By Kevin D. Williamson
Friday, September 14, 2018 6:30 AM
I probably should note that, as I write this, the music
from a spin class is audible in the background: “Kung Fu Fighting,” Jamaican
singer Carl Douglas’s 1974 one-hit wonder and — according to the British
government — musical hate
crime. A man was arrested for singing that song, and not because performing
disco is a felony.
From that point of view, Norm Macdonald has got off lucky
so far.
Macdonald, a comedian, is being run through the gantlet
this week after saying something stupid and ugly. He was disinvited from an
appearance on The Tonight Show after
making sympathetic comments about celebrities accused of sexual misdeeds (Louis
CK) and political thoughtcrime (Roseanne Barr), and then, in the course of
apologizing, said that one would have to have Down syndrome to doubt the
stories of sexual-harassment or assault victims.
Yeah.
You can imagine what happened next: A lot of the same
nice people who have quietly cheered the eugenic elimination of two-thirds of
the Americans with Down syndrome pretended to be very, very offended on behalf
of the third who weren’t put to death by their mothers. If Macdonald had been
in Denmark, where 98 percent of those with Down syndrome are put to death, his
remarks probably would not have occasioned much of a ripple. People with Down
syndrome don’t deserve the insult, and Macdonald is right to apologize for it,
but people with Down syndrome, like almost everybody else walking the Earth,
have bigger problems than Norm Macdonald.
Macdonald’s various efforts at making an apology for his
apology have not helped much. The general impression he has given me is that of
a man who is not very bright, but our Theodore Kupfer, who actually knows
something about Macdonald, says I am wrong to conclude that, and I defer to his
more informed opinion. (My isolation from some broad parts of popular culture,
splendid as I find it, is only partly intentional. Part of it is middle age: I
was speaking with a friend last weekend about the remarkable craftsmanship of
recent pop songwriting — the immediate subject at hand was Cardi B’s Balenciaga
advertisement “I Like It” — and I suggested “. . . Baby One More Time” as a
point of comparison, not pausing to realize that that song is now almost 20
years old, older than Britney Spears was when she recorded it, which seems
impossible.) Teddy writes that Macdonald is “deliberately obtuse,” which is at
least half correct and probably more.
(The soundtrack has changed to Taylor Swift’s “Mean,” and
I suspect the sound system here has grown self-aware, and prescient.)
Here is some unsolicited advice for Norm Macdonald: Stop
apologizing. Once was enough.
At some point, maybe in a few weeks and maybe in a few
years, this current fad of serial mass hysterias — driven in part by social
media and amplified by the news media and entertainment media — will pass. Some
people will look back on it and be embarrassed, but most people will not,
because they do not have the intelligence or the moral depth to be embarrassed
by it. It will go the way of hula hoops and screaming at the Beatles with
religious fervor. This is mostly a game, not a moral panic, and Macdonald and
others should meditate with equanimity on the truth that this is not really
about them. They are convenient piƱatas in this early 21st century backyard
birthday party of the damned. It doesn’t matter what Norm Macdonald says. He
isn’t the point of the game; he’s just the ball.
These aren’t moral and political crusaders. These are
pests. For one reason or another, my big bald head is irresistible to Texas
mosquitos, and I sometimes am swarmed on summer evenings when nobody else
notices a thing at all amiss by way of airborne hematophagy. The mosquitos try
to bite me, and I try to swat them. But neither party feels any particular way about the other. There isn’t any sense
getting angry at mosquitos. They are only following their nature.
To the extent that these episodes do represent a genuine
moral panic rather than a simple diversion for the simple, they follow a
familiar pattern. Some have compared them to the Salem witch hysteria, and many
of my conservative friends, noting the political advantage-seeking in many of
these exercises, invoke the Red Scare. But what they most closely resemble is
the Christian fundamentalist and social-conservative panic over heavy metal and
rap music in the late 1980s and early 1990s, a well-heeled inquisition in which
Tipper Gore played Torquemada. No intellectually serious and mentally healthy
adult (sorry, Tipper) ever thought that Judas Priest songs were going to lead
to Jim Jones-style mass suicide scenes in America’s shopping malls or that
Ice-T was the man behind the crack-era crime wave. They just didn’t like having
their kids listen to that music, which was considered to be what our British
friends would describe as “naff.” The low-minded and superstitious believed,
and the cynical political opportunists (sorry, Tipper) pretended to believe,
that there was a species of magic afoot, that uttering certain words would
bring certain infernal realities into the world, as though Ozzy Osbourne were
an actual real-world wizard. It’s pretty funny in retrospect: The ranting Chet
version of this Twisted Sister presented in videos of the era was an
exaggeration, but only a little one.
Social media, by instantly connecting millions of
insignificant people to one another (“insignificant” isn’t a moral judgment;
it’s just how things are) has created a Grand Canyon of an echo chamber in
which that echoing insignificance has become enveloping and inescapable, and
intolerable to those trapped in the middle of it. People with the opportunity
to say whatever they want to say to anybody they want to say it to discover
(even if they will not admit it to themselves) that they do not have anything
of interest to say. They have been given voices, but they have no fruitful
purpose to which to put them. They require distraction. They sometimes latch
onto public figures such as Norm Macdonald because they mistakenly believe
(because people know the names of famous people, and say them) that these are figures of significance, and
that by forcing themselves into some sort of relationship with these people
they will acquire some significance by association. They are a vast crowd of
people performing the characteristic act of this weird little moment in our
history: being desperately lonely, together.
Give Norm Macdonald the benefit of the doubt and assume
that he is genuinely sorry about the offense he has given. Even so, he takes
himself too seriously because he takes the ravening maw of general public
outrage too seriously. (Or perhaps it is the other way around.) He insists,
with contrition, that his offense was “unforgivable.” Please. The Holodomor was
unforgivable. The Rape of Nanking was unforgivable. Child abuse is
unforgivable. Norm Macdonald is just a guy, one who said something dumb while
trying to be funny — which is, after all, his occupation. On the subject of
forgiveness, we may consult the prophet Tom Waits: “There’s no eye for an eye,
there’s no tooth for a tooth / I saw Judas Iscariot carrying John Wilkes
Booth.”
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