Issues of race, gender identity,
and sexual orientation trigger a particular type of news broadcasting
on the major networks.
With their objective to provide viewers with “infotainment,” rather
than fair and balanced reporting, discerning television viewers
- straight and gay alike - are most often insulted by the news
than informed by it.
Case in point: “The O’Reilly Factor” with
Bill O’Reilly on the Fox News Channel, which recently tipped
the scales of purportedly delivering fair and balanced reporting.
O’Reilly carelessly brought defamatory news to his viewers
about an alleged national epidemic of black lesbian gang violence
terrorizing neighborhoods and schools in large urban enclaves.
According to Rod Wheeler,
a Fox News crime analyst, these black lesbian gangs recruit
and force kids into
homosexuality. “There
is this national underground network, if you will, Bill, of women
that’s lesbian and also some men groups that’s actually
recruiting kids as young as 10 years old in a lot of the schools
in communities across the country,” Wheeler told host O’Reilly
on the show.
And the notorious black lesbian
gang, Dykes Taking Over, is supposedly a pedophiliac gang carrying
weapons
and violently
attacking and raping the girl victims they recruit. “As
a matter of fact, some of the kids have actually reported that
they were actually forced into, you know, performing sex acts
and doing sex acts with some of these people,” Wheeler
continued.
And corroborating Wheeler’s crime-busting story is former
lesbian gang-banger and evangelist Linda D. Jernigan, who was
asked to speak at a Chicago area public school on the topic,
but was turned down because the school wanted her to “de-Christianize” her
conversion testimony.
Jernigan nonetheless gives
her testimony to all and any who will listen. She told Peter
LaBarbera of
the right-wing organization
Americans for Truth about Homosexuality, “Lesbian girl
gangs would drag a targeted female into the school restroom,
hold her down, and perform oral sex on her to ‘turn her
out” by forcibly seducing the poor girl through lesbian
rape.”
Although O’Reilly had to apologize for the egregious errors
and lies reported on his show, the story has nonetheless achieved
the desired goal of “infotaining ” its audience by
perpetuating both frighteningly racist and homophobic stereotypes.
“We overstated the extent of gay gangs in the Washington
area. .... Detective Wheeler has apologized,” O’Reilly
stated on his show.
And the report about “Dykes Take Over” offered
no evidence to support the allegations.
The story about this purported trend of black lesbian gangs
actually derives from a story about several black lesbians coming
home late from a night out in Greenwich Village in New York City
in August 2006. They defended themselves against an anti-gay
attack.
Because of poor legal representation,
three of the women pleaded guilty to attempted assault, and
were
sentenced to six months
in jail and five years probation. However, these women were depicted
in the media as “a posse of lesbians,” “a pack
of marauding lesbians” and a “gang of lesbian women,” all
created in the imaginative and entertaining world of news broadcasting.
But the real story not told is how little is ever accurately
reported about hate crimes against black lesbians - and other
gay, bisexual and transgender people of color - and how issues
of race, gender identity, and sexual orientation trigger the
type of violence against them. Nor are the reasons for the silence
around such violence often explored.
For example, on the morning of May 11, 2003, Shakia Gun, 15,
was stabbed to death when she and her girlfriends rebuffed the
sexual overtures of two African-American men by disclosing to
them that their disinterest was simply because they were all
lesbians.
Around 3:30 a.m. that morning,
Gun and a group of her girlfriends, ages 15-17, going home
from Manhattan
to Newark, N.J. While waiting
for the bus, two African-American men in a white station wagon
harassed the girls. "At some point during their interaction,
they made their sexual orientation known. They made it clear
that they weren't interested," Lt. Derek Glenn, a spokesman
for the Newark Police Department, told the Associated Press.
Incensed that the girls rebuffed them - and by lesbians, no
less - the two assailants reportedly jumped out of their
car and got into a scuffle with the
girls.
Stabbed by one of the men, Gun dropped to the ground and died
shortly after arriving at University Hospital in Newark.
The lack of reporting on this type of hate crime is for three
reasons - all dealing with race.
The first reason is the "politics of silence" in
LGBTQ communities of color to openly report these kinds of
attacks
unless it results in death. With being openly queer and often
estranged if not alienated from our communities of color, reporting
attacks against us by other people of color can make victims
viewed as race traitors. So we end up colluding in the violence
against us.
The second reason has to do
with the dearth of LGBTQ reporters of color writing for both
straight and queer
white media. Those
papers and television networks sensitive to race issues, but
that don't have LGBTQ people of color working for them, often
engage in the "politics of avoidance" and won't broach
the topic for fear that the news organization won't bring the
right angle or sensitivity to the topic. With the objective of
newspapers and networks to report the news, those media engaging
in the "politics of avoidance" when it comes to people
of color do a disservice not only to the profession, but also
to the entire LGBTQ community.
The third reason has a lot
to do with how the media view the topic of violence and people
of color as
synonymous. From such
a skewed perspective, there is no news to report. And if so,
it’s both defamatory and sensationalized.
The end result is a kind of institutional racism and homophobia
that not only revictimizes those targeted by such crimes, but
also falters in serving the community these news organizations
purport to serve.
BlackCommentator.com columnist, the Rev.
Irene Monroe is a religion columnist, public theologian, and
speaker. She is a Ford Fellow and doctoral candidate at Harvard
Divinity School. As an African American feminist theologian,
she speaks for a sector of society that is frequently invisible.
Her website is www.irenemonroe.com. Click
here to contact the Rev. Monroe.