By Rich Lowry
"The final solution": 'Kill everyone in China,' a six-year-old boy said during Jimmy Kimmel's 'Kids Table' segment on Oct. 16
Jimmy Kimmel speaks to Chinese in front of the El Capitan Theatre on Wednesday, Oct. 30, 2013.
A few weeks ago, the host of ABC’s late-night show "Jimmy Kimmel Live" aired a bit where a 6-year-old boy recommends killing everyone in China.
Over the weekend, Chinese protesters besieged ABC studios around the country.
They want Kimmel fired or, failing that, more apologies.
The bit was part of a routine called "Kids Table," where Kimmel talks to cute 5- and 6-year-olds, and hilarity ensues.
The bit was part of a routine called "Kids Table," where Kimmel talks to cute 5- and 6-year-olds, and hilarity ensues.
In the funny episode, Kimmel asked the kids what to do about our debt to China, and one boy chirps, "Kill everyone in China."
Kimmel laughs and jokingly calls it "an interesting idea," before returning to it later when, with mock seriousness, he asks the kids whether the Chinese should be allowed to live.
It doesn’t take a well-honed sense of humor to realize that "Kids Table" is a forum for kids to say laughably and harmlessly absurd things, not for the discussion of serious foreign-policy initiatives.
It doesn’t take a well-honed sense of humor to realize that "Kids Table" is a forum for kids to say laughably and harmlessly absurd things, not for the discussion of serious foreign-policy initiatives.
If the boy’s proposal for a genocidal war against China as a solution to our national debt were getting a respectable hearing, he would have been invited to debate it on CNN’s "Fareed Zakaria GPS" with deadly earnest foreign-policy panjandrums like Richard Haass and Zbigniew Brzezinski.
Nonetheless, the grim gears of offense-taking began to grind.
Nonetheless, the grim gears of offense-taking began to grind.
Previously, Jimmy Kimmel’s main offense against humanity had been encouraging parents to get a rise out of their kids by telling them that they had eaten all their Halloween candy.
Now, he was guilty of incitement to mass murder.
The Chinese protesters sported signs festooned with swastikas and pictures of the comedian with a Hitler mustache, accusing him of "manipulating children" and "promoting racial genocide."
The Chinese protesters sported signs festooned with swastikas and pictures of the comedian with a Hitler mustache, accusing him of "manipulating children" and "promoting racial genocide."
Kimmel had to apologize in public to Chinese outside his Hollywood studio in a scene that bore a resemblance to a "struggle session" in the Cultural Revolution wherein accused enemies of the people were humiliated and engaged in coerced self-criticism.
Kimmel said he was "very, very sorry" and bowed to the Chinese, who still demanded every imaginable kind of other apology from him.
Kimmel said he was "very, very sorry" and bowed to the Chinese, who still demanded every imaginable kind of other apology from him.
No matter how sorry he said he was, they wanted him to be sorrier still.
The Chinese Foreign Ministry is now in on the act, calling on ABC to "face its mistakes head on."
The Chinese government’s entry into the debate might seem opportunistic, but in fairness to Beijing, no other entity in the world has proven itself as adept at killing Chinese people en masse.
The Kimmel controversy is of inherent concern since it involves its core competency.
The Kimmel kerfuffle is worthy of a Monty Python skit, but also typical of the surreal theater of offense-taking in contemporary America.
The Kimmel kerfuffle is worthy of a Monty Python skit, but also typical of the surreal theater of offense-taking in contemporary America.
Are we, in such matters, a foreign-manipulated country?
One that encourages a sense of Chinese victimhood and grievance?
One that lacks any sense of proportion?
Yes, yes and yes.
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