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News Analysis
Time To Go, Chris
by Bruce Fisher
The Corrosive Consequences of Casual Hate Speech
In the best of times, Buffalo is a hard sell. We’re a little city in the cold part of fly-over country, an inconvenient eight-hour drive from Manhattan, Boston, Washington, or Chicago—the big cities where America’s political, cultural, financial, scientific, educational, and entrepreneurial leaders live. Despite the sunny reality of our summers, the pleasant livability of our short commutes, our world-class natural and cultural amenities, America and the world alike imagine us to be a snowy place that houses terrorists, sits atop Love Canal, jails innocent non-rapists, and loses Super Bowls.
It just got harder. Buffalo now has an elected official who makes anti-Semitic remarks to an audience that chuckles nervously rather than getting up, leaving the room and demanding his resignation.
Even worse, reports are coming in that this Western New York elected official has for some weeks now, perhaps longer, been using the lines that were first reported in the New York Daily News. Collins recently made the same comparison to a group of Buffalo State students, in the presence of two members of the faculty.
How does a community look when its leaders—religious, secular, institutional, and elected alike—merely shrug at hate speech?
Other than condemnations by Democratic Party Chairman Len Lenihan and Assemblyman Sam Hoyt, the silence about Chris Collins’s characterization of an Orthodox Jew as “anti-Christ” and as “Hitler” is deafening.
There is no movement afoot to unseat Collins. The bishop of the Catholic Diocese hasn’t said a word. Unlike in the early 1980s, when a blatantly racist, anti-Semitic neo-Nazi came to town, no university or college presidents are leading hundreds of community residents on a march to confront the evil-sayer. The head of the local Jewish Federation has uttered a cautious critique that is far, far short of condemnation—though some have told me that this is completely understandable, actually, as members of wronged religious minorities have learned, through long and bitter historical experience, that sometimes it is better to endure stoically. But there’s political silence in the air as well: Fifteen county legislators, all of whom are up for re-election, 10 of whom are the political foes of the Jew-basher, are silent. Republicans have pointed to Collins’s anemic apology and have announced that it is time to “move on.”
The evidence so far is that in this part of New York State, there is no immediate political consequence to anti-Semitism. In the rest of the state, however, the many hundreds of thousands of readers of New York City newspapers know, again, that Upstate New York, like South Carolina, hosts politicians who make anti-Semitic remarks and stay in office.
Five reasons why this matters
Here’s a list of reasons why that’s a problem for this community.
• Western New York is dependent on downstate, and that makes the region politically vulnerable. As reported here before, the Buffalo metro area annually receives more than $1 billion more in New York State expenditures than the Buffalo metro area contributes in taxes to the New York State exchequer. Most of that money comes in the form of transfer payments—pension checks to retirees and subsidies to public assistance. Albany also sends funds for the state university, checks to state employees, payments to local governments, and enormous chunks of cash that keep construction workers working on things like the Buffalo schools reconstruction project. The money that constitutes entitlements will keep coming. But the discretionary money is, well, discretionary. In a tight budget year, nobody would be surprised if downstate elected officials—whose constituents, after all, are paying our bills—would be responsive to downstate voters who are angry about anti-Semitic hate speech uttered by an upstate politician whose community is largely silent about his anti-Semitic hate speech. Why should downstate Assembly members send us an extra dime beyond the handouts they already send?
• Expressly anti-Semitic language may be part of the political culture in South Carolina, but until now, even code words were taboo up here in the civilized North. As a leader of a national coalition of progressive Christian Democrats told me Tuesday when I described the statements of County Executive Collins, hateful speech about religious and other minorities “coarsens us all.” Permit me to suggest that it’s much worse than that. Religious leaders, activists, and American grownups everywhere spent decades of effort to kill off the “N” word in public discourse. Inter-group enmity, tribal resentments, and ancient stereotypes live on more persistently than zombies, but furtively, like foot fungus in locker rooms. But in 2008, there was a pretty decisive national rejection of the time-tarnished American ethos of hate speech. Now, however, it is popping up all over the place again. That should worry everybody—because the last time this behavior became part of American political discourse, a Western New Yorker named Timothy McVeigh murdered 168 government workers in Oklahoma City.
