ideologyhunter
Contributor
Aren't turtles the victims?
I agree. Getting caught by the camera making a goofy face is one thing. But ripping someone on physical features is in bad taste in most instances and flat out racist in others. I never felt comfortable with people making fun of Chris Christie's size either.There's not much more wrong with calling Obama a horse than there is calling McConnell a turtle. She does kind of look like the horse there. It's considered more out of line to make fun of a woman's appearance, again because of the historical context surrounding doing so regarding a woman's value being tied to how attractive she is, but it's still a far cry from comparing black people to apes.
Nobody over 12 is unaware of this.
Many have said that Mitch McConnell kinda looks like a turtle. Can't say I disagree. Is he owed an apology?
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But many vocal rightwing personalities were quick to rush to Roseanne’s defense, often employing, as Lahren acknowledged, a variety of mental gymnastics to argue that the comedian’s tweets weren’t racist.
Singer Ted Nugent, said: “So Roseanne referencing a movie title is racist. Lying dishonest soulless freaks from Planet of the Apes.”
Barr’s tweet had said the former Obama White House adviser Valerie Jarrett was the “baby” of “Muslim brotherhood & planet of the apes”.
Nugent’s denial of the racist connotations of comparing an African American woman to an ape was common among avowed Trump supporters. Bill Mitchell, one of Trump’s most prolific supporters on social media, tweeted that, in the Planet of the Apes, the apes were superior and so comparing Jarrett to an ape was not racist. Mitchell deleted the tweet shortly after posting it.
The assertion that Roseanne’s tweets were not racist were also accompanied by cries of political correctness gone mad. Mark Dice, a rightwing conspiracy theorist with 317,000 Twitter followers snarked: “Time to ban monkey bars from all school playgrounds, because they’re ‘racist’ too, I guess. RE: Roseanne fired by ABC.”
During a Fox News panel, Noelle Nikpour, a Republican strategist, said the comedian was fired because “we live in a politically correct world right now”. And Alex Jones, who is currently being sued for spreading a conspiracy theory that Sandy Hook was a hoax, railed against the “THOUGHT POLICE”.
Many have said that Mitch McConnell kinda looks like a turtle. Can't say I disagree. Is he owed an apology?
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As with everything else about the Trump occupation, I always wonder who these people think they're fooling? Or, simpler, who are they talking to? Are there Trump supporters out there who don't think he's a racist or that Roseanne wasn't being racist? Very clearly, Nugent knows she was being racist, so who is he trying to fool into thinking she wasn't being racist? Other racists?
Do they think that by denying it, we will all go, "Oh, ok. Sorry. I guess we misunderstood. Thanks!"?
As with everything else about the Trump occupation, I always wonder who these people think they're fooling? Or, simpler, who are they talking to? Are there Trump supporters out there who don't think he's a racist or that Roseanne wasn't being racist? Very clearly, Nugent knows she was being racist, so who is he trying to fool into thinking she wasn't being racist? Other racists?
Do they think that by denying it, we will all go, "Oh, ok. Sorry. I guess we misunderstood. Thanks!"?
The people who try to defend this kind of crap by saying "Well, if it's not OK to call A a B, would it be OK to call X a Y then?", I refer to as childish, because their question indicates that they are working (or wish to work) at stage one of Kholberg's stages of moral development (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lawrence_Kohlberg%27s_stages_of_moral_development).
The question 'If that's against the rules, then what about this?', depends on the implication that immorality is a matter of breaking an arbitrary rule, and that if one can establish what the set of rules are, one might then be able to behave in a 'correct' fashion, and avoid punishment or censure (claims of 'Political Correctness' fall into a similar category, with the idea that there is a set of 'correct' behaviours).
Adults don't handle morality by defining specific rules for every circumstance. They use universal ethical principles to navigate social situations, and these principles lead to highly nuanced behaviour (such as it being only a mild insult to call G W Bush a monkey, but completely unacceptable to use the same epithet for Michelle Obama).
Hence the calls to grow up.
As with everything else about the Trump occupation, I always wonder who these people think they're fooling? Or, simpler, who are they talking to? Are there Trump supporters out there who don't think he's a racist or that Roseanne wasn't being racist? Very clearly, Nugent knows she was being racist, so who is he trying to fool into thinking she wasn't being racist? Other racists?
Do they think that by denying it, we will all go, "Oh, ok. Sorry. I guess we misunderstood. Thanks!"?
I see it as more about reassuring themselves that they themselves are not racist and that they don't deserve the opprobrium associated with the thoughts and feelings they have about various groups of people. They are certainly driven by anger at being marginalized socially. That may be why they love Trump so much--because he seems to lend social legitimacy to them. And, frankly, I think Trump is having that general effect on the US. He is making open hostility to minority racial and ethnic groups more normal.
Biploar and Dissociative Identity Disorder. She probably is mentally ill in the strictest clinical sense. If she weren't funny she'd probably be a bag lady talking to herself.