The Keane Edge


The Keane Edge by Brendan Patrick Keane

Rick Sanchez points a dirty finger at Jon Stewart aka "The Bigot"

Posted on Monday, October 04, 2010 at 05:09 AM

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I honestly thought Rick Sanchez was white. I would never have guessed he was an oppressed "minority."

But that's what the former CNN host has claimed in his bid to represent "everyday Americans" against anyone with any advantage he did not have.

The butt of many Daily Show lampoons for being a goofy journalist--Mr.Sanchez--has finally succumbed to the gravitas of a wounded ego; lashing out at Jon Stewart, Jewish people, physicists, school teachers and anyone smarter than he.

While promoting his aptly titled autobiography/treatise Conventional Idiocy, Sanchez was reminded, as he talked with Pete Dominick on radio, of his enmity for Jon Stewart, and proffered his theory that the Comedy Central host is a bigot. (huh!?)

Of all comedians to accuse of bigotry, Jon Stewart is the least convincing candidate--unless of course, you ask a Belgian. Poor Belgium doesn't get a break on The Daily Show. On Thursday's Show alone, Stewart made no less than three--three!--waffle jokes about the small nation.

Stewart explained this "bigotry" towards little Belgium was really only that he and his writers were wracking their brains to come up with any Belgium references at all, but could manage no better than waffles.

As a seeming white person, Sanchez may have been upset about the Belgian waffle jokes. Or he may have just been seeking compatriots for his victim complex by scapegoating popularly-resented smart people.


Listening to Rick Sanchez's case against Stewart is cringe-worthy, because we live in a meritocracy, where the hierarchy is determined in a big way by merit. Some resent the kids that had good study habits, or who come from families where talk about physics and anything else in the world, is normal family time conversation.

Sanchez's rationalizations of persecution and his dirty finger-pointing is just more of his trade-mark sloppiness.

Anti-semitism is a strangely problematic danger because it targets just some of those that succeed in the meritocracy. Success in this society stems from many factors, including bookish upbringing, study habits, testing skills, analytical dialogue tradition, unabashed curiosity, personal achievement and many other successful traits that are associated with that tired old target of ancient hate narratives, "the Jews."

Sanchez chose the usual and wrong target--a tiny group of people that won't put up with that shit anymore.


25 comments

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@Rebelforce His name is Rupert Murdoch.. and he's an Australian who became American to take control of your media, though he could become Chinese if there's enough money in it for him ;0
correction- maybe the American public woudn't have to WATCH their pathetic rantings.
That's like the pot calling the kettle black. What a bunch of bigots - neither one has a clue. Now if Bill Maher, Rachel Maddow, and the other clueless wonders were axed maybe the American public would actually WATCH their pathetic ranting.
Sanchez sucked. He should have been fired a long time ago. good article Brendan.
Hergé, Hercule Poirot, Jacques Brel, Georges Simenon, fine beer, Jean-Claude Van Damme, Audrey Hepburn, Django Reinhardt? Come on, Stewart. There's plenty to celebrate -- and ridicule -- about the excellent country that is Belgium.
Keane: You are what the Irish would call a waster. You have nothing to offer. Go Away.
Did you hear the interview, Brendan? Rick Sanchez didn't imply all the things attributed to him, and pulling quotes out of context is unfair. For example, he didn't lash out at school teachers, physicists or Northeast Jews. He simply said that people who grow up in the privileged white suburbs aren't minorities in the sense that is commonly understood.

You're wrong about the American "meritocracy." In many ways, young Americans' career options are already determined before they're on their own. For example, every member of the Supreme Court went to an Ivy League college - is that a coincidence?
Brendan Patrick Keane.....Suck up
CORRECTION: We USED to live in a meritocracy. That was forty years ago. Today we live in the era of Affirmative Action programs and "cultural and ethnic diversity". If it's okay for Rick Sanchez to point out that there are "too many" white NY firefighters with names like McMahon and Flanagan and more should be done to hire people named Robinson, Perez, Patel, Chang and Cohen, (regardless of their ability) why is it wrong when Sanchez suggests we might need some cultural and ethnic diversity in who controls America's newsmedia?
Loved this summary. Very smart and to the point and I wholeheartedly agree.
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