Edit 7/5/2012: Curtis has deleted the tweets, but has still made no public acknowledgement of saying them or an apology for them. More edits as the situation changes.
On the second of July, the rapper, producer and businessman Curtis Jackson, known to many as "50 Cent", posted two posts to his Twitter account that enraged the Autism community:
"yeah i just saw your picture fool
you look autistic #SMSaudio RT @yung_raditz @50cent Release the
album or get shot again" ( Previously found at
https://twitter.com/50cent/status/219978810689470464)
and
"i dont want no special ed kids on
my time line follow some body else #SMSaudio" ( Previously found at
https://twitter.com/50cent/status/219980077855809537) .
He followed up with an "apology"
for the Special Ed. remark that seemed more like a jab at how the
program worked than an actual retraction of his opinion:
"just kidding about da special ed
kids man, i was in special ed day said i had anger issues lol"
(Previously found at https://twitter.com/50cent/status/219983198527045633 ) .
As many people have already talked
about the event itself, I would rather springboard this to a
discussion on how celebrity status seems to affect public opinion.
Why is it that a good many people take the advice of a celebrity in
fields they have no knowledge about? From the posts, it is clear
Curtis knows nothing of autism; there is no autistic "look",
after all, and the idea of "looking autistic" being an
insult is absurd when any of the world's greatest innovators were on
the spectrum. Yet people will fight his opinion, myself included,
because we know there are people who will hold it as gospel if
unchallenged.
This provides a catch-22: a few
bloggers have said that there are better things to do than fight one
man's opinion, and they are right. It is, after all, the opinion of
just one man. The issue, however, is that if we do not fight it,
those that hold his opinion sacred will spread it. If we do fight
it, the fight will spread the discussion to people who would
otherwise not have heard it, and thus we spread it ourselves. Either
way, an opinion that quite rightly should just die out spreads. I
choose to speak out, however, because at least speaking out shows
that this view is not universally held and has opposition. And that,
hopefully, will discourage other people from actively expressing such
views. I would wish people did not respect celebrity views just by
virtue of their celebrity, but until people take positions based on
actual merits, others must fight back in order to show those views
are wrong.
One of the greatest ironies, however,
is that the person this insult is coming from, Curtis Jackson, is a
member of a race and culture that in his very lifetime experienced
and experiences systematized discrimination. He knows what it is
like to be insulted for an attribute he is born with (the color of
his skin), yet chooses to propagate discrimination for another born
trait (autism). If he does not know autism is a born trait, it makes
him ignorant. If he does, it makes him a hypocrite, especially after
promoting a book against bullying. Either way, I hope the community
continues to push for an apology and retraction until it gets one. Nobody deserves to be insulted for how they were born, be it sexuality, race or neurotype.
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