Bill Cosby's May 17 remarks at a Washington, D.C., gathering
commemorating the 50th anniversary of the Brown vs. Board of
Education Supreme Court decision continues to draw controversy and
debate. That's good. Some of the debate highlights a point made by
my colleague Dr. Thomas Sowell:
"Bill Cosby and the black 'leadership' represent two
long-standing differences about how to deal with the problems of
the black community. The 'leaders' are concerned with protecting
the image of blacks, while Cosby is trying to protect the future
of blacks, especially those of the younger
generation."
Let's compare and contrast the tenor of Cosby's
comments with an example of one made by a black "leader." You decide
which class of comments is more helpful to the black community.
Cosby: "With names like Shaniqua, Taliqua and Mohammed and
all of that crap, and all of them are in jail. Brown vs. the Board
of Education is no longer the white person's problem. We have got to
take the neighborhood back. We have to go in there -- forget about
telling your child to go into the Peace Corps -- it is right around
the corner. They are standing on the corner, and they can't speak
English."
And on teen sex, Cosby said, "Hey, you have a baby when you
are 12; your baby turns 13 and has a baby. How old are you? Huh?
Grandmother! By the time you are 12, you can have sex with your
grandmother, you keep those numbers coming. I'm just predicting."
Cosby went on to say, "What is it -- young girls getting
after a girl who wants to remain a virgin? Who are these sick black
people, and where do they come from, and why haven't they been
parented to shut up? This is a sickness, ladies and gentlemen."
Contrast the gist of these remarks to those of Julian Bond,
NAACP chairman, to the group's 94th annual convention: Republicans
appeal "to the dark underside of American culture, to the minority
of Americans who reject democracy and equality." Bond added, "They
preach racial neutrality and practice racial division ... their idea
of reparations is to give war criminal Jefferson Davis a pardon."
Cosby's comments, as well as others he made, show that he's
willing to address the pressing problems of the black community, as
opposed to Bond's grandstanding on the behalf of the Democratic
Party. Black people will accomplish much more by focusing on the
issues of crime, illegitimacy, poor parenting and slovenly behavior
than worrying about whom the Republican Party is appealing to and
racial discrimination.
It's really a matter of diagnosis. In medicine, the key to
effective treatment is correct diagnosis. If one presents to a
physician with chronic fatigue, and the physician incorrectly
diagnoses it as caused by the patient's toenail fungus, he can treat
the toenail fungus until kingdom come and do nothing for the chronic
fatigue. Similarly, if black politicians and civil rights groups
diagnose black illegitimacy, crime and anti-intellectualism as
caused by racial discrimination or the Republican Party, they can
spend all the resources they please fighting discrimination and the
Republican Party and do nothing for illegitimacy, crime and
anti-intellectualism-induced poor academic performance.
As a medical doctor would be obliged to prove the causal
connection between chronic fatigue and toenail fungus or face
malpractice charges, black politicians and civil rights
organizations should be obliged to prove the causal connection
between illegitimacy, crime and anti-intellectualism, on the one
hand, and racial discrimination and the Republican Party on the
other. I think the Cos has the more accurate diagnosis, and what we
have to come up with is the effective treatment regimen.