Imperial Valley Press

Sadly, Roseanne is a victim to some

- JOHN L. MICEK An award-winning political journalist, John L. Micek is the Opinion Editor and Political Columnist for PennLive/The Patriot-News in Harrisburg, Pa. Readers may follow him on Twitter @ByJohnLMic­ek and email him at jmicek@pennlive.com

Words matter. What we say to each other, how we treat each other matters.

There are basic norms of civilized behavior, outside the realm of politics, beyond the reach of cable network news, that we should all be able to agree upon.

One of them is that, if you call an African-American woman an “ape,” that you are the worst kind of vile racist. And you deserve whatever scorn, whatever vitriol, whatever criticism that comes your way as a result of your actions.

It shouldn’t be hard to call racist remarks racist. It shouldn’t be hard to decry a viciously personal and apparently unprovoked attack.

But because of the remove of social media, because the forces at the very top of the American power structure have normalized the worst kind offensive behavior, there’s somehow a difference.

Because we live in the times that we do, those same disgusting words, uttered by the comedienne Roseanne Barr, about the former Obama administra­tion adviser Valerie Jarrett, who is African-American, are being inevitably viewed through the filter of partisan politics.

And that means, to some, they are, as shockingly, mystifying­ly, horrifying­ly as it seems, entirely acceptable.

And to them, Barr — not Jarrett — is a victim.

That sadly unsurprisi­ng sentiment came through loud and clear on Wednesday morning when a reader decided to share his views on my office voicemail.

“Yes, I would like to show my support for Roseanne Barr,” he began. “The Muslim Brotherhoo­d, the Planet of the Apes. Yeah, you have a perfect Valerie Jarrett. I studied this picture last night. What’s wrong with saying something like that? Oh, all the butt- hurt liberal media. You know what? I hope they all drop dead because Roseanne is right. And that lady ... woman is a b***h anyway.”

That’s one of your neighbors. One of your colleagues. The guy in front of you in the supermarke­t checkout line. The person sitting next to you in church.

That’s the hateful voice of racism here in central Pennsylvan­ia. And if he were the only one, a lone whackjob crying out in the wilderness, that’d be one thing.

But he’s not.

He’s the torch-bearing, Nazi-flag waving white supremacis­t who marched in Charlottes­ville last year.

He’s the extreme end of a spectrum that starts with the sort of ignorant prejudice that prompted Starbucks to close its shops on Tuesday to conduct sensitivit­y training for its employees.

But sometimes they don’t march. Sometimes they wear suits. And they run for Congress.

“Much love @therealros­eanne. We live in a country were people don’t respect our constituti­on. One of most essential freedoms is freedom to express ourselves even if it makes others upset. It’s beautiful to think different. Shame on the leftist media,” Republican Omar Navarro, who’s running against U.S. Rep. Maxine Waters, D-Calif., tweeted Wednesday.

Republican. Democrat. Independen­t. It doesn’t matter.

There is no universe, there is no moral plane where what Roseanne Barr said is even remotely acceptable. It wasn’t funny. It wasn’t a joke. And it wasn’t the first time, either. As Christine Emba of The Washington Post writes, Barr has “a history of making inflammato­ry statements and pushing right-wing conspiracy theories — whether it’s lending credence to a bizarre theory that Democrats ran a pedophile ring; making wild insinuatio­ns about the death of Democratic National Committee employee Seth Rich; or accusing businessma­n and philanthro­pist George Soros of Nazism and attempts to undermine American democracy.”

And because Barr has a platform, a voice, it emboldens others.

Some among you will say that Barr had a First Amendment right to say what she said. And you’d be right. But the First Amendment doesn’t shield her from the consequenc­es of her actions.

Her employer, Walt Disney Entertainm­ent and ABC, which knew what it was getting from Barr when they hired her and green-lighted her show anyway, fired her, calling her tweeted words “abhorrent, repugnant and inconsiste­nt with our values.”

Barr has since blamed her racism on the sleep drug Ambien, prompting its manufactur­er, Sanofi, in some serious Twitter shade, to release a statement asserting that racism is not among the medication’s known side effects.

In the end, though, it’s on the rest of us, Republican, Democrat, independen­t, Christian, Jew, Muslim, or nothing at all, to simply stand up and say enough, to forcefully assert, that racism has no place in our midst.

Whether that’s on our TV screens or at the highest levels of power.

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