(The following is my latest blog for Huffington Post, and my latest column for the Newton County News.)
The timing of Missouri Speaker of the House Steve Tilley’s
announcement that he had named Rush Limbaugh to the Hall of Famous Missourians
could not have been any worse.
It has only been a few days since Limbaugh went on a verbal
rampage, referring to Georgetown
student Sandra Fluke as a “slut” and a “prostitute,” simply because she advocated
expanded access to birth control.
Tilley noted that Limbaugh is “famous,” and that certainly
is true. But then the speaker had the audacity to compare Limbaugh to other
famous Missourians who have already been enshrined in the hall and who had
their detractors- the Show-Me State’s only president, Harry S Truman, former
Attorney General John Ashcroft, and former Gov. Warren Hearnes.
For Steve Tilley to compare a radio host who has made
millions by dividing America
to people who devoted their lives to public service is an insult. Limbaugh has
always referred to himself as “an entertainer,” but there is also no legitimate
comparison between Limbaugh and such entertainers as St. Louis Cardinals legend
Stan “The Man” Musial and Walt Disney, both of whom are in the Hall.
Some have called Limbaugh a journalist (though journalists
are required to provide a least of modicum of truth). In that field, the Cape Girardeau native
pales in comparison to Walter Cronkite, another member of the Hall.
Even if you could forgive Tilley, who as Speaker has the
sole province to select the new members, for preferring someone from his own
area of the state, there is no forgiving him the insult to enshrine Limbaugh
during the same year that he selected Buck O’Neil and Dred Scott for induction.
That would be the same Dred Scott, whose efforts to escape
slavery were thwarted by one of the worst decisions in U. S. Supreme Court
history, and Buck O’Neil, who nearly singlehandedly brought the Negro Baseball
Leagues Museum in Kansas City into existence, was the first African American
coach in major league baseball, and who was a long-time all-star with the
Kansas City Monarchs in the Negro Leagues, where he played because the doors to
major league baseball were closed to people of his color.
What a cruel joke for Steve Tilley to invite Rush Limbaugh
into the Hall of Famous Missourians the same year as Buck O’Neil and Dred
Scott.
After all, though it is his sexist comments that have
brought a firestorm upon Limbaugh over the past few days, he has a long history
of peppering the airwaves with racially-charged remarks.
Nine years ago, it was his disparaging comments about
Philadelphia Eagles quarterback Donovan McNabb, saying McNabb had been built up
by a media that wanted to see a black quarterback and black coaches succeed.
Limbaugh asserted that McNabb’s success was completely owed to the Eagle
defense. The controversy over that remark led to Limbaugh’s resignation from
ESPN.
Since the election of Barack Obama in 2008, Limbaugh has
teetered on the edge of racist comments on nearly a daily basis, referring to
the president as a “Halfrican-American,” and offering alleged humor based on President
Obama’s skin color including a song called “Barack, the Magic Negro.”
A man such as this has no place in an institution designed
to honor the best of Missouri .
While the world has moved into the 21st century, Rush Limbaugh and
those who hang on his every word steadfastly cling to a lily-white past that
shames all of us.
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