August 03, 2004
The Malkin Media Diversity Test
By
Michelle Malkin
Every five years, a herd of
perpetually disgruntled minority journalists gathers
together to decry the lack of "diversity" in the
media. This week, thousands of them will huff and puff
in unison at the
"UNITY Journalists of Color, Inc." convention in
Washington, D.C. Both
President Bush and
Sen. John Kerry are scheduled to give their "I
Heart Diversity More Than The Other Guy" speeches at
UNITY on Thursday and Friday.
The
Asian-American Journalists Association will complain
about the lack of Asian-American male television news
anchors. The National
Association of Hispanic Journalists will attack the
radio industry for not hiring enough Hispanic on-air
personalities. The
National Association of Black Journalists will
lambaste newspaper publishers for not
hiring enough black editors. And the
Native American Journalists Association will grumble
about the
Washington Redskins.
In response,
journalists of non-color will engage in obligatory
self-flagellation. They'll promise to put more photos of
minorities on the front pages of their papers. They'll
vow to add more ethnic flavor to their airwaves. They'll
step up racial sensitivity training. And they'll loudly
proclaim their commitment to ensuring "diversity."
The diversity they seek is, by
definition, skin-deep. They call themselves
"journalists of color." Not journalists of
substance. Or journalists of integrity. Or journalists
of independent thought.
I experienced this rainbow-tinted
groupthink at the UNITY conference in
Seattle in 1999, where I was the
lone, out-of-the-closet conservative in a room of
about 150 minority journalists.
After this Seattle "debate,"
a few journalists sent me secret hand signals or left
whispered voice mail messages letting me know that they
agreed with my point of view. The rest had groaned,
snickered, and rolled their eyes when I criticized
ethnic identity politics and voiced my support for
University of California regent
Ward Connerly's ballot initiatives to
eliminate government race-based affirmative action.
Hey, can't we "journalists of
color" all get along? Sure. But only if you stick to
the
liberal orthodox line. All others must endure the
"Uncle Tom" slings and
"Aunt Tomasina" arrows of the politically
correct thought enforcers—an experience that is at first
intimidating, then laughable, and finally painfully
tiresome.
Well, I guess I must have
masochistic tendencies, because when I learned that the
UNITY conference would be coming to the Beltway this
year, I volunteered to bring my divisively brown-skinned
self back to the gathering. I contacted UNITY program
co-chair O. Ricardo Pimentel, whom I
once debated on immigration issues in Tempe,
Arizona, and asked if UNITY would be interested in
putting me on a panel to offer my
ideologically diverse views on
homeland security issues.
He politely passed the buck and I
never heard back from UNITY.
So, alas, I won't be joining
UNITY's illusion of inclusion this year. No hard
feelings. But I am hoping that some venturesome
journalist will pass along my Media Diversity Test to
the multicultural masses at UNITY. Test-takers get five
points for every statement they mark "YES."
- I have never
voted for a Democrat in my life.
- I think my
taxes are too high.
- I supported Bill Clinton's impeachment.
- I voted for President Bush in
2000.
- I am a
gun owner.
- I support
school voucher programs.
- I oppose condom distribution in
public schools.
- I oppose bilingual education.
- I oppose
gay marriage.
- I want Social Security privatized.
- I believe racial profiling at
airports is
common sense.
- I shop at Wal-Mart.
- I enjoy
talk radio.
- I am annoyed when news editors substitute the
phrase
"undocumented person" for
"illegal alien."
- I do not believe the phrase
"a chink in the armor" is offensive.
- I eat
meat.
- I believe
O.J. Simpson was guilty.
- I
cheered when I learned that
Saddam Hussein had been captured.
- I cry when I hear
"Proud to be an American" by Lee Greenwood.
- I
don't believe the New York Times.
I'm sure a large number of my
culturally and ideologically diverse readers would earn
a perfect score, as I did.
What is the average score among
UNITY attendees?
Take the test, my fellow
journalists of "diversity,"
and show us your true colors.
Michelle Malkin [email
her] is author of
Invasion: How America Still Welcomes Terrorists,
Criminals, and Other Foreign Menaces to Our Shores.
Click
here for Peter Brimelow’s review. Click
here for Michelle Malkin's website.
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