Wednesday, April 11, 2007

Justice or Retribution

Almost every blog has its post on the Imus issue and every news broadcast is discussing it. What I find disturbing is that there is little discussion of how to bring about justice in this situation. Those who advocate his dismissal from employment and revel in his humiliation are talking about punishment and retribution. By demanding Imus be fired, they are hoping to create an example to others or perhaps hurt Imus in return for hurting others with his words. But in my view, retribution and punishment will not bring justice, a goal much more difficult to achieve but certainly one more worthy of our efforts.

What is justice? The Greeks viewed justice as both a personal virtue and a goal for society to achieve. The dictionary defines it as, “The principle of moral rightness; equity. Conformity to moral rightness in action or attitude; righteousness”. As I’ve discussed at length in my previous post, this whole society has a problem with moral rightness in action and attitude, and the acceptance of ridicule and shocking remarks that demean others in the guise of humor is only the tip of the iceberg. On CNN this morning Rutgers coach, C. Vivian Stringer aptly pointed out,” It's not about the Rutgers women's basketball team, it's about women. Are women hos? Think about that. Would you have wanted your daughter to have been called that? It's not about they as black people or as nappy headed, it's about us as a people, black, white, purple or green.

And I want to suggest that as much as I speak about that, the truth of the matter is, that it is not even black and white; the color is green. The color is green. You see, because if we can tolerate as a society what has just taken place, the remarks that have been directed toward young women. I don't know how anyone could have heard this and not been personally hurt and offended.

When there is not equality for all, or when there's been denied equality for one, there's been denied equality for all. “

I think that the young women and the coach of the Rutgers basketball team understand justice as opposed to retribution or punishment. It would have been easy for them to give into anger and demand the figurative head of Imus on a platter, but they chose instead to use the opportunity to let the world and Imus know who they are as individuals. The coach has taken the opportunity to use Imus’s remarks to address the injustice in our society, not just a remark by a third-rate talk show host, but the larger injustice and moral bankruptcy of a society that values money over treating each other with respect and equality.

To have justice, we need to do more than demand that Imus resign or be fired. We need to look deep within ourselves and our society and ask for divine guidance to restore “moral rightness, equity. Conformity to moral rightness in action or attitude.” Maybe a beginning of justice would be for Imus and his sponsors to host a weekly program that would let us know each other and the pain that we cause each other through our thoughtless speech and action. Maybe they could discuss the greed that pervades our society and causes us to treat each other as objects instead of human beings. They could make us aware of the many people who deserve our respect and our attention for their achievements, like the Rutgers basketball players and their coach.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Hi Ceejay ... The demands for Imus's dismissal are more about preserving the commercial revenue of his network hosts rather than a genuine effort to make his unethical behavior an example for the rest of us.

MSNBC and CBS were pefectly willing to capitalize on his bigotry until it began to effect their profit margins.

Cartoon link below illustrates this assertion:

GETTING RICH ON SUBLIMINAL HATE

The lesson the Establishment media has taught us is white lies are acceptable and even necessary if one can gain monetarily from them. They know no "moral rightness" only how to foster an attitude regardless of how perversely abrasive it may be.

Unfortunately it's an example our currents residents in the White House have masterfully exploited as well which others such as Imus are regrettably imitating.

They won't stop until they realize money can't replace honesty.

Peace,
Cosmic

Cee Jay said...

Cosmic,
Thanks for your comment and the link to the cartoon. You are so right! Some have suggested that this incident was even staged to increase the ratings for both Imus and Sharpton, but drew a stronger reaction than the media expected. I don't buy into that conspiracy theory, but agree with you, firing Imas was all about ratings and money.