Usually, she gives care. But after broadcasting a five-minute-long rant in which she used the N-word 11 times, Dr. Laura Schlessinger is now on the receiving end.

The radio instructor used racial epithet eleven times in five minutes.

“It’s disagreeable,” said Abraham Foxman, national director of the Anti-Defamation League. “There’s ~t any way that it’s acceptable. It’s not funny, it’s invading to African-Americans. She should know better. There should be consequences.”

At smallest one entertainer, no stranger to the word himself, agreed.

Black comedian Paul Mooney once “had a love affair” with the N-vocable. But in 2007, after “Seinfeld” actor Michael Richards nearly ended his diverting career by using the N-word in a tirade at Los Angeles’ Laugh Factory, Mooney, who famously wrote toward Richard Pryor, banned the word from his vocabulary and started urging others to carry on the same.

“There are times when I was saying it and I couldn’t papal court the forest for the trees,” he said. “I’ve said it, I’ve been a office of it, because I’ve been a victim of my environment. I’m like a recovering alcoholic.”

Schlessinger ignited a firestorm of review after Media Matters posted audio from a Tuesday conversation she had with a black female caller. The caller was complaining about her white husband’s friends and their use of the N-word. In rejoinder, Schlessinger said:

“Black guys use it all the time. Turn in c~tinuance HBO and listen to a black comic, and all you perceive by the ear is n****r, n****r, n****r. I don’t be in possession of it. If anybody without enough melanin says it, it’s a horrible matter. But when black people say it, it’s affectionate. It’s remarkably confusing.

When the caller said she was appalled by Schlessinger’s exercise of the N-word, the radio host demurred, “Oh, then I judge at random you don’t watch HBO or listen to any black comedians. My at a high price, the point I am trying to make … we’ve got a mournful man as president and we’ve got more complaining about racism than to the end of time. I think that’s hilarious.”

Their exchange heated up after that. When the caller related she couldn’t believe Schlessinger was “on the radio spewing exhausted” the N-word, Schlessinger said she “didn’t spew out” the N-word and repeated, “n****r, n****r, n****r is what you ~ken to on HBO.”

She then criticized the caller, saying “Don’t take things not at home of context. Don’t NAACP me.”

Their conversation ended there. Schlessinger offered every epilogue to her audience: “If you’re that hypersensitive about rosiness and don’t have a sense of humor, don’t wed outside of your race.”

The Internet dropped its collective jaw at the same time that Schlessinger’s rant went viral. The story spread through Tweets and Retweets, blog comments and Facebook station updates. The following day, she offered an apology, on-air and up~ the body her website.

“I talk every day about doing the right occurrence. And yesterday, I did the wrong thing,” she said. “I didn’t intend to afflict people, but I did. And that makes it the wrong event to have done. I was attempting to make a philosophical moot ~, and I articulated the N-word all the way out — greater degree of than one time. And that was wrong. I’ll say it once more — that was wrong.”

It’s not the first time Schlessinger has offended masses of the many the crowd: in 2000, she issued multiple mea culpas after referring to homosexuality at the same time that a “biological error” and criticizing gays for “deviant” behavior.