(ThyBlackMan.com) The fall out from what commentator Roland Martin tweeted during the Super Bowl is still, well falling. Roland Martin was suspended for tweets that a few predominately white gay advocacy groups characterized as offensive. Roland Martin has already issued an apology but part of his penitence and is go with head hung low and meet with the organization GLAAD that led the charge to push CNN to take punitive action against him. Martin suggested that if a male watching the Super Bowl got excited about an underwear commercial featuring soccer star David Beckham, he should be smacked. Most of the Black community, including the founder of Black Men’s Exchange, has condemned the suspension of Roland Martin by CNN. Martin’s wife allegedly blasted both GLAAD and CNN on her now deleted Twitter account and she now denies ever making the post. However, the strangest reaction or non-reaction was by National Association of Black Journalists (NABJ).
In a statement publish on the NABJ website specifically addressing Martin’s suspension; the NABJ seemed to take a neutral stand. The statement which totals only 80 words reads,
“This is a teachable moment for all journalists. We are reminded that what we communicate in print and broadcast – and now through social media – has considerable power. NABJ does not support any commentary in any medium that is insensitive or offensive.
Mr. Martin is one of our most committed members. In lieu of his presence on CNN, until this matter is resolved, we encourage the network to continue to present a diverse offering of voices in its programming.”
However, the U.S. branch of the media outlet Russia Today is raising issues that would suggest that CNN may have racially discriminated against Roland Martin by suspending him for tweets about men being turned on by Beckham’s underwear commercial. In recent weeks, at least white commentators made similar offensive remarks but were not suspended. The comments uttered by CNN contributors Dana Loesch and Erick Erickson were judged by many to be offensive and far worse than what Martin tweeted.
When video of U.S. Marines peeing on dead Afghans surfaced on the internet, Dana Loesch, a white female contributor to CNN, took to her radio program which is carried by a Fox News Radio affiliate station, and said she would have joined the Marines in desecrating the bodies of the Afghans. To justify her comments, she falsely accused Afghans, presumably Taliban fighters, of being involved in the planning and destruction of the World Trade Center and other attacks that occurred on 911. The United States government concluded after its investigation that only Al-Qaeda and Osama Bin Laden were responsible for the attacks and no other governments or organizations. TheU.S. military has strongly condemned the act of desecrating the Afghan’s bodies and is seeking punitive actions against the Marines responsible for the reprehensible and barbarous act. However, despite calls for them to do so, CNN did not suspend Loesch for her comments.
Another CNN contributor, Erick Erickson, a white male, made jokes about police violence used against an Occupy protestor in New York when police brutality is a very sensitive issue in the United States. Several people are killed or otherwise abused at the hands of law enforcement officials every year, including the NYPD which of late has been facing a number of scandals including the killing of unarmed teen Ramarley Graham.
If you throw out any potential debate about which contributor, Martin, Loesch or Erickson, comments were the most offensive, you are still left with the fact that Roland Martin was treated differently than Loesch and Erickson. Since Loesch is female and Erickson is male, the only real discernable difference between the three is that Roland Martin is a black male and they are white. It is doubtful that Roland Martin will take his case to court or file a work related complaint for the unequal way CNN appears to deal with its contributors based apparently by race.
Some are questioning the National Association of Black Journalist’s commitment to equal rights declaring in their mission statement that among other things, the NABJ is committed to,
“Sensitizing all media to the importance of fairness in the workplace for black journalists”
Instead, they come off looking unwilling to examine the discrimination aspect of Martin’s suspension who also just happens to be a member of their organization.
The principle parties involved, Roland Martin, CNN and the NABJ may be waiting for the story to exit the three day news cycle but the conversation is hardly over among people where the controversy first erupted, on social media networks.
Staff Writer; Scotty Reid
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Anderson Cooper referred to people in the teaparty by the derogatory slur, ‘teabaggers’, and he giggled derisively, Cooper has used the slur, ‘Uncle Tom’ when referring to black members of the teaparty, yet he’s never been suspended or asked to apologize. Now, Roland Martin doesn’t get much sympathy from me. I remember when Campbell Brown was out on maternity leave, and he covered for her, he tweeted really nasty comments about her, of course he didn’t get in trouble for that. I think Martin has reaped what he, and a lot of others like him have sowed. Martin isn’t being treated as an equal on CNN because the leftist plantation doesn’t view him as an equal. Democrats were the party of slavery, democrats wrote Jim Crow laws and were the party that created the KKK. But go ahead and sell yourselves to them, just don’t complain when they take your rights away this time.
@amanda [Imagine if this was a white person on TV, who frequently made comments about someone being “Ghetto”.]
The point is white people on tv do make derogatory comments towards non-white people all the time and never get suspended. The point is, regardless of who was offended, and there are no shortage of victims, Roland Martin does not deserve to be treated differently than his white co-workers. That is racism and sadly more and more Black people are submitting to it.
I’m glad they threw him under the bus – comments like this seem to be perfectly OK in the black community… the bottom line is, jokes laden with homophobia are not okay, and Mr. Martin doesn’t deserve any sort of pass, considering he works in such a public position. When you’re on TV, you have to watch what you say! Simple as that!
I hope, in some sort of way, this sparks change in our community. The terms “sweet”, “sugar in the tank”, etc, all are derogative towards the gay community, and in 2012, people need to learn to not be so dismissive of other lifestyles.
Imagine if this was a white person on TV, who frequently made comments about someone being “Ghetto”. Al Sharpton would have a field day with that! So NO, Mr. Martin doesn’t deserve a pass. I hope they make an example of him!
@Juan, I understand why GLADD did what they did, but the article speaks more to what CNN did in suspending him and not the others. There was just as big an outcry for them to fire Dana Loesch, not so much for Erick Erickson but the comments were similarly offensive and Martin was treated differently from his white colleagues.
I don’t get it. I thought we had freedom of speech in this country, like calling a Queer a fag,a lesbo,penis-sucker and my favorite(thanks to Anderson Cooper} tea-bagger.
Its not cuz hes black, its cuz he made fun of gays or homosexuality. I dont consider it offensive but GLAAD will attack anyone who potentially makes a statement that may be considered offensive to gays.
The point is there is no such thing as freedom of speech in this age of political correctness and the gay community will gladly use this double standard to tear anyone they perceive as a threat to their unnatural lifestyle.