NEW YORK - New York City symbolically banned use of the word nigger on
Wednesday, the latest step in a campaign that hopes to expunge the most vile of
racial slurs from hip hop music and television.
 New York City is seen in a file photo
taken October 26, 2005. New York City symbolically banned use of the word
nigger on Wednesday, the latest step in a campaign that hopes to expunge
the most vile of racial slurs from hip hop music and television.
[AP]
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The City Council unanimously
declared a moratorium that carries no penalty but aims to stop youth from
casually using the word, considered by most Americans to be the most offensive
in the English language.
The New York City measure follows similar resolutions this month by the New
York state assembly and state senate, and supporters of the ban are taking their
campaign to The Recording Academy, asking it not to nominate musicians for
Grammy awards if they use the word in their lyrics.
Many rap artists and young New Yorkers toss the word around as a term of
endearment or as a substitute for black, angering some black leaders who
consider those who use it as ignorant of the word's hate-filled history in
slavery and segregation.
"This could be the beginning of a movement," councilman Albert Vann said.
Councilman Leroy Comrie, a sponsor of the moratorium, said the campaign
against the word has gained strength since comedian Michael Richards spewed it
in a racially charged tirade in Los Angeles.
The Laugh Factory club where Richards performed has since banned comedians
from using the word there and the former "Seinfeld" television star has
apologized.
"The Michael Richards incident really brought it to another level. It has
forced people to express their outrage. Many people had been seething quietly,"
Comrie said.
Comrie also asked TV network Black Entertainment Television to stop using the
word in its shows. Representatives of BET did not immediately respond to a
request for comment.
A Grammy spokesman said he doubted the academy's 11,000 voting members would
support any measure that might censor artists.
"They are not going to be supportive of something that excludes someone
simply because they are using a word that is offensive," said Ron Roecker, vice
president of communication for the Recording Academy.
The city resolution calling for the moratorium traces the etymology of the
word from the Latin "niger," meaning black, to its first documented written use
in 1786 as a term slave masters used to label their African slaves.
Use of the word by blacks exploded with the rise of rap music in recent
years, and some black comedians like Chris Rock continue to use it in their
routines.
"What, is there a fine? Am I going to get a ticket?" Rock mocked in a Reuters
interview when asked about the City Council move. "Do judges say, '10 years,
nigger!"'
Rock said politicians were trying to divert attention from real problems:
"Enough real bad things happen in this city to worry about how I am going to use
the word."