By David Harsanyi
Tuesday, January 18, 2022
In response to Al
Sharpton: MSNBC’S Hands-On Antisemitism Expert
As Isaac notes, on Monday, MSNBC included Al Sharpton on a panel of
pundits to discuss the hostage-taking situation in a synagogue in Colleyville,
Texas. Of all the nearly 8 billion human beings available to chime in on an
antisemitic incident, Nicolle Wallace thought that Sharpton was the best choice
available. This would be akin to bringing David Duke on after the killing of
Ahmaud Arbery to discuss how Americans could do a better job protecting
African-American lives.
It will never cease to amaze me how Sharpton, one of the
most pernicious characters in New York history, is constantly being
trotted out by MSNBC as if he has the moral high ground on issues of tolerance.
I’m old enough to remember one-time conservative congressman Joe
Scarborough authoring the resolution, “Condemning the racist and
anti-Semitic views of the Reverend Al Sharpton.” These days, the two are
buddies.
It can never be repeated enough that before he was a
kingmaker, sought out by national candidates and presidents, Sharpton infamously used a tragic 1991 car
accident to incite a three-day race riot in Crown Heights. Sharpton took
advantage of the accidental death of a boy named Gavin Cato to spread
conspiracies about a Jewish “nexus” between “Tel Aviv” and “South Africa” (then
still an apartheid state) and the “diamond merchants” of Crown Heights. “All we
want to say is what Jesus said: If you offend one of these little ones, you got
to pay for it. No compromise, no meetings, no coffee klatch, no skinnin’ and
grinnin’,” went the eulogy from the Baptist minister.
After the Jewish community protested this kind of
rhetoric, Sharpton responded, “If the Jews want to get it on, tell them to pin
their yarmulkes back and come over to my house.” Well, a mob found a man with a
yarmulke named Yankel Rosenbaum, a 29-year-old Orthodox Jew visiting from
Australia, who had the ill fortune of turning down the wrong street at the wrong
time. He was dragged from his car to the shouts of “Kill the Jews!” by throngs
of angry protesters and stabbed to death.
In 1995, Fred Harari, a Jewish subtenant who operated a
store called Freddy’s Fashion Mart in Harlem, had his rent hiked, and he ended
up evicting his own sub-subtenant, a black-owned record store. Sharpton used
this incident to stoke vile racist, anti-Jewish sentiments for weeks on New
York radio. “Kill the Jew bastards and burn down the Jew store!”
protesters yelled in front of the store. “We will not stand by
and allow them to move this brother so that some white interloper can expand
his business,” Sharpton told an audience. Soon, a 51-year-old man named Roland
Smith entered the store, asked the black customers to leave, murdered seven
people, and then firebombed the store.
Sharpton, of course, most famously threw an entire city
into turmoil in 1987 when he cynically exploited a hoax of a black teen girl
named Tawana Brawley — who claimed to have been raped, kidnapped, smeared with
feces, and left wrapped in a plastic bag by a “cult” of white men in Dutchess
County, N.Y. Sharpton accused a prosecutor named Steven Pagones of abduction
and rape of a teenager — “on 33 separate occasions,” according to the Associated Press — destroying the
man’s career, destroying a teenager’s life, and exacerbating racial tensions in
the city. Sharpton would also go on to blame a secret cabal led by the Irish Republican Army for
the rape, because he is a dangerous clown. (Tom Wolfe satirized the devious
Sharpton as “Reverend Bacon” in The Bonfire of the Vanities, a book that captures
the 1980s New York zeitgeist better than any.) A state grand jury found
Brawley’s claims to have been fabricated, perhaps as a way of avoiding the
wrath of her dad for staying out late one night. When he was successfully sued
for defamation, Sharpton refused to pay damages, as always, allowing others to
pay his ride.
Sharpton never killed anyone. He is just an insidious
huckster and shakedown artist who cynically stoked chaos and violence to
catapult him into national prominence. Never once, as far as I can tell, have
any of his colleagues on MSNBC challenged him to explain these career
highlights or his history of Jew-baiting. Nor has Sharpton ever apologized or
shown the slightest genuine regret for his role in tearing a city apart. As
Yankel Rosenbaum’s brother Norman has pointed out, his rehabilitation was largely predicated on
an “egregiously distorted and sanitized” version of his involvement in these
events. He’s never set the record straight. Never made it right with anyone.
And why should he? If you hate the right people, all can be forgiven.
No comments:
Post a Comment