Amusing as it may be to play the "the liberal media is going after Herman Cain" card when it comes to the allegations recently made against Jesse Jackson, it is also prudent to remember one incredibly important fact: Jesse Jackson isn't running for President. Let's also be honest about something else: if he were running for President, you better believe that liberals and conservatives alike would, in their own way, go after him for his numerous failings as a "moral person." Jackson is not unfamiliar to the controversy bucket, as his 1984 comments about Jews (shortly after losing the Presidential ticket) and his numerous infidelities make clear. And I think his history makes him unlikely as a legitimate Democratic candidate for the Presidency in the future.
Of course, The Huffington Post did report on the incident. But I suppose we can just pretend they aren't part of the "liberal media" or the "media" in general. Ever so insignificant that Huffington Post... In any case, the predominately right-leaning base will take this oversight as an indictment
of the evil liberal media and its evil ways of leaving out the truth. This great conspiracy theory falls apart when you actually look at who comprises the liberal media: corporate-owned, largely conservative agencies who are no more liberals than their right-leaning counterparts.
And that's really where all this rests: talking about who is a liberal and who is a conservative and who has the right narrative, blah blah blah, is all a giant game of ideology that serves no other purpose than to keep people nipping at one another's throats. The truth of matter is that very little "truth" gets through corporate media. If you want to see what's going on in the world, you have to go to independent media sources, or the rare corporate media source that doesn't have its hands caught in the cookie jar (I would look at The Guardian as one such source).
But to return to the original point: why is Herman Cain getting the shaft and Jesse Jackson a pass?
- Herman Cain is running for President. I can't say whether Cain is innocent of the charges, but it goes without saying that a Presidential hopeful should be subject to public scrutiny. This includes Obama, who I will undoubtedly criticize throughout the next year in my evil liberal circles. But since Jesse Jackson is not running for President, and remains little more than an activist whose core values are really hard to disagree with (justice for people of color, etc.), I really don't see the point in putting Cain and Jackson on the same public pedestal.
- Cain has a tendency to shove his foot in his mouth whenever he talks, which makes challenging him on allegations of sexual harassment all the more important. Any candidate who cannot keep his narrative straight deserves the kind of scrutiny Cain is getting. Did Cain know about the settlement or not? Should abortion be illegal or a choice? Whose fault is it for the high unemployment rate -- those without jobs or the system? I could go on, but I think the point is made. I have the same misgivings about Romney and Perry, whose rambling and flip-flopping make it rather difficult to determine where they actually stand. And I have the same misgivings about Obama, who I think betrayed his progressive base by cowering before the opposition.
- Jackson isn't really getting a pass. Plenty of news sources are covering the incident. But the truth is that very few people actually care. That's not because Jackson is unimportant in a general sense. It's that he's unimportant when compared to the vast array of problems and events happening all around us. Are we really concerned with whether Jackson fondled someone's testicles or whether Presidential hopeful Cain sexually harassed a woman, or whether the economy will bounce back or Obama's Jobs Bill will get passed (and if it will be good for us), or whether Occupy Wall Street will effect any changes (or if it is really bad for the country), or whether the Arab Spring will produce good results in the Middle East, or whether we'll withdraw troops from Iraq or Afghanistan, and so on and so forth.
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