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Contributors
Michael Nevin Jr. - Contributor
Michael Nevin
Jr. is a 3rd generation California law enforcement officer
and
freelance writer. Mike's writing explores many topics
ranging from the War on Terror to issues facing America's police
officers. Mike is a contributing writer for several Internet
websites including ChronWatch, American Daily, Renew America.us,
and Men's News Daily. He can be contacted at nevin166@comcast.net.
[go to Nevin index]
Speaking
Out of The Left Side of Their Mouth
Human Rights Commission's Unwarranted Intervention...
[Michael Nevin Jr.] 8/5/04
In a letter
from the San Francisco Human Rights Commission to San Francisco
Police
Officers’ Association (POA) President
Gary Delagnes, the commission chastised the association for promoting
tickets to its membership offered by radio station KNEW to the “Michael
Savage Uncensored” event this past May. The POA, representing
labor interests of dues-paying cops (not the city or police department),
was taken to task for accepting tickets from the radio station
for an event that the commission finds repugnant. “By choosing
to promote this event to its membership, the POA lent its name
and credibility to one of the foremost promoters of hate in the
United States,” cites the letter.
Michael Savage
is a Bay Area resident and host of “The
Savage Nation,” one of the country’s most popular
talk-radio programs with over 350 radio stations. He has apparently
aroused the ire of the S.F. Human Rights Commission. This should
come as no surprise, because he has a storied history of offending
people from every end of the political spectrum. From his gripe
about the melodramatic coverage of the Ronald Reagan funeral
to his description of liberalism as “a mental disorder,” Savage
hardly fits into an easily described stereotype. He is fiercely
independent and probably not on any Democratic or Republican
Party mailing list. While we can debate the myriad opinions Savage
expresses, we cannot debate his popularity, even here in the
Bay Area.
The commission’s letter cites several examples of “Savage’s
daily hateful rantings.” Michael Savage can defend himself
and his comments, but this begs the question—what is more
alarming: Michael Savage uncensored or a governmental body attempting
to dissuade members of the POA from seeking tickets to an off-duty,
public event?
What went
unmentioned in the commission’s letter but has
not gone unnoticed among many San Francisco cops is the fact
that Michael Savage stood up for the rank and file during the
days following the killing of Officer Isaac Espinoza in April.
When the San Francisco Board of Supervisors were passing resolutions
supporting the decision of District Attorney Kamala Harris not
to seek the death penalty for the accused killer of Espinoza,
Savage was rallying support for the cops on his national radio
show. POA President Gary Delagnes was invited on “The Savage
Nation” to express the outrage that many cops felt. It
was during these trying times that local radio station KNEW made
an offer to POA members wishing to attend the Savage event.
The commission
ends the letter on a disturbing note: “And
while we acknowledge Mr. Savage’s right to his opinions,
we are concerned that POA support of his performance suggests
that the City and the police force share or otherwise support
his views.” Should current cops and future applicants be
given a litmus test regarding what talk shows they listen to?
Now that would be a concern because it wouldn’t end with
Savage, and background checks would take on a whole new meaning.
The commission
has chosen a dangerous path bordering on the proverbial slippery
slope. Who is to decide when one’s
opinion crosses the line from free speech to hate speech? Columnist
and radio talk show host Julianne Malveaux spewed invective when
talking about Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas when she
said, “You know, I hope his wife feeds him lots of eggs
and butter and he dies early like many black men do, of heart
disease. Well, that’s how I feel. He is an absolutely reprehensible
person.”
NAACP Chairman
Julian Bond routinely attacks conservatives. Bond gave a speech
in
June stating, “Their idea of equal
rights is the American flag and the Confederate swastika flying
side by side,” Bond told a cheering audience. He continued, “They
draw their most rabid supporters from the Taliban wing of American
politics.”
Michael Moore
is no stranger to controversy and polarizing rhetoric. Case
in point: “The Iraqis who have risen up against the
occupation are not ‘insurgents’ or ‘terrorists’ or ‘the
Enemy.’ They are the REVOLUTION, the Minutemen, and their
numbers will grow – and they will win.”
Many Americans
find it highly offensive to compare the barbarians in Fallujah
to
the Minutemen at Bunker Hill. Would the S.F. Human
Rights Commission dare to oppose any of these speakers? It’s
fair to ask whether or not a double standard exists.
It is unfortunate
that a governmental body rebuked the POA President and his
association for allowing the distribution of
tickets to a lawful assembly. The issue isn’t about supporting
or opposing Michael Savage. Some cops love Savage, some cops
hate him. The issue is that the POA should feel free to distribute
tickets to a Michael Savage or Michael Moore event with impunity.
The police
department is not unlike any other place of work. Fill a room
with five
cops and you’ll get seven opinions.
The marketplace will determine the fate of “The Savage
Nation.” Firebrands exist on both sides of the aisle, and
Americans can decide for themselves which ones are worthy of
their attention. It should be obvious that the battle for hearts
and minds will not be won by censorship; it will be won by ideas.
San Francisco
prides itself as a beacon of tolerance and freedom of expression.
It cuts both ways. Either everyone has freedom
of speech and association or no one does. It’s that simple.
Becoming a San Francisco police officer should not entail leaving
self-evident rights at the doorstep of the academy. French philosopher
Voltaire famously stated, “I may not agree with what you
say, but I’ll defend to the death your right to say it.” American
cemeteries are filled with people who understood this old adage,
and it still applies today. CRO
copyright
2004 Michael Nevin Jr.
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