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Come on People, No, Come on Cosby
Earl Ofari Hutchinson
Comedian Bill Cosby is the walking and now writing proof of the
ancient adage that good intentions can go terribly awry. That’s never
been more painfully true than in Cosby’s latest tome, Come on People.
Cosby and his publisher boast that the book is a big, brash, and
provocative challenge to Black folk to get their act together. That’s
got him ga ga raves, and an unprecedented one hour spin job on Meet the
Press. In the book, Cosby harangues and lectures, cobbles together a
mesh of his trademark anecdotes, homilies, and personal tales of woe and
success, juggles and massages facts to bolster his self-designated Black
morals crusade. Stripped away it’s the same stock claim that Blacks
can't read, write or speak coherent English, and are social and
educational cripples and failures.
Since Cosby’s much touted tirade at the NAACP confab a few years
back, and on countless talk shows, and at community gatherings, he has
succeeded marvelously in getting the tongues of Blacks wagging furiously
and their fingers jabbing relentlessly at each other’s alleged
mountainous defects. They stumble over themselves to hail Cosby as the
ultimate truth-giver.
He isn’t. While Cosby is entitled to publicly air Black America's
alleged dirty laundry, there's more myth than dirt in that laundry. Some
knuckleheads in Black neighborhoods do kill, mug, peddle dope, are
jobless untouchables, and educational wastrels. They, and only they,
should be the target of wrath. But Cosby makes a Grand Canyon size leap
from them to paint a half-truth, skewed, picture of the plight of poor
Blacks and the reasons and prescriptions for their plight. The
cornerstone of Cosby mythmaking is that they are crime prone,
educational losers, and teen baby making machines.
The heart wrenching and much played up news shots and specials of
Black-on-Black blood letting in Philadelphia, New Orleans, and a handful
of other big cities and the admission that Blacks do have a much higher
kill rate than young whites tell a tale of out-of-control, lawless
Blacks. The truth: homicides and physical assaults have plunged among
Black teens to the lowest levels in the past two decades. The rate of
drug use among young Blacks is no higher than among young whites. Blacks
are more likely to be arrested, convicted and imprisoned than young
whites who if arrested at all are more likely to get drug rehab,
counseling, and treatment referrals, probation or community service.
This horribly distorts the racial crime picture.
Then there is the Black teen girls as baby making machine myth. The
truth: The teen pregnancy rate among Black girls has sharply dropped
during the past decade. And they continue to fall.
The biggest myth that young Blacks empty out the public schools, fill
up the jails and cemeteries, and ridicule learning as acting white has
risen to urban legend rank. The truth: The U.S. Dept. of Education found
that in the decades since 1975, more Blacks had enrolled in school, had
improved their SAT scores by nearly 200 points and had lowered their
dropout rate significantly. It also found that one in three Blacks
attended college, and that the number of Blacks receiving bachelors and
masters degrees had nearly doubled. A survey of student attitudes by the
Minority Student Achievement Network, an Illinois-based educational
advocacy group in 2002 and confirmed in other surveys, found that Black
students were as motivated, studied as hard, and were as serious about
graduating as whites.
Cosby publicly bristles at criticism that he takes the worst of the
worst behavior of some Blacks and publicly hurls that out as the warped
standard of Black America. Cosby says that he does not mean to slander
all, or even most Blacks, as derelict, laggards and slackers. Yet that’s
precisely the impression he gives and the criticism of him for it is
more than justified. Even the book title, Come on People: On the Path
from Victims to Victors (a hint they’re all losers) conveys that
smear.
He did not qualify or provide a complete factual context for his
blanket indictment of poor Blacks. He made the negative behavior of some
Blacks a racial rather than an endemic social problem. In doing so, he
did more than break the alleged taboo against publicly airing racial
dirty laundry; he fanned dangerous and destructive stereotypes.
This is hardly the call to action that can inspire and motivate
underachieving Blacks to improve their lives. Instead, it further
demoralizes those poor Blacks who are doing the best to keep their
children and themselves out of harm’s way, often against towering odds,
while still being hammered for their alleged failures by the Cosby’s
within and without their communities. Worse, Cosby’s blame the victim
slam does nothing to encourage government officials and business leaders
to provide greater resources and opportunities to aid those Blacks that
need help.
Come on People, intended or not, continues to tar the Black
communities and the Black poor as dysfunctional, chronic whiners, and
eternally searching for a government hand-out. Come on Cosby.
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