
memurphy
The best sentence in Bozell's article is the stating
176,000 DISLIKES. I do not watch such filthy vids,and can't imagine the kind of viewers that could like such garbage!!!
Posted January 27, 2012 at 5:31:08 PM
Emcee
It is another indication of the moral bankruptcy of America, when such trash is even considered for publication and/or viewing.
Posted January 27, 2012 at 6:24:48 PM
Adrien Nash
For sure, no one is minding the store. Can you imagine the record company execs allowing their own daughters to listen to the poison that their underlings create and release while they are out having power lunches and betting at Hollywood Park race track. It's just business, it's just words, no one gets hurt, physically that is. But what part of "an impressionable age" do those morons not understand? Their degenerate products are infecting the mothers of tomorrow with a serious gangrene of the spirit. But don't think that such crap is having a general decaying effect. It only damages those who listen to it, but it damages them big time. Once such sleaze gets into their consciousness through such a repetitive work there's no getting it out.
But the real tragedy may be that they are already damaged before they expose themselves to external auditory excrement, and it only reflects the poisoned state of their already degenerate consciousness. But that doesn't describe the young and still untarnished. With almost every child owning internet devises, they are vulnerable in a way that no children in history have been.
Posted January 28, 2012 at 1:24:35 AM
Mike in Indianapolis
Imus was guilty, guilty I tell you! He was guilty of not being as cool as he thought he was. He had no clear understanding of the racial divide that separates those who can say anything they want and those who can't. I suspect he thought that his presence in the media placed him above the fray. He guessed wrong and was toppled for his error. Whether this was just or not, is immaterial. It's not his world anymore and he hadn't read the eviction notice.
Posted January 30, 2012 at 10:11:24 AM
JAC
Hey, Mike in Indy: As a typical left wing apologist, you obviously missed the entire point of the column--but I'm not surprised. You sound like a knee-jerk liberal like Alan Colmes, that "morally rancid, smirking skull" on Fox News.
Posted January 30, 2012 at 5:52:15 PM