Should
we talk about those who use the word n*gger out of turn, or those who
treat black folks like n*ggers from the Oval Office?
Let’s
talk about both, because we’re able to do both at the same
time.
Bill
Maher
has
found himself in the predicament of using the word white folks shall
not utter — except for some limited circumstances like
providing testimony under oath in a courtroom — and then
reaping the whirlwind for it. On last week’s episode of
Real
Time on HBO,
Maher was interviewing Sen. Ben Sasse (R-Nebraska). This is what
transpired between the two men:
Maher:
Adults dress up for Halloween. They don’t do that in Nebraska?
Sasse:
It’s frowned upon. We don’t do that quite as much.
Maher:
I gotta get to Nebraska more.
Sasse
You’re welcome. We’d love to have you work in the fields
with us.
Maher:
Work in the fields? Senator, I’m a house n*****.
Some
would say Maher got ahead of himself at that moment, or perhaps got a
little too comfortable around black people. I admit when I heard him
say it on live cable, it took me by surprise for an instant. But then
I concluded it didn’t offend me, which in and of itself
surprised me. Perhaps it was the context of his comment. But people
are all over the place on this.
For
example, DeRay Mckesson and Chance The Rapper want Maher gone from
HBO yesterday:
Michael
Eric Dyson and Killer Mike took a different, more nuanced approach.
On the one hand, Dyson acknowledged that n*gger is a word reserved
only for black use, yet declared Maher’s support for black
causes. On the other hand, Killer Mike said we have bigger fish to
fry:
It
would be foolish and irresponsible not to acknowledge the power and
the pain inherent in the word n*gger. After all, it was hundreds of
years in the making and reflects the essence of the oppression we
have faced. Black people have been known to internalize the word and
use it as a form of self-abuse and self-hatred, while also seizing it
and flipping it, neutralizing it, and even using it as a term of
endearment, as the subjugated sometimes do. Last year,
Larry
Wilmore
made
it work when he addressed
President
Obama
at
the White House Correspondents’ Dinner, back when presidents
attended those things.
African-Americans
also risk not being able to see the forest for the trees if we assign
so much power to the word that we care more about what
Bill
Maher
said
than what Donald Trump is doing. Bill Maher put his money where his
mouth is when he gave $1 million to the Obama campaign in 2012. On
the other hand, he has offended some with his
fixation
on Islamic terrorism
and
for
calling
Black Lives Matter protesters “f*cking idiots”
as well as for criticizing Hilary Clinton during the presidential
campaign season.
As
we discuss whether Bill Maher should have license to say n*gger on
HBO, let us consider those who treat us like n*ggers every single
day.
Trump
treats black people like n*ggers in just about everything he does —
certainly when he stocked the West Wing full of Klan and Nazis, or
when he had all the HBCU presidents at the White House, then refused
to increase funding for HBCUs — which was predictable, by the
way.
Betsy
DeVos, Trump’s education secretary, might as well have called
black folks n*gger when she gave the commencement address at
Bethune-Cookman University, right before the announcement that
K-12
education and college student loans would face deep cuts
to
support her public school privatization racket. DeVos’s only
claim to fame is being a rich white lady who owns much of the
Republican Party and the politicians therein — except for the
shares claimed by the Koch Brothers, the Mercers, the Murdochs and
Putin – which, apparently, gives her the right.
Mick
Mulvaney, Trump’s budget director, surely treated somebody like
a n*gger when he said there is no proof at-risk programs such as
after-school and Meals on Wheels work. “We’re no longer
going to measure compassion by the number of programs or the number
of people on those programs,” Mulvaney
said.
“We’re going to measure compassion and success by the
number of people we help get off those programs and back in charge of
their own lives.”
Those
Republicans who voted for Trumpcare in the hopes of killing more
people will n*ggerize you and try to convince you it was your idea.
Those who push voter ID, voter suppression and racial gerrymandering
believe n*ggers never should vote.
Let’s
make sure that should we choose to wage war on the so-called N-word,
we don’t lose sight of the war in the corporate suites that
impacts our access to capital and advertising revenue, and the war in
the courtroom that robs us of our lives and livelihood, our families
and our freedom.
Spend
too much time on who is exercising the First Amendment, and risk
forgetting the Second Amendment remedies being used against us.
Reserve your outrage for Kathy Griffin for holding a fake bloodied
head of Trump, and forget that black children, women and men shed
real blood, dying from police bullets, chokeholds and Tasers, in jail
cells and by vigilante violence. And Trump and his Jim Crow attorney
general don’t give a damn about that. But they do care about
imprisoning journalists, protesters, and those who, like Bill Maher
and Kathy Griffin, use their high-profile status and cache to resist
this administration.
We
can walk and chew gum at the same time. We can focus on words that
may offend, while not losing sight of policies that could hurt.
This commentary was originally published by The Grio
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