The media frenzy and rabid, foaming at the mouth impugnment of Paula
Deen's character is rubberneckingly amazing. The media, corporations
and politicians have not only thrown her down a hole, but they are now
using a plunger to send her further down and pull her back out so they
can assail her even more - and sell more ad space, deflect attention and
milk the witch hunt for all its worth.
I have no need to
explore Paula's cultural heritage, character, remorse, rehabilitation,
upbringing or Christic morality regarding the matter. What I find more
interesting are the corporations who are severing all ties with her and
putting as much distance between them and her as they can. Why?
They
are all hypocrites. We live in a society whose mob mentality embraces
revenge, punishment, ostracization, fear and unforgiveness. The irony
is that many of these corporations probably have people on their boards
who are far worse "racists" but are smart enough to never admit it.
This will teach people to paint over their windows of transparency.
Nobody
is the worse thing they've ever done or said and we've ALL said or done
things we may not be proud of. Whether those things have gotten us in
trouble or fired does not negate the fact that we may have learned from
those experiences, grown from them, changed or even made restitution and
asked for forgiveness. Many people go so far as to work more hard to
prove themselves as worthy and productive members of society in the
process of that reinvention.
If someone asks for forgiveness
and we don't offer it, what does that say about us? I'd rather have a
repentant criminal live next door to me than a surreptitious "good guy"
who has never been caught. For those of us who are Christians, while
on the cross, Jesus took a repentant convicted criminal to paradise with
him, not an honest man like all those "good" people who accused,
convicted, leered and denied him.
As an aside, (Did anyone see
the movie "The Gathering?" It was about [spoiler alert] the people who
witnessed the crucifixion and did nothing to stop it. They were
condemned to spend eternity witnessing the worse atrocities humanity
inflicts upon itself for, not to act is to act. ( For instance, the
church must condone war since it does little to stop it)).
The
corporations who severed their ties with Paula are blind. All they are
doing is tearing down and destroying in an effort to either get people
to notice how superior and ethical they are or, to deflect attention
away from themselves (Look how evil Paula is and how good we are because
we threw her to the curb. We're not hateful, prejudice or evil as she
is. Look at our moral superiority by denouncing her and her
wickedness).
If I were in charge of one of these corporations,
I'd embrace Paula and design an ad campaign using Paula and focusing the
ad on race relations, the destructive force of prejudice and how we can
heal from hate. I would show the world what hate looks like, what it
can do and what we are doing to help heal the wounds of ignorance. Then
combine it with coupons and events to promote healing, attract
attention to the good we are doing rather than what we are not doing and
of course, sell product. What is that age old axiom about honey,
vinegar and flies?
When all you do is destroy, disown and
dissolve, you can't heal or build. These companies are cutting off their
noses to spite their face. So far, these companies are The Food
Network, Walmart (a paragon of race and fair wage relations) Caesars
Entertainment (gambling is not an addiction but bring your credit card
anyway), Target now has her in their cross-hairs (Target finds it
acceptable to sell products made by minors working for $2 a day in Asian
sweatshops. Their PR teams are thanking Deen for diverting attention
away) and Smithfield Foods.
Smithfield issued a statement saying
"As an ethical food leader, it is important that our values and those of
our spokespeople are properly aligned.”
Smithfield has ethics?
Their use of gestation crates would seem to be at odds with that. Not to
mention all the land they have contaminated with feces-ridden runoff.
The very fact that they have the gall to use the word "ethical" when
referring to themselves strikes me as ludicrous.
Novo Nordisk
which produces the drug Victoza has dumped Paula, too. Victoza is a
drug for people with diabetes. Paula was a spokesperson for Victoza
while at the same time she was promoting lifestyle and dietary changes
in an effort to battle diabetes. I'm sure that that competitive opinion
didn't sit well with Novo Nordisk who would rather that people
afflicted with diabetes take their drug instead of putting down that
doughnut and getting exercise. Paula's alternative method of healing
certainly had nothing to do with Novo Nordisk breaking their contract
with her, I'm sure. But her use of the N-word, the concision of insult,
came at a convenient time.
The ancient art of the invective
has been around for centuries and will be around for centuries more. It
won't stop by firing Paula and negating all the good she did and is
further capable of doing, but, imagine what could be accomplished by
using her to educate people and proffering a little forgiveness laced
with mercy and grace.
I have no doubt that Paula is going to
reinvent herself and come back bigger and better. The question is,
which savvy corporation is going to align with her and make a big score
when she does have a lucrative comeback? Paula, I'm in! But all I
have is ten bucks.
Musician Malcolm Kogut has been tickling the ivories since he was 14 and won the NPM DMMD Musician of the Year award in 99. He has CDs along with many published books. Malcolm played in the pit for many Broadway touring shows. When away from the keyboard, he loves exploring the nooks, crannies and arresting beauty of the Adirondack Mountains, battling gravity on the ski slopes and roller coasters.
Showing posts with label smithfield. Show all posts
Showing posts with label smithfield. Show all posts
Thursday, June 27, 2013
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