Why anyone aspires to be a public figure is beyond me. Undoubtedly, there is a psychological issue or two at work. Some individuals need to be the center of attention. Some apparently believe they are better-equipped than others to be in leadership or decision-making roles, or perhaps they equate it all with fitness as a person, or as someone who will be loved.
But, those in the public eye, for whatever reason, do not just reap a bounty of adulation, admiration, and praise. They also are subjected to criticism (justified or not), ridicule, and invasion of privacy.
Today on the MSN internet homepage, there is a feature called, “The Hypocrisy Hall of Shame,” listing a “dirty dozen” well-known folks who were deemed first-rate hypocrites because of the disconnect between their actions and their words. Certainly, there are more than twelve hypocrites in the world, and all hypocrites are not famous or notorious.
At the end of the slide-show of the Hall of Shame inductees, readers are invited to select the worst of the bunch, and to suggest which, if any, really should be excluded from this dubious list. You can look at the list and make your own determinations.
But, I must say, that while I never would delete Rush Limbaugh from any list that makes him look bad, I stopped for a second and wondered about Strom Thurmond, the late virulent segregationist who was a U.S. Senator from South Carolina for almost fifty years. He was included because he fathered an out-of-wedlock child with his African-American housekeeper. And it happened a long time ago. When Thurmond died, his secret daughter was 78 years old.
My question is this: Is a racist necessarily a hypocrite when he engages in illicit sex with a person of the race he so despises? The way it looks to me, if the woman involved was Thurmond’s housekeeper, she was not seen by him as an equal, especially in those days and circumstances. Was it consensual sex? I don’t know, but I have my doubts, even though the senator never was accused of rape, to my knowledge. She may have feared for her job (or life) if she refused his advances. To me, it looks like a power issue far more than a romantic issue. He disregarded her as a person, kept her in subservience, and exploited her for his own purposes. And while I would not condone extra-marital sex even if Thurmond and his housekeeper truly loved each other, this whole episode smacks of racism. So, maybe ol’ Strom shouldn’t be in the Hypocrisy Hall of Shame.
Being a low-life doesn’t automatically qualify one as a hypocrite.
