Wednesday, April 6, 2016

NCredibly Ignorant

Stop me if you've heard this before.  An entertainer with a net worth many times above the people he's speaking to, tries to garner support by playing on their worst fears.  His "credibility" is based on his success in business.  He hopes the message he's sending provokes an emotional reaction big enough to get them to spend money on him so he can be their "voice" while everyone else looks on with amazement at how so many people can be so easily duped into championing actions that are clearly not in their best interests.  That's right, I'm talking about...


Nick Cannon.

Yeah, I can see the struggle all over your designer suit. (Photo: laineygossip.com)

Mr. Cannon, who's net worth is estimated to be over $50 million, actually thought it was a good idea to, write, film, and release a work of spoken word called "Too Broke to Vote"*, discouraging his fans from voting.  VOTING.  You know, the most powerful say we have in how our lives are governed.  The thing Super PACs, Democrats, Republicans, and every other party in the country spends billions of dollars in advertising to convince you to cast yours for them.  The thing that is considered so important that it was kept in the hands of the elite for the better part of this country's history.  The thing that great men died for to make available to Nick's family 50 years ago and is still under legal attack today.  The practice that he uses on his own shows  that allow him to make his fortune in the first place.  So according to Nick, voting is great when it makes him money but not when deciding who our local and national leaders will be?  The logic is absolutely Trumpian and in that spirit, let's take a journey into what life is like when everyone follows Mr. "Ncredible's" advice and simply stays home on Election Day.

Ferguson, Missouri:

"...majority-black Ferguson has a virtually all-white power structure: a white mayor; a school board with six white members and one Hispanic, which recently suspended a highly regarded young black superintendent who then resigned; a City Council with just one black member; and a 6 percent black police force."

-- 8/14/2014, Jeff Smith, NY Times Op-Ed "In Ferguson, Black Town, White Power"

The Michael Brown tragedy wasn't a one off.  His passing was an inevitable symptom of what happens when the people who live in a town aren't who's represented in its governance, similar to colonialism.  Abuse, neglect, and violations of human rights are almost a certainty yet Ferguson's voter turnout for its last Mayoral election, in 2014, was still just 12%.  I wonder if Nick would put his money where is mouth is and see what its like to live as an average Ferguson resident for a year.  They clearly agree with his political views.


Chicago, Illinois

The mercifully FORMER Chicago DA (Photo: fox32chicago.com)

"[Anita] Alvarez is the Cook County state's attorney, which is just another way of saying that she's the DA of Chicago. She has been working in the state's attorney's office as a prosecutor for nearly 30 years and has been the head of the office since 2008. She's up for re-election next November, and the March primary is coming up quickly. Kim Foxx, a Chicago native and a believer in criminal justice reform, is challenging her in the primary. (There will be more on Foxx in the next post.)
Alvarez is known as one of the worst prosecutors in the country. Here are just a few of the dozens of stories of misconduct and bad behavior in Alvarez’s office."
-- 11/24/2015, Josie Duffy, Daily Kos, "The Horrifying Behavior of Anita Alvarez, Chicago's Head Prosecutor"  


Anita Alvarez, now jobless after being voted out (see how that works, Nick?), was at the center of not one but two high-profile cases in which the murders of African Americans were treated with utter contempt and disrespect.  In the case of Rekia Boyd, Alvarez deliberately under charged her killer, Chicago Police Detective Dante Servin, with "reckless conduct" instead of first degree murder, knowing that it would be dismissed because the facts of the case clearly point to the more serious charge.  Servin is still on the force...for now.  In the case of LaQuan McDonald, the final nail in her coffin, she knew the police version of the events leading up to the 17 year old's death were a lie.  She refused to do anything about it, however, until a judge forced the release of a dash cam video exposing the cover up.  Only then did she charge Chicago Police Officer Jason Van Dyke with murder.  I still find it incredulous she hasn't been brought up on charges of prosecutorial misconduct but I'll take my victories where I can.


Cleveland, Ohio

"Very interesting people who have their own economic motives"--Former Prosecutor McGinty describing Tamir Rice's mother (Photo: Lisa DeJong/Cleveland Plain Dealer)


"We have never seen a prosecutor try so hard to lose a case," [Jonathan S.] Abady, attorney for the mother of Tamir Rice said.

The grand jury needs only to find that the evidence presents probable cause that a crime has been committed in order to indict a suspect, but Rice's family claims that McGinty seemed to be working explicitly to convince the grand jury of the officers' innocence.

Less than two weeks after receiving the case, McGinty released a redacted version of the Cuyahoga County Sheriff's Department's investigative report to the public. The Times reported that McGinty believes publicly releasing evidence increases the transparency of the investigation and could help prevent unrest akin to that in Ferguson, Missouri, where evidence was only made available to the public after the decision not to indict the police shooter was announced."


Timothy McGinty, the now former head prosecutor in Cuyahoga County, was also voted out of office (amazing how that works isn't it, Nick?) after his office, like Alvarez's, also botched two high profile cases of the deaths of African Americans.  To his credit, at least he prosecuted the officers involved in the deaths of Timothy Russell, and Malissa Williams, even though he failed to get a conviction. What was truly inexcusable, was his refusal to prosecute never-should-have-been-a-cop Tim Loehmann for the cold blooded murder of 12 year old Tamir Rice.


 Alvarez would still be the sitting DA, running her office as her personal re-election headquarters instead of a place of justice if the people of Chicago shared Nick's apathy.  Tim McGinty would have had what amounts to a mandate for the system he works for to ignore the deaths of black children at the hands of police had the people of Cuyahoga County decided nothing would change.  Ferguson is still woefully unbalanced in its representation because its citizens clearly don't understand, just like Cannon, that a closed mouth doesn't get fed.  Even with the release of the so-called "Panama Papers," highlighting the abuses of capitalism we've all suspected the world's super rich were guilty of, abandonment of the system only ensures entrenchment of the status quo.  Who watches the watchers if we, the people their actions directly affect, decide we simply can't be bothered?  I don't know if Cannon is a rags to riches story of if he was born into privilege, nor do I care.  What concerns me is how easily someone who is part of the 1%, the people who are historically least affected by political change, can convince people that willingly abdicating the little political power they have is a good idea.  Nick Cannon's message isn't a call to revolution against the system.  It's an appeal to your baser instincts, anger and fear, to manipulate you into doing what people like him are best at.  Separating you from your money.  With every YouTube click, money flows into his pocket.  You know what America would look like if we did as he's suggesting?  Maybe you should ask your grandparents. Then ask them if they ever thought they were "too broke to vote."



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