Posted on 04/04/2014 12:17:34 PM PDT by Kaslin
I like Megyn Kelly. The Fox News anchor is smart, lively and gorgeous. But she's managed to walk right into a controversy over race and ethnicity, and it's not the first time. These are treacherous waters for anyone in media -- but especially so for media personalities who are perceived as conservative. (Full disclosure: I am also a Fox News commentator.)
The current brouhaha involves Kelly's decision on Wednesday during her eponymous show not to name the shooter in the deadly attack at Ft. Hood. Here's what she said: "Authorities are identifying the shooter. If you are interested, you can get his name on other shows, like the one that preceded this one, and online, but we have decided not to name these mass killers as a policy here on 'The Kelly File.'"
So far, so good. While many might disagree with her decision, it seems motivated by a desire not to give mass killers the notoriety many of them desire. In this particular case, Kelly may be off target -- the shooter was a soldier being treated for mental health issues -- but the principle at stake is unobjectionable.
If Kelly had left it there, the controversy would be solely about whether naming mass killers is good or bad policy. Unfortunately, later in her show, she decided to comment on the shooter's ethnicity. "The nationality of the shooter, it sounds Hispanic, Latino, but you can look up his name online," she said.
Now, I have no problem with identifying race when it is relevant. If a suspect in a shooting is on the loose, it seems eminently sensible to describe what he or she looks like, including skin color. But in this case, Kelly's use of the shooter's ethnicity was superfluous. He'd already killed himself, as well as three others.
The problem for Kelly is compounded by an earlier controversy over her assertion that both Santa Claus and Jesus were white men. She's right, depending on how you define "white." St. Nicholas, after whom Santa Claus is modeled, was a 3rd-century bishop from a town that is now part of Turkey but was Greek at the time. Jesus of Nazareth was a Jew living in what is now Israel and likely looked more like El Greco's depiction of a dark-haired, dark-skinned Semite than Holbein's fair-haired Northern European.
To be fair, Kelly's comment on Santa Claus and Jesus was in response to an article in Slate that argued for Santa Claus to be turned into a penguin. The author, Aisha Harris, argued that in today's increasingly multiracial, multiethnic America, we should get rid of "Santa-as-fat-old-white-man," a sentiment that clearly struck Kelly as offensive.
She would have been better off at the time making the point that race is irrelevant -- or should be -- to both figures. And it is clearly irrelevant to the Ft. Hood shooting. Conservatives have to be especially careful in this regard.
I don't know what was going through Kelly's mind when she decided to raise the ethnicity issue -- but if she'd thought it through, I doubt the words would have come out of her mouth, which is one of the great dangers with live television.
One of the best ways I know to stop from uttering something that is likely to sound prejudiced is to imagine the words coming from someone who doesn't share your ethnicity -- even better, someone whose views you usually don't agree with -- and substituting your own ethnic or racial group for the one being talked about.
If Al Sharpton had said he wasn't going to name the shooter but the name sounded white, you can bet Kelly would have jumped all over the comment.
The Ft. Hood shooting was tragic. It does not appear from early reports that the shooter, Ivan Lopez, was motivated by anything other than mental illness. He served a short tour in Iraq and returned home depressed, anxious and possibly suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder, for which he was prescribed several medications. His superiors regarded him as an exemplary soldier; he was married and a father of four.
Because he took his own life (as well as cruelly killing three others and wounding another 16), we'll probably never know why he turned from a good soldier into a murderer. But one thing we can say for sure: The fact that he was Puerto Rican had nothing to do with it.
I’m now genuinely tired of talking about race and sexuality.
But....he didn't 'look' Puerto Rican.
Why? We will be branded as racist in any event, even by semi-conservative FOX News contributors.
Libs can spew any vile diatribe about any filthy, racist, homophobic TEA bagger, and it's OK, but let a semi-neutral talking head like Kelly, say anything, no matter how innocuous, and she has an entire column written about it {by a friend?}.
How exactly can we say that for sure?
Maybe he thought he was strking a blow for oppressed Puerto Ricans everywhere.
How exactly can we say that for sure?
Maybe he thought he was strking a blow for oppressed Puerto Ricans everywhere.
A "white Hispanic?"
Megyn Kelly Won’t Name Ft. Hood Shooter On Her Fox News Show (Video)
Opposing Views ^ | 04/03/2014 | Sarah Fruchtnicht
Posted on Thursday, April 03, 2014 10:25:09 AM by Responsibility2nd
It’s OK - hiding the ethnicity is worse. Everyone needs to take a deep breath and get real. One hispanic killer isn’t going to make everyone think ALL hispanice are killers. Give us a little credit here.
The advantage of telling the truth is we’ll start to trust our ‘news’ outlets again. Really, we can handle the truth... If the next 5 killers are hispanics we might need to have one of those ‘hard conversations’ about what’s going on...
It’s OK for people to connect dots - IF there’s enough dots... if there’s not, plenty of people will be rolling their eyes at REAL racism. Not the musing of guilty while liberal elites like the person who wrote this... where the ‘little people’ are too biased to handle the truth.
Really, this whole piece was insulting.
What’s race got to do with it? I’m not sure, since “Hispanic” is not a race. But as for identifying the name as Hispanic, it’s clearly a matter of what it’s not, a Muslim name, which is what people wanted to know. Anyone with a IQ above room temperature who’s not obsessed with political correctness would understand that, Linda.
ethnicity has become FAR too much of any story, a black man did this, a white woman shoplifted, a hispanic smoked a joint....who cares, and why have people become so enamored with race. At the drop of a hat, people will accuse others of being racist.....well, we are all racist to one extent or another but to accuse virtually every move a person makes as being racist is nonsense. I don’t like Obama because of his policies and methods....I wouldn’t like him if he was white, yellow, red, or whatever!
This is why “we can’t have an honest conversation” about ANYTHING! The PC police go bonkers if anyone talks about any demographic group that our government and liberals have defined.
I am tired of being told that I constantly have to walk on eggshells and bend over backwards to avoid saying anything that may ever be interpreted as not politically correct. I am tired of people who are so anxious to be able to present themselves as victims that they twist everything around and try to present it as racist, sexist, homophobic, etc. and supposedly the burden is on the honest person to defend himself or herself.
All this political correctness and victimhood is just a dishonest attempt to bully good people and make them afraid to speak the truth.
We should not worry about being "especially careful". We should confront these lying professional victims forcefully whenever they accuse us of being racist or whatever else they can dream up.
That would make him “Puerto RicanDASHAmerican”, right?
Lighten up Francis.
He wasn’t denied...but he was given only 24 hours...then it was extended to 2 days...and yes it was in Puerto Rico...All according to source you posted.
He IS red, to the core!
Because the left-stream media has become complicit in covering up the fact that blacks are disproportionately far more likely to be responsible for violent crime in this country, and black on white attacks are commonplace, whereas white on black crime is very rare. Yet these same libs complaint that we need "an honest conversation about race", by which they mean whites don't feel sufficiently guilty.
No.
It would make him American.
People from Puerto Rico are American citizens by birth.
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