Language of Protest
Recently, Dawn Provencher, Educator, County Chair of the Democratic Party, wrote a letter to the editor quoting words spoken at an actual event where people were actually cursed at and spit upon by despicable people because they objected to health care reform and the person who made it happen.
In the lead up to the vote on health care, racist Tea Party protesters were spitting on and shouting the N-word at Rep. Emanuel Cleaver (D-Mo.), an African-American lawmaker, while Rep. Barney Frank (D-Mass.) was spat on and slurred for being a homosexual.
Dawn did the right thing by reminding the readers of this newspaper that such historically charged and damaging epitaphs should not go unchallenged. She did the right thing by reminding us all of why these words should never be spoken in anger or used to belittle other human beings. She did the right thing by writing those words, and you did the right thing by printing them, because everyone should know that we as a community will not tolerate words that diminish the dignity of human being.
A media that is over-protective of its consumers by censoring certain words is not doing us a favor. These words remind us that part of our society is still living in the past and may act again as they did in the past. We don’t need protecting from words and ideas; we need to deal with the emotions that cause those words to be spoken. These are Democratic values.
Originally published in the Alamogordo Daily News sometime in March of 2010.



