Leave it to me to somehow tie Don Imus & Rutgers to an obscure Star Wars reference
They fired Imus yesterday. I’m still not sure what I think about the entire debacle. I agree with everyone else that what he said was beyond defense and the way he handled the outcry was less than stellar. His comments were despicable and the Rutgers team didn’t deserve any of his nastiness.
I had listened to Imus from time to time a few years ago. He just sounded like an angry, bitter, old man who couldn’t say anything nice about anyone – except John Kerry before he lost the election…then he turned on him, too. I did what everyone should do when they don’t like what they hear on the radio…change the station and forget about him.
As the hype surrounding “the I-Man’s” comments intensified, I grew uncomfortable about where it was heading. It wasn’t because I had any sympathy whatsoever for Imus’s situation. What he said was tame compared to some of the stuff I’d heard him say before. It was not a one-time incident. You eventually reap what you sow. It doesn’t really matter if you help so many children’s charities raise so much money every year if you’re a jerk the rest of the time. Charity does not automatically a good person make (hmmm…I think I see a potential sermon here…that might preach…). My concern was (and is) about the precedent established by firing Imus because he said something inflammatory. I was especially struck by Rev. Sharpton’s complaint that this was said on public airwaves and how such hate should be removed from the public airwaves…and implied the FCC should be involved. Where’s the freedom of speech in that? Is there even such a thing anymore? “The Thought Police is just around the corner,” I thought to myself.
I don’t think I’m too off-base, though. Tom DeLay is already leading the charge, calling for Rosie’s firing from The View. Keith Olbermann seems to have a hit list of who should “be next” (they talk about it halfway down this transcript…conveniently, it’s all right-wing talkshow hosts…how lovely). Why do we feel like we need to shout everyone else down? Are we already so far down the road that we can’t even have civil dialogue with people with whom we disagree? When will it end? I don’t like this road we’re on. Someone stop the bus! I want to get off!
Ironic, isn’t it? Sixty years ago this weekend, Jackie Robinson faced more than a stupid, off-handed, ugly remark when he shattered the racial barrier in Major League Baseball…years before the civil rights movement began to take shape. He literally put his life on the line every time he put on a ball cap for the Dodgers. Is this why he broke through that barrier…so we can beat down an arrogant jerk who said some pretty stupid things? How is this episode fostering any type of unity? How far have we really come in sixty years?
I have a lot of questions. Most of them will remain unanswered, I’m afraid.
Today, after Imus’s fate was sealed with both MSNBC and CBS radio, the Rutgers women’s team announced that they had accepted his apology. I, being the Star Wars nerd that I am, couldn’t help but think of a scene in Empire Strikes Back. You can’t push this analogy too far…none of this was any fault of the Rutgers ladies. Imus set himself up for this. The timing still struck me as odd.
Anyway…
Captain Needa’s ship was pursuing the Milennium Falcon. They suddenly lost track of the Falcon. In a stroke of considerably bad luck, Darth Vader asked for a report on Needa’s progress in the pursuit of their prey…right after the Falcon disappeared from all of their scanning devices. Out of nobility (maybe it was stupidity), Needa boarded his shuttle and flew over to Vader’s ship so he could apologize to the Dark Lord in person.
The next time we see Needa, he’s on the floor, gasping for breath. Yep, Vader was choking him with that invisible death grip he has. As Needa takes his last breath and collapses to the floor, Vader turns, walks away, and says, “Apology accepted, Captain Needa.”
Apology accepted, indeed.
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