• This anti-Semitic hate speech fits a local pattern. We want to think of ourselves as a progressive community with shared values. Conservative and liberal alike, our business and civic leadership invests mightily in the not-for-profit entities—especially our artistic, architectural, and community-service organizations, from the BPO to the Wright icons—that define us and our hometown as part of civilized society. But when a politician utters gutter words, and concurrently dis-invests in community assets, the community ought to do something to defend its reputation as the Jew-basher manifests his ideology and rhetoric in his budgets. There is no outrage over the Jew-bashing. So far, neither is there any protest from his alleged opposition of the sharp reductions in local public support for libraries, cultural organizations, aid to indigent women, and to human services that address the needs of the last and the least. No protest, no pushback, no nothing? No community, apparently, either.
• Without sane Republicans, the Red State divide will worsen. This is, after all, the state of Nelson Rockefeller, the Republican governor under whose stewardship was created the 46-campus State University of New York system and countless artistic, environmental, historic-preservation, and enduring infrastructure projects. Progressive Erie County Republicans Ned Regan and Joel Giambra funded culturals and fought for knitting city and suburbs together. How the heck does this state have anything like a policy discussion worth the words when the only thing Republicans have to say about Jew-bashing Chris Collins is nothing? Does this mean that all Republicans are Jew-haters? My quiet survey of a few Republicans so far tots up lots of sighs and eye-rolling, and statements like “Collins is political toast.” Democrats put on a brave face about how useful Collins’s statements are going to be as they set out to raise funds from disgusted GOPers. But to the non-insider, the message so far is that Collins erred only by degree, not in essence—and to the general public, the basic assertion that Sheldon Silver is some kind of anti-Upstate monster of demonic proportion is going unchallenged.
• Worse behavior will come if there are no consequences now. It is unlikely that anybody insensitive enough to repeatedly compare an Orthodox Jew to the historic murderer of Jews will have the wit to resign public office. What is more likely is that the narcissism that spawned such heedless hatefulness will result in the reaction that all narcissists exhibit when criticised—namely, a great big sense of victimhood. Soon enough, especially if MSNBC talk-show host Rachel Maddow does another spot on Collins (she was ruthlessly critical of Collins on the issue of the Erie County Holding Center), Collins and his apologists will do what heedless haters do: They’ll scream that they’ve been wronged. That’s when the barstool bubbas will start doing what resentful loud-mouths do: They’ll talk about the black helicopters, the International Jewish Conspiracy, the “truth” of Rush Limbaugh, Glenn Beck, and the rest. And there will be more bad words, and, inevitably, more bad behavior.
This community has suffered from decades of capital flight and the resulting income stagnation, persistent poverty, social discord and erosion and outright closure of beloved community institutions. The politics of racial divisiveness, exacerbated by suburban self-isolation, worsened the negative economic fundamentals. Every historical parallel, especially to the distressing analogies of the 1930s, indicates that we are vulnerable to demagoguery and to hate speech. And now we have it.
The real Sheldon Silver
As for Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver from faraway Manhattan, it is hard for Western New Yorkers to perceive him as anything but a distant stranger because of his infrequent presence in a media market where all politics feels local, angry, and anti-government. The facts don’t much matter, but his voting record is simple and clear. He is a strong supporter of unions. He is a supporter of progressive income taxation. He is a supporter of an expanded definition of civil rights that includes gays. He is an unapologetic defender of the role of government services. His demeanor isn’t sunny, to be sure. Politics ain’t beanbag, and you don’t stay leader by being a pushover, so his alleged intolerance of dissent should come as no surprise. An impartial observer notes that the fear or angst about Silver reflects frustration about the imbalance of power between rich and populous downstate versus empty and poor upstate. But since when is demographic reality or relative political powerlessness an excuse to call Sheldon Silver vile names, bash his religion, and compare him to a psychopathic murderer of innocents?
There is no excuse. Nor is there any excuse for silence. What needs to happen is for black veterans of the Civil Rights movement to stand up and ask Chris Collins to resign. What needs to happen is for the women and men who work so hard to help the international reputation of this community to step forward and tell the world that we will not be led by a hate-speaker. It’s time for religious leaders to demand a better standard of behavior, and acts of contrition, the first act being a resignation. It’s time for community leaders to figure out a way to speak just a little bit of truth to a little bit of power. After all, folks, the Erie County executive commands neither army nor militia. (That may be why the leading Jewish organization in town isn’t mixing it up, for after all, what does a little county leader threaten, really?) All he has is his mouth and his minions.
