I think if anyone is to be blamed but Imus (for his insensitivity and stupidity in first making the comments and then initially dismissing them as being harmless) it is the
sponsors. The networks did what they had to do based on the revenue lost.
As much as the sponsers may want to present their decisions to pull advertising from the show as being morally based, we all know that is

.
They caved to pressure from Jackson and Sharpton, and they were cowardly and stupid to do so. Both of those guys are all talk, and haven't accomplished anything worthwhile in decades (if ever). Their M.O. is to use a potential boycott by their "constituency" as a threat. Sure african-americans buy the products these companies sell, but the very idea that they make decisions as a group, and will buy or not buy something based on what these 2 losers and the small bands of protestors they are able to put together say, is demeaning to all black people. I would be interested to hear/read the details on any effective boycott of anything led by either Jackson or Sharpton.
I absolutely LOVE what Jason Whitlock is saying about the crying need for new, REAL leadership in the african-american community. He compares the current "leaders" to supreme court justices or college professors with tenure who are there for life, whether they deserve it or not.
I believe that wrong actions deserve consequences, but
I think that the focus by some on the particular consequence of FIRING was in this case ill-concieved. I would have been interested in seeing what would evolve if there were a somewhat longer suspension (which could be used to revamp). Then returning to CBC/MSNBC under the tight scrutiny he would have undoubtedly faced, there would be an opportunity to creatively retain elements of humor along with his unique eclectic approach to a myriad of other things, while retaining proper boundaries. I'm afraid now that if/when he makes a "comeback" it will be on XM or in some other format or set of circumstances where he will be able to just go back to what he was doing, or possibly worse. I would be very surprised if he just "fades away" right now, even though he is 66. He had just signed a 5 year contract with CBS and was planning on that money, along with the "bully pulpit" his show provided, to endow his ranch for kids with cancer.