Juan Williams

NPR was wrong to fire Juan Williams

The left is crowing, but punishing journalists -- even Fox News toadies -- for having opinions is a terrible idea

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NPR was wrong to fire Juan WilliamsNews analyst Juan Williams appears on the "Fox & friends" television program in New York, Thursday, Oct. 21, 2010. Williams, who has written extensively on race and civil rights in the U.S., has been fired by National Public Radio after comments he made about Muslims on Fox News Channel's "The O'Reilly Factor," on Monday. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)(Credit: Richard Drew)

I’m the last person who ought to be feeling sympathy for fired NPR analyst Juan Williams today. It was a little over a year ago, playing his role as Bill O’Reilly’s liberal toady, that Williams joined the Fox bully in trashing me after I challenged O’Reilly on his nasty crusade against murdered abortion provider Dr. George Tiller. He accused me of threatening poor Bill.

Williams did much the same thing this week with O’Reilly: He defended the Fox host against liberal critics, this time for O’Reilly’s false and silly remarks on “The View” that “Muslims killed us on 9/11.”

Still, I find something a little bit off about what NPR has done here. Let’s be clear: Williams regularly comes to O’Reilly’s rescue, and the words that got him in trouble this time were telling O’Reilly he was “right” about his anti-Muslim views — even though he later challenged him. Williams starts out: “Well, actually, I hate to say this to you because I don’t want to get your ego going. But I think you’re right. I think, look, political correctness can lead to some kind of paralysis where you don’t address reality.”

He then goes on to express fear when he sees Muslims on an airplane, especially those “who are in Muslim garb and I think, you know, they are identifying themselves first and foremost as Muslims, I get worried. I get nervous.” That’s bigotry, pure and simple.

And yet, as Will Saletan shows in Slate, Williams went on to say most of the things you’d expect a liberal to use against O’Reilly — that the problem is Muslim extremism, that we wouldn’t hold the actions of Fred Phelps or Timothy McVeigh against all Christians — and expresses concern that extreme anti-Muslim rhetoric led to the knifing of a New York cabby in August. Saletan goes too far to compare Williams to Shirley Sherrod — and to equate Think Progress, which first circulated the Williams video, to Andrew Breitbart, who slimed Sherrod. It’s an attention getting comparison, and it’s false.

But I do think the entire Williams transcript makes it clear that in his own Fox-toady way, he was trying to defend Muslims and critique his Fox brethren who can’t distinguish between al Qaida supporters and the vast majority of peaceful, observant Muslims.

Which leaves me troubled about his firing, I have to say. Williams has long been a problem for NPR. The network made him stop using his NPR affiliation when he appeared on Fox News a while ago. Maybe it’s been looking for a reason to cut ties. But even the excuse given for his firing by NPR CEO Vivian Schiller — “He expressed views. That is not compatible with his role as a news analyst. Plain and simple” — is ludicrous. How does a news analyst not express views?

I’m with Glenn Greenwald on the question of journalists being fired for expressing political opinions: I don’t like it, but if that’s the era we’re in, with Octavia Nasr, Helen Thomas and Rick Sanchez all going down for expressing either anti-Israel, pro-Palestinian or anti-Jewish sentiments, I guess I think a similar standard should apply to anti-Muslim bigotry.

But the whole trend makes me queasy. We need more speech, more debate about these issues, not less. Juan Williams didn’t stand up for me when he had the chance on O’Reilly, but I feel like I should stand up for him, at least to ask whether the left should really be so gratified by his dismissal.

Not that Williams needs me to stand up for him. With the three-year, $2 million contract Fox News wasted no time handing him, he’ll do just fine.

Joan Walsh

Joan Walsh is Salon's editor at large.