One recalls what Pope John Paul II said when he served mass to Lech Walensa and a few hundred thousand Poles back when the Solidarity movement was up against communist tanks and guns, “Do not fear.” They didn’t fear. They stood up. They won.
Back down on political earth, though, maybe it’s easier simply to ask politicians to say something before next Tuesday. So here’s a question for Ed Cox, the true gentleman who is a great leader of the movement to offer educational opportunity to poor kids, the man who is now the leader of the Republican Party in New York State: Ed, when Chris Collins called Sheldon Silver the “anti-Christ,” and when Chris Collins compared Sheldon Silver to Adolph Hitler, what did you say or do? Did you get up and leave? Did you demand an apology? Did you weigh in on that person’s fitness to hold public office? Or were you silent?
Lenny Lenihan said his piece. Sam Hoyt said his. Are there any other Democrats who have anything to say about this? Are Democrats really so cynical that they will chuckle about Collins’s hateful speech as nothing more than a political gaffe, or is something more sinister lurking in this community—like, perhaps, quiet agreement that Shelly Silver is everything Chris Collins says he is?
New York wants to know.
Bruce Fisher is former deputy county executive for Erie County and visiting professor of economics and finance at Buffalo State College, where he directs the Center for Economic and Policy Studies.
Reader Comments (posting new comments is closed!)
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Cynthia 29 Oct 2009, 11:23
I can't believe there's a whole article about how Chris Collins' possible lack of political saavy. People love to invoke Godwin's Law and until there's a guy worse than Adolf Hitler people will continue to compare other people to him. You should be indicting the WNY community as a whole for its blatantly intolerent, even racist, attitude towards just about everyone. Collins grew up in this hateful cesspit and so I'd say that Collins is a mirror for that WNYer's need to take a good look into, recognize our shortcomings, and start changing our ways. But I guess its easier to say "We are so not racists/bigots. I have a Black/White/Hispanic/Asian friend so thats impossible. Let's crucify Chris Collins so we don't have to look to ourselves and examine our own beliefs." than to do the right thing.
Kathy Mecca 29 Oct 2009, 11:42
Mr. Collins' inexcusable conduct is not an indictment of the rest of us - transferring the blame to the WNY community as a whole get's him off the hook too easily. If others find as I do, Collins remarks appalling then take the time to tell Mr. Silver. Dear Mr. Speaker, I along with so many other good people from Buffalo are appalled over the conduct of our County Executive, Chris Collins. His behavior is simply inexcusable. His anti-Semitic comments reflect the attitude of one politician but certainly not the majority of people he was elected to serve. Buffalo is and always has been a richly diverse city. We have for 150 years embraced the culture of people from all over the world. I would be honored to have you come to my neighborhood the next time you are in Buffalo so you could see why we deserve to be known as the City of Good Neighbors. Your leadership in the Senate of the great state of New York is deeply appreciated and respected. I hope that the hateful words of one man will not cast a dark cloud over how you feel toward Buffalo.
p 29 Oct 2009, 13:17
ehm, why does artvoice publish this dry and long-winded drivel?
SoldierBoy 29 Oct 2009, 15:19
Hey.. Bruce.. That can't be as bad as when You and Giambra laid off the Veterans in the county because after all you BLEW 200 million that was left you by Dennis gorski.
GladGiambraisGone 29 Oct 2009, 15:24
We all know that you buddy Joel A. Giambra and his buddy Lazio are sneaking their way in the governer's race. Clever leak and misinfo to the press
User Loser 29 Oct 2009, 19:32
I'm not so sure that this isn't intentional on Collin's part. Ergo that any publicity is good publicity. I mean for a Republican any mention on Left wing blogs is good as long as you are involved in some racist thing whatever...And I saw his smirking countenance staring out at me at Talking Points Memo for Wingnuts that is hallowed ground to be staked out in...Enemy of my enemy and all that. Sure got him in national spotlight for 15 nanoseconds.
