And here we are again, back to the same question:
What to do about Louis Farrakhan?
The leader of the Nation of Islam has, for years, been a toxic fount of anti-Semitic and homophobic rhetoric.
“These false Jews,” he preached in 2006, “promote the filth of Hollywood that is seeding the American people and the people of the world and bringing you down in moral strength. … It’s the wicked Jews, the false Jews, that are promoting lesbianism, homosexuality. It’s the wicked Jews, false Jews, that make it a crime for you to preach the word of God, then they call you homophobic!”
The hatred in those words is as clear as if they had been spoken by David Duke — as, indeed, they easily could have been. And faced with that hatred, the obligation of moral people would seem obvious.
Condemn it.
Condemn it loudly.
Condemn it with vigor.
Condemn it unflinchingly.
But for some African-Americans, it has never been that easy where Farrakhan is concerned. Consider Illinois Rep. Danny Davis. Asked about Farrakhan earlier this month by a reporter for the conservative Daily Caller, he danced like Baryshnikov around the Nation of Islam leader’s record of Jew-bashing.