martes, 24 de febrero de 2009
A New York Post infamy
By now, the New York Post is feeling the effects of having published a despicable political cartoon drawn by an equally despicable political cartoonist who goes by the name of Sean Delonas whose photo appears above, a resident of New Jersey well known as the Picasso of prejudice. In this cartoon, published on page 12 of the Wednesday paper of february 11th, Delonas depicts two white police officers who just shot and killed a chimpanzee, and one officer says: “They'll have to find someone else to write the next stimulus bill”, in what appears to be a clear reference to President Barack Obama and to the racist stereotype of African Americans being portrayed as non-human apes:
As pointed out in The Huffington Post, at its most benign the cartoon suggests that the stimulus bill signed into law by Barack Obama was so bad that rabid monkeys may as well have written it. However, many others believe the Delano's cartoon compared President Obama himself to a rabid chimp. On this issue, Reverend Al Sharpton stated: “Being that the stimulus bill has been the first legislative victory of President Barack Obama (the first African American president) and has become synonymous with him it is not a reach to wonder are they inferring that a monkey wrote the last bill?”
While it is true that the stimulus bill was not written by President Obama himself, that it was written by Democrat Congressman David Obey, a white man from Wisconsin, along with input from nine other Democrats who are white as well, the stimulus bill was in fact an initiative promised by Obama himself even before he took office. It was certainly not a Republican idea, and had it not been for Obama making good on his promise to push for an economic stimulus bill, such a bill would not be a reality today. It must be kept in mind that the stimulus bill itself was modified several times in order to gain bipartisan support, adding and deleting things not to Obama’s liking, and at the end of the day the Republicans puttting partisan politics above the interests of the nation decided to stay on the sidelines denying any kind of support for this economic relief package in spite of the modifications put into the bill in order to please them somehow. While Obama could have exercised his veto power, he went ahead anyway judging that a modified initiative was better than nothing at all.
Delonas already had a prior history of outraging some sectors of the American society. His cartoons have repeatedly been criticized as grotesque in their depiction of gays, lesbians, blacks and Democrats. Yet, despite these valid criticisms, media such as the New York Post have continued to patronize Sean Delonas as if his vile work was something worthy of preservation and admiration. That’s not the case from this side of the border.
Adding insult to injury, the New York Post, instead of breaking off all ties with Sean Delonas, actually defended the vile cartoon, and the editor-in-chief of the New York Post, Col Allan, stated: “The cartoon is a clear parody of a current news event, to wit the shooting of a violent chimpanzee in Connecticut. It broadly mocks Washington's efforts to revive the economy. Again, Al Sharpton reveals himself as nothing more than a publicity opportunist.” A publicity opportunist? Whate about the tens of thousands of people of all races who were offended by Delonas's infamous work?
In publishing this repugnant cartoon, the New York Post did not seem to care that this is a time when the newspaper industry is drowning in red ink, and it recently took the second richest man in the world, a Mexican financier who goes by the name of Carlos Slim, to come to the rescue of The New York Times on january 20th with 250 million dollars to help keep it afloat. Had it not been for the help given by this Mexican financier, the New York Times would have had to declare bankruptcy and shut its doors. Perhaps the current owner of the New York Post, Rupert Murdoch, is not aware that a nationwide boycott against the New York Post can easily break the back of this newspaper besides severely tarnishing the reputation of Murdoch himself if he insists on continuing his support of the New York Post and Sean Delonas under a nationwide boycott.
In principle, a boycott against the New York Post should be precisely targeted at the right people, those who are responsible for the publication and mass circulation of a piece of worthless trash loaded with bigotry and prejudice, i.e. the editor-in-chief Col Allan, the editorial review board and Sean Delanos himself. However, there are those who call for the total shutdown of the New York Post. This seems to be the prevailing opinion of those who have formed and joined the Boycott the New York Post Group on Facebook who already have a partial list of advertisers that they are boycotting and will continue to boycott if they continue to sponsor the racist rag called The New York Post. They point out that the history of this newspaper has been incendiary and racist, and that this is the last straw, going beyond Sharpton's criticisms and President Obama himself, adding that the Delonas’ cartoon is a perpetuated insulting stereotypical image of black people and the police shooting them down in the street has always been a position that the New York Post has stood in justification of. They all agree that the fact that the stimulus bill was signed by a black man clearly shows the racial connotation of Delonas’ cartoon, and if one knows anything about the history of negative stereotypical images in the United States then one cannot help but immediately see the provocation here, and this being the last straw the New York Post can no longer be allowed to get away with this. They further warn that the boycott they are calling for is not a flash in the pan and is permanent, that they will not buy the New York Post again ever! They make it clear that they will no longer be sitting down idly while businesses like the New York Post continue to survive, ensuring a permanent boycott targeting the sponsors of this newspaper.