Bruce Fisher 29 Oct 2009, 21:29
Some facts: Racial code words have a long ugly history as a political tactic. Until Roosevelt, Democrats race-baited Blacks; since Nixon, Republicans have done it. Anti-Semitism as a political tactic seems quite different. As for alleged mis-information, actually, a couple of hundred people heard Collins say "anti-Christ" and "Hitler" about a week after a dozen students and faculty hear Collins say "anti-Christ" and "Hitler." Could they all be wrong? If so, then why did Collins issue two apology statements? And Rick Lazio is not sneaking into the race for governor. He declared his candidacy quite openly, in September. Now my question: why do on-line letter-writers so often use pseudonyms, while snail-mail letter-writers always sign their names?
Harvey Rogers 30 Oct 2009, 03:26
To all who are interested, I reccommend,"Why are Jews Liberals" by Norman Podhoretz. It gives an excellent summary of hatred, lies and conduct directed towards the Jewish people for at least 2000 years. There is nothing new about Collins comments, but to let them go without taking action is a mistake. If you want a vote to remove him from office, you have mine.
jay ferrari 30 Oct 2009, 12:43
it would be more sensible to point out why Silver is anti-upstate BUT also how weak limbed our state legislators are, but this would never occurto Chris Collins. I am rooting for Bruce Fisher!!
Matt G. 30 Oct 2009, 16:57
Ok, so Chris Collins, in making his statements about Sheldon Silver, should have used some analogy that could in no way be aligned with the third rail that is anti-semitism. It was thoughtless, and speaks to the fact that so many of our leaders today fail to understand the reach and influence of their utterances. Our new president included. If Collins is a determined anti-Semitic, as Mr. Jackson seems to suggest, then it will be apparent throughout his administration and he will be rejected by the voters as he should be, maybe sooner if there is something virulent afoot in county hall. That will be found out over time. What is more surprising, if this is the case, is how this "jew-basher" (from the article) ever made it through the election process without being vetted by media whizzes like Mr. Jackson. As is usually the case with things like this, the legitimate point he brings up gets lost in the sea of feel good "indignation" by all of the "better" people. Let's burn Collins at the cross, as all "jew-bashers" should be, but let's also man up and discuss what he clumsily tried to bring attention to. Let us hope that the real issue he was trying to draw attention to (not Silver's ethnicity) does get some time in the light of day. Anyone who has paid any attention to state politics for the last decade or two understands that Mr. Silver, along with Mr. Bruno (former Leader of the Senate) and the sitting Governor of the time (Cuomo, Pataki, Spitzer) were the "three men in a room" that essentially made all decisions regarding spending for the state. Now Silver is the only one left standing, as the emasculated Governor Patterson does not have a seat at the table and the Senate (now controlled by Democrats and with out the dethroned Bruno)is in lockstep with Silver. Silver dictates policy, or that is what it feels like to many observers of the political process in the state. Rather than try and solve the problem of our spiraling deficits, he leaves it to the governor to suggest spending cuts and then sits back and uses appropriate moral indignation to say we can't cut this or that, or lets his members do it. He, Sheldon Silver, wields an inordinate amount of power, and uses it to nearly dictate policy. He could implement changes no one else could, and it makes it all the more tragic that he does not. His interests are not our interests in Western New York. That is what our representatives are for, our interests. All things related to the dysfunction of our ever-over-reaching and over-regulating state government bear an even closer scrutiny now as the federal government seems intent on distributing the "success" of horribly over-regulated states to the rest of the country, by dictate whenever possible. Mr. Collins, at the very best, made a poor choice of words. At the worst, he has revealed a strain of hatred that repels any reasonable person. He has apologized, and we will find out if there are more shoes to drop. Like our former president, any shoes of this type are sure to be hurled at him in a news conference, as they should be. He has invited this scrutiny. In our indignation at Mr. Collins, we can all feel better about ourselves. I guess when things are as bleak as they appear now, even that is of some use. Sincerely, Matt
Betty Barcode 30 Oct 2009, 17:56
No one named Jackson had anything to do with this article, Matt. It was written by Bruce Fisher. Thank you Artvoice for featuring it on the cover. So who's starting a petition to call for Collins' resignation? I especially appreciated this insight: "What is more likely is that the narcissism that spawned such heedless hatefulness will result in the reaction that all narcissists exhibit when criticised—namely, a great big sense of victimhood."
