Observe that the denominator is $0$ as $|\omega|=\alpha$ and to avoid it we need to assume that $\alpha<0$ (since $|\omega|$ runs from $0$ to $\infty$.
If $\alpha=0$, $\sin (\omega)\sim \omega$, while denominator is $\omega|\omega|$, so still singularity.
Nathan observed that as $\alpha=n\pi$ with $n=1,2,\ldots$ singularity does not appear since $\sin (\omega)/(\omega -2\pi n)\sim 1$. However $\sin(\omega)$ appears only because of the special $g(x)$, and it saves only some $g$, not all of them, so while indeed we have a solution for such $\alpha$, it is only for some $g$.