Really, did it ever leave? Sure, Allen's been asked about it every time he's been on tv since the incident (wherein he called a young man of Indian descent a term that may or may not be a racial slur in his mother's native French-speaking north Africa, just in case you haven't read a blog in a month), but we stopped paying attention to his answers once he got his story straight -- it was a "made up word," one that he'd "never heard before." He said this on Meet the Press and the Fairfax Chamber of Commerce Webb debate. It was that debate, if you'll recall, where a reporter's question about his mother led to the now-famous "casting aspersions" not-a-Jew-no-sir breakdown, which was promptly rescinded the next morning. See, he claimed, by saying he heard the word from his mother, they were calling
MACACA'S BACK, EVERYONE!
MACACA'S BACK, EVERYONE!
MACACA'S BACK, EVERYONE!
Really, did it ever leave? Sure, Allen's been asked about it every time he's been on tv since the incident (wherein he called a young man of Indian descent a term that may or may not be a racial slur in his mother's native French-speaking north Africa, just in case you haven't read a blog in a month), but we stopped paying attention to his answers once he got his story straight -- it was a "made up word," one that he'd "never heard before." He said this on Meet the Press and the Fairfax Chamber of Commerce Webb debate. It was that debate, if you'll recall, where a reporter's question about his mother led to the now-famous "casting aspersions" not-a-Jew-no-sir breakdown, which was promptly rescinded the next morning. See, he claimed, by saying he heard the word from his mother, they were calling