In WSJ Limbaugh Blasts 'Contempt in News Business for Conservatives,' It 'Reflects Blind Hatred'
Saturday's “Weekend Edition” of the Wall Street Journal featured an op-ed from
Rush Limbaugh, that went online Friday night, in which Limbaugh,
echoing his on-air observations,
outlined how “this spectacle is bigger” than left-wingers trying to
keep him out of the NFL. After noting the leading roles of
race-hustlers Al Sharpton and Jesse Jackson in smearing him as a
racist, Limbaugh proposed in his penultimate paragraph:
There is a contempt in the news business, including
the sportswriter community, for conservatives that reflects the blind
hatred espoused by Messrs. Sharpton and Jackson. “Racism” is too often
their sledgehammer. And it is being used to try to keep citizens
who don't share the left's agenda from participating in the full array
of opportunities this nation otherwise affords each of us. It was on
display many years ago in an effort to smear Clarence Thomas with
racist stereotypes and keep him off the Supreme Court. More recently,
it was employed against patriotic citizens who attended town-hall
meetings and tea-party protests.
Earlier in the piece, “The Race Card, Football and Me,” America's
most popular talk radio show host called out syndicated Washington Post
sports columnist Michael Wilbon and others for “slanders against me” in
forwarding fabricated quotes:
“Wilbon wasn't alone. Numerous sportswriters, CNN, MSNBC, among others, falsely attributed to me statements I had never made.” Specifically: “I never said I supported slavery and I never praised
James Earl Ray. How sick would that be? Just as sick as those who would
use such outrageous slanders against me or anyone else who never even
thought such things.
Mr. Wilbon refuses to take responsibility for his poison pen, writing instead that he will take my word that I did not make these statements; others, like
Rick Sanchez of CNN, essentially used the same sleight-of-hand.”
An excerpt from “
The Race Card, Football and Me:
My critics would have you believe no conservative meets NFL
'standards,'” Limbaugh's piece in the Saturday/Sunday, October
17-18 Wall Street Journal:
....It didn't take long before my name was selectively
leaked to the media as part of the Checketts investment group. Shortly
thereafter, the media elicited comments from the likes of Al Sharpton.
In 1998 Mr. Sharpton was found guilty of defamation and ordered to pay
$65,000 for falsely accusing a New York prosecutor of rape in the 1987
Tawana Brawley case. He also played a leading role in the 1991 Crown
Heights riot (he called neighborhood Jews "diamond merchants") and 1995
Freddie's Fashion Mart riot.
Not to be outdone, Jesse Jackson, whose history includes
anti-Semitic speech (in 1984 he referred to Jews as "Hymies" and to New
York City as "Hymietown" in a Washington Post interview) chimed in. He
found me unfit to be associated with the NFL. I was too divisive and
worse. I was accused of once supporting slavery and having praised
Martin Luther King Jr.'s murderer, James Earl Ray.
Next came writers in the sports world, like the Washington Post's
Michael Wilbon. He wrote this gem earlier this week: "I'm not going to
try and give specific examples of things Limbaugh has said over the
years because I screwed up already doing that, repeating a quote
attributed to Limbaugh (about slavery) which he has told me he simply
did not say and does not reflect his feelings. I take him at his word."
Mr. Wilbon wasn't alone. Numerous sportswriters, CNN, MSNBC, among
others, falsely attributed to me statements I had never made. Their
sources, as best I can tell, were Wikipedia and each other. But the
Wikipedia post was based on a fabrication printed in a book that also
lacked any citation to an actual source.
I never said I supported slavery and I never praised James Earl Ray.
How sick would that be? Just as sick as those who would use such
outrageous slanders against me or anyone else who never even thought
such things. Mr. Wilbon refuses to take responsibility for his poison
pen, writing instead that he will take my word that I did not make
these statements; others, like Rick Sanchez of CNN, essentially used
the same sleight-of-hand....
As I explained on my radio show, this spectacle is bigger than I am
on several levels. There is a contempt in the news business, including
the sportswriter community, for conservatives that reflects the blind
hatred espoused by Messrs. Sharpton and Jackson. "Racism" is too often
their sledgehammer. And it is being used to try to keep citizens who
don't share the left's agenda from participating in the full array of
opportunities this nation otherwise affords each of us. It was on
display many years ago in an effort to smear Clarence Thomas with
racist stereotypes and keep him off the Supreme Court. More recently,
it was employed against patriotic citizens who attended town-hall
meetings and tea-party protests.
These intimidation tactics are working and spreading, and they are a cancer on our society.
— Brent Baker is Vice President for Research and Publications at the Media Research Center