Fresh off of receiving a presidential commutation, Roger Stone on Saturday used a racial slur during a live taping of a radio show hosted by a Black man.
The remark came while Morris O’Kelly, host of the Mo’Kelly Show, and Stone, a longtime adviser to President Donald Trump, were engaged in a heated discussion over the president’s July 10 decision to commute Stone’s 40-month prison sentence for lying to Congress and witness tampering in the Russia investigation.
“There are thousands of people treated unfairly daily,” O’Kelly said at one point. “How your number just happened to come up in the lottery, I’m guessing it was more than just luck, Roger, right?”
Stone, who up until that moment had been providing rapid-fire, animated responses to O’Kelly’s questions, paused. He is then heard mumbling a few unintelligible words in a low voice, before uttering the phrase “arguing with this Negro.”
“I’m sorry what was that?” O’Kelly, clearly taken aback, asked. “Roger? I’m sorry, what did you say?”
It’s then that Stone suddenly went quiet. “I thought we were having just a very spirited conversation, what happened?” O’Kelly continued.
After O’Kelly said that he can hear that the phone line is still open, Stone reappeared and suggested that the phone signal had been wonky.
“I was talking, and you said something about negroes, so I wasn’t exactly sure,” O’Kelly told Stone, who quickly denied the accusation. “You’re out of your mind,” Stone said.
According to the Associated Press, Stone elaborated on this denial in a statement after the interview:
In a statement, Stone defended himself by saying that anyone familiar with him “knows I despise racism!”
“Mr. O’Kelly needs a good peroxide cleaning of the wax in his ears because at no time did I call him a negro,” Stone said, using lowercase for the word. “That said, Mr. O’Kelly needs to spend a little more time studying black history and institutions. The word negro is far from a slur.”
He cited the United Negro College Fund and the historical use of the word.
At one time, “Negro” was common in the American vernacular to describe African Americans. By the late 1960s, however, the word was scorned by activists in favor of such descriptors as “Black.”
These days, the antiquated word is widely viewed as derogatory in most uses.
In his statement, Stone noted that some of the program’s audio was garbled and alleged that there was cross-talk from another radio show and that his sound was cut off.
The incident, while exceedingly bizarre, isn’t exactly surprising, however. Stone, a self-proclaimed “dirty trickster,” has long spewed racist, sexist, and inflammatory language, including the word “Negro.”
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