Tempting as it may be to call for a massive boycott to force the New York Post to shut its doors for good, it must be kept in mind that there are other workers inside the New York Post who do not share Delonas's brand of bigotry and prejudice, and some of them have voiced their disagreement and disgust with the publishing of Delonas’ trash. The janitors certainly had nothing to do with this travesty of the freedom of the press. Nor did some of the other columnists who write on other columns and who feel unhappy and ashamed of the vile cartoon. These people who depend on the New York Post for their livelyhood should not be held responsible or accountable for what happened. If there is anybody to blame, it is the editor-in-chief Col Allan, the editorial review board, and Sean Delano himself. It is them who should be punished by whatever legal means possible. It is them who should be forced to resign from the New York Post, and any boycott should be targeted with that objective in mind. However, considering that the New York Post has not terminated its relationship with Delanos nor has it forced its prejudiced editorial staff into the ranks of the unemployed, unfortunately the whole team will have to bear the brunt of a boycott. It must be pointed out that Sandra Guzman, a hispanic and a Post's Associate Editor, sent out an email to other reporters distancing herself from the paper's cartoon and acknowledging that she had talked to management about her disapproval. The e-mail reads: “Thank you for your feedback,” reads the email. “Please know that I had nothing to do with the Sean Delonas cartoon. I neither commissioned or approved it. I saw it in the paper yesterday with the rest of the world. And, I have raised my objections to management. --Sandra Guzman.” Considering that at present time the New York Post is akin to a sinking ship, perhaps Sandra Guzman could do herself a favor by abandoning the New York Post before its likely demise.
The very limited mind of Sean Delonas, obviously a Republican, has been unable to grasp the fact that Barack Obama came into office as President of the United States with a majority of the popular vote. He has been unable to grasp also that the dire economic conditions being faced at this very moment by many Americans (not just African Americans) who have lost their homes, their sources of income, their investments, their possibilities for a college education, their medical insurance and even their lives, after eight straight years of a Republican administration in office. It was a Republican who ran the White House during these last eight years, it was a Republican who plunged America into a very expensive foreign war using the now ridicule argument of weapons of mass destruction (WMD) that never existed in Iraq to begin with. It has fallen upon the shoulders of President Obama to clean up the mess left by the Republicans, and he has not sugar coated the bleak fact that the current economic downturn is the greatest crisis faced by the United States since the Great Depression and it will take years to undo the devastation caused by this Republican tsunami. These things have not yet sunk into the mind of Sean Delonas. Perhaps if he joins the ranks of the unemployed and starts losing everything he owns, Delonas may get to see the immense suffering on the other side.
Eventhough I am not a US citizen nor a US resident, as a Mexican and as a world citizen (which is how I consider myself) I am outraged by this latest Delonas prank that many Mexicans like me consider vile and repugnant. From this side of the border we support those who in the USA are voicing their objections against the continued support from the New York Post given to this Picasso of Prejudice.
This is not an issue of simply being politically correct. I’m sure that if someone made a grotesque depiction of Sean Delonas’s mother portraying her as a vile drug addicted prostitute who delivered Sean Delona prior to attending a customer, and that depiction got published in a major newspaper, it is possible that Sean Delona would be outraged and would not sit idle doing nothing in response to such a depiction of his mother (or perhaps he would simply joke and laugh about it, given the low ethics and moral standards of Sean Delona).
In publishing his cartoons, the New York Post is giving Delonas a piece of valuable space in the printed newspaper which he most certainly does not deserve, a space that is denied to others. If someone wants to see his complaint against Delonas published in The New York Post, he will either have to pay several thousands of dollars (the cost of a full page or half a page) to The New York Post or he will have to send his comments to the ‘Letters to the Editor’ section where his point of view will face a strict limit in the number of words he can use, if his point of view gets published at all.
It is beyond me why Sean Delona has been patronized for so long in major circulation newspapers as a political cartoonist after being so crude and so insensitive to the feelings of others, given the fact that there are many (and I underline the word many) other cartoonists in the USA who are far better drawers and have far more talent and ingenuity than Delonas. Delonas can be fired at this very moment by his employers and his all contracts terminated with no problems whatsoever, since a replacemente can be quickly found in these hard economic times by merely giving a chance to some of those other extremely talented political cartoonists who are still out there waiting to be accepted by the mainstream media. Delonas is certainly not indispensable, and as a matter of fact, if he were to die today, the world would not lose anything worthy of remembrance.
It is imperative that the American society as a whole teach Sean Delona a lesson in civility he will not forget for the rest of his worthless life. All legal means must be used to bring his career as a political cartoonist to an end. Delonas has crossed the line, and those who were offended by him have every right to make him learn his lesson. Herein, and speaking on behalf of many Mexicans who are outraged and offended by the racist, I offer my sympathies and moral support to the actions taken in order to keep The New York Post from going into this type of scandals again. I and other Mexicans offer our support in extending the proposed boycott against Sean Delonas and the New York Post outside the USA, to last until the editor-in-chief and the review board have been fired and sent to the ranks of the unemployed, and until the career of Sean Delonas as a political cartoonist has been terminated once and for good. If Sean Delonas wants to see his trash published in the future, he should pay the insertion of his trash with his own money in those newspapers and magazines who otherwise would not publish his materials for free, much less pay him a single cent for such trash.
I am sure that Delonas, given his unmistakable prejudice and his extreme conservatism filled with hatred towards African Americans and gays and lesbians and Democrats which borders on extremism, will find ample space in other media symphatetic to whatever is left of the KKK. I am sure he will find ample sympathy and support there. That’s were he should be.
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