Matt G. 30 Oct 2009, 22:44
Thank you for correcting me Betty. I do not read Artvoice often, but I think there is a Bruce Jackson that also has written for the paper. I confused him and Mr . Fisher. Again, the point about Collins is not one to debate. His comments were thoughtless and he deserves whatever repercussions come his way. A high school kid should know better. The more relevant long-term issue to our community is our collective political leadership fiddling like Nero while the whole state is on fire. Being indignant and upset about this, sadly, does not give people that good feeling of pious self-righteousness that pointing out boneheaded behavior does, so it will not get the attention it warrants. It is not much different than why celebrity tabloids are in the line at the check-out. Knowing how much better we are than octo-mom is way more satisfying than genuinely addressing the problems associated with the society we are leaving in our wake for our children to deal with.
geoff kelly 31 Oct 2009, 10:19
Matt G: I agree that the issue of downstate control of the state's political system is important, and so is that fcat that the ystem is controlled by a handful of men. Those issues have been the subject of AV cover stories in the past, and are a frequent topic of (or context to) our short news pieces in the front. I don't think by addressing what Collins said in this week's issue we're cutting off the conversation about the imbalance of power in past or future issues. We're just condemning the terms Collins used, especially in light of the fact that he'd made the same joke before, that it was not some unscripted gaffe, as he originally suggested when issuing an apology. Here at AV, we figured that revelation was another shoe dropping. I'm not interested in discovering whether Collins is truly an anti-Semite or not. I doubt that he is, if he allows himself a moment of reflection, but I don't care to look into his heart. That's his business. I only think it's worth pointing out that any public official who would make a joke like that -- not once, but at least twice -- in public forums is either too stupid and clueless to hold office or too arrogant and heedless to hold office. Thanks for reading. I hope you'll continue.
Elin Bemmond 31 Oct 2009, 19:23
There's more on CC and his personal background. Afterall, who else could go to a party at Nichols and be asked to leave due to his cynical comments? Sorry Chris, anyone who deflects on other politicians that they are bad guys when you yourself are one, is just trying to hide something.....what is it?
wende 31 Oct 2009, 19:58
Anyone who has ever been in the same room with this guy can attest to his arrogance. clueless? out of touch? absolutly.
DS 02 Nov 2009, 14:28
You know why there was no public outcry about this ? Because most failed to see how the 'remark' is anti-Jewish, because it isn't !!!!! It's one politician talking about another.
Uncabobbo 03 Nov 2009, 10:09
Here we go taking a page from the good Reverand Sharpton's playbook. Someone says something bad about a race or religion...lets go after his job! Problem is it only applies to white males. I am no fan of Chris Collins but come on Mr. Fisher...include Mayor Brown and Councilmen Davis and Smith in your article. They most certainly display blatant racism. Or, you can take the other tack and simply say that syou don't like what was said but would be willing to die fighting for the right to say it. Peace and Goodspeak.
love buffalo 03 Nov 2009, 20:34
One thing the article doesn't address is the Rush Limbaugh,Glen Beck, Sarah Palin led embrace of hateful rhetoric that gives this County Executive license to be racist, classist, and free with his anti everyone but the rich and dumb. The essence of the Republican Party is anti-government, pro-business claptrap so that people who are closed out of the economic system hate not those who marginalize them, but those who are competing for non-existent or low paying jobs. Chris Collins knows this, and plays to the crowd.Imagine, he won his job as a businessman glorifying business values in government when Madoff, Picculo, Enron, Citibank, and many others were destroying the lives of so many people nationwide? There are those who want to identify with the oppressor, and those who are the oppressor. Chris seeks, and owns them, with his remarks. When he speaks, he targets his comments at people who think Jews are rich and have the power to close them out of the economy. He is in comfortable territory in Erie County, because it is segregated by class and race. What I can't figure out is why our somnambulent community allows this vicious vision to be the one that shapes our future. Our image is tarnished statewide; he exposes us as rubes; the religious and politial communities don't respond; the community ignores his destruction of good jobs and social services; hello Buffalo, is anyone home?
Brian Wood 12 Nov 2009, 16:29
Mr. Silver should quietly remove his support for the $1 billion that WNY receives over what it pays to the state. Mr. Collins needs to face the consequences of his stupidity, if not his prejudice.
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