|
New York City bans racial slur
03/01/2007 11:43 AM, Reuters
New York City symbolically banned use
of the word nigger on Wednesday, the latest step in a campaign
that hopes to expunge the most vile of racial slurs from hip
hop music and television.
The City Council unanimously declared a moratorium that
carries no penalty but aims to stop youth from casually using
the word, considered by most Americans to be the most offensive
in the English language.
The New York City measure follows similar resolutions this
month by the New York state assembly and state senate, and
supporters of the ban are taking their campaign to The
Recording Academy, asking it not to nominate musicians for
Grammy awards if they use the word in their lyrics.
Many rap artists and young New Yorkers toss the word around
as a term of endearment or as a substitute for black, angering
some black leaders who consider those who use it as ignorant of
the word's hate-filled history in slavery and segregation.
"This could be the beginning of a movement," councilman
Albert Vann said.
Councilman Leroy Comrie, a sponsor of the moratorium, said
the campaign against the word has gained strength since
comedian Michael Richards spewed it in a racially charged
tirade in Los Angeles.
The Laugh Factory club where Richards performed has since
banned comedians from using the word there and the former
"Seinfeld" television star has apologized.
"The Michael Richards incident really brought it to another
level. It has forced people to express their outrage. Many
people had been seething quietly," Comrie said.
Comrie also asked TV network Black Entertainment Television
to stop using the word in its shows. Representatives of BET did
not immediately respond to a request for comment.
A Grammy spokesman said he doubted the academy's 11,000
voting members would support any measure that might censor
artists.
"They are not going to be supportive of something that
excludes someone simply because they are using a word that is
offensive," said Ron Roecker, vice president of communication
for the Recording Academy.
The city resolution calling for the moratorium traces the
etymology of the word from the Latin "niger," meaning black, to
its first documented written use in 1786 as a term slave
masters used to label their African slaves.
Use of the word by blacks exploded with the rise of rap
music in recent years, and some black comedians like Chris Rock
continue to use it in their routines.
"What, is there a fine? Am I going to get a ticket?" Rock
mocked in a Reuters interview when asked about the City Council
move. "Do judges say, '10 years, nigger!"'
Rock said politicians were trying to divert attention from
real problems: "Enough real bad things happen in this city to
worry about how I am going to use the word."
(Additional reporting by Christine Kearney)
|