Juan Williams still doesn’t get it, is rich anyway

Fox gives the former NPR analyst, who still refuses to acknowledge any prejudice, a multimillion-dollar new deal

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Juan Williams still doesn't get it, is rich anywayFILE- This undated photo released by SeniorNet shows NPR news analyst Juan Williams. NPR News says that it has terminated the contract of Williams after remarks he made about Muslims on The O'Reilly Factor. (AP Photo/SeniorNet, File) NO SALES(Credit: AP)

The firing of Juan Williams (and his subsequent full-time hiring — at an insane $2 million — by Fox News) for saying he is afraid of Muslims (and adding that it is OK and right to be afraid of Muslims) is the perfect sort of overwrought nonevent for our obsessively navel-gazing media-political establishment. Old bores of the traditional media love a tale of one of their own saying something stupid and getting fired for it (it is usually outrageous when this happens unless the stupid thing said was about the Jews). The right wing immediately goes into a tizzy whenever anyone, anywhere, can be spun into sounding like some sort of victim of liberal political correctness. (As an added bonus, conservatives now get to launch an ACORN-style campaign against “government-funded” NPR.) The news is of no interest to anyone in the world outside this sphere, beyond the segment of NPR’s 20 million listeners who liked Williams so much that they called in today, weeping. (Which, truth be told, is probably a decent number of people — folks who love public radio think of the people on it like family, in my experience.)

The good reason to fire Juan Williams is that he’s predictable and boring and his appearances on Fox reflect poorly on NPR. This, for all I know, was the actual reason he was fired. But this is a very bad way to explain that firing:

A “news analyst” can’t express “views?” Oy.

But Williams still can’t acknowledge the essential bigotry of his statements. This, from Williams’ defensive, deeply stupid column on his firing, is telling (emphasis mine):

Two days later, Ellen Weiss, my boss at NPR called to say I had crossed the line, essentially accusing me of bigotry. She took the admission of my visceral fear of people dressed in Muslim garb at the airport as evidence that I am a bigot. She said there are people who wear Muslim garb to work at NPR and they are offended by my comments.

That is really the perfect explanation for what was wrong with Williams’ remarks, and it seems like the point at which an empathetic person might actually apologize. But Williams does not reflect on that, at all. Maybe he doesn’t believe it’s true. Maybe he thinks those people are somehow wrong to be offended. He’s deluded enough, after all, to consider his firing for saying something stupid “a chilling assault on free speech” — demonstrating a Palin-esque reading of the First Amendment that should embarrass the author of a biography of Thurgood Marshall. Maybe Juan Williams actually thinks being afraid of a religious or ethnic group solely because of the way they look or dress isn’t bigoted (he keeps insisting as much!), in which case, NPR is justified in firing him — as CNN was in firing Rick Sanchez — for reasons of stupidity.

But because he is a useful pawn in the war on the Liberal Media and their relentless politically correct Muslim-Coddling, he is now one of the best-compensated pretend liberal news analysts in the nation.

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Alex Pareene

Alex Pareene writes about politics for Salon and is the author of "The Rude Guide to Mitt." Email him at apareene@salon.com and follow him on Twitter @pareene

Hypocritical Huckabee will boycott NPR

The former presidential candidate is outraged that NPR sacked Juan Williams. But he told Helen Thomas to "go home"

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Hypocritical Huckabee will boycott NPRMike Huckabee

In response to NPR firing Juan Williams for expressing prejudice toward Muslims, Mike Huckabee today slammed NPR for discrediting “itself as a forum for free speech” and solidifying “itself itself as the purveyor of politically correct pabulum.” 

In a statement published on his PAC’s website, Huckabee called for the de-funding of NPR and said he will “no longer accept interview requests” from the network:

NPR has discredited itself as a forum for free speech and a protection of the First Amendment rights of all and has solidified itself as the purveyor of politically correct pabulum and protector of views that lean left.

While I have often enjoyed appearing on NPR programs and have been treated fairly and objectively, I will no longer accept interview requests from NPR as long as they are going to practice a form of censorship, and since NPR is funded with public funds, it IS a form of censorship. It is time for the taxpayers to start making cuts to federal spending, and I encourage the new Congress to start with NPR.

Huckabee, who hosts his own show on Fox, has himself been criticized for extreme rhetoric. He has reportedly advocated the idea of a population transfer of Palestinians out of the West Bank.

But more to the point, Huckabee’s rhetoric about free speech rings hypocritcal in light of his reaction to White House reporter Helen Thomas’ comments about Jews and Israel in June. After those comments, in which she said Jews should “get the hell out of Palestine,” a huge media outcry — with Huckabee one of the loudest voices — prompted Thomas to resign.

On his Fox show, Huckabee fumed that Thomas’s words were “outrageous, anti-Semitic, racist,” and “indefensible.” His conclusion: “Helen, I’ve got a suggestion: maybe it’s time for you to go home.”

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Emma Mustich is a Salon contributor. Follow her on Twitter: @emustich.

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