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kliljedahl Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Dec-15-05 03:25 PM
Original message
Preening for the cameras
Geov Parrish
WorkingForChange.com
12.14.05

If Rev. Jackson really wants to help, he'll stop stealing spotlights



Stanley "Tookie" Williams is dead, for which we should all be sad. Not because Williams was innocent -- despite the dubiousness of the evidence linking him to the four murders for which he was convicted, any co-founder of the Crips has more than one lifetime's worth of karma to work off. No, it's sad, and enraging, because no nation worthy of its name should execute its citizens. Any citizens. Williams should not have been murdered by the state -- and neither should any of the thousands currently on America's death rows, almost none of whom share William's fame or his friends in high places.
But I digress.

Williams' execution was disgusting, as was the statement released by Gov. Schwarzenegger (a man who's no stranger to bad karma) in denying clemency. But I was also revolted by the scene Monday night outside the gates of San Quentin, where the march protesting Williams' execution was led by none other than... Rev. Jesse Jackson.

It probably won't be popular, but somebody has to say this. The time has long passed since Jackson's presence gave a cause additional credibility (let alone effectiveness). Jackson is such a shameless opportunist, such a relentless seeker of screen time, that rather than enhancing, he actually discredits the causes he parachutes in to "lead." And in eclipsing the people who work tirelessly on those causes, he prevents media from airing voices that have a lot more to say than he does, and more credibility with which to say it.

This has been going on a long, long time. I still vividly remember standing outside the Chinese Embassy on Connecticut Ave. NW in Washington in early June 1989. A half a world away, the massacre at Tiananmen Square was unfolding, and outside the Embassy, hundreds of Chinese nationals, mostly students, had gathered to protest. (I spoke Mandarin, so I was there as a translator.) Those students, videotaped from the embassy's windows, were there at great risk to their own futures and to the safety of their relatives back home. They had a lot to say, from personal experience, about the repressiveness of the Chinese government and the valor of the movement for greater freedom.

So here, uninvited, comes the good Reverend, and there went the TV cameras -- for about 15 minutes



Keith’s Barbeque Central


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BOSSHOG Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Dec-15-05 03:33 PM
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1. His attempt to grab some air time because of Katrina
succeeded but did not put him in the best light. He brought busloads of residents back to New Orleans shortly after the hurricane so they could repopulate their hometown only most of the people on the busses were not from New Orleans. That incident did not seem to embarrass Jackson as the cameras rolled. I believe he has done a lot of good but every positive deed does not have to be caught on tape. Try a Mother Teresa impersonation for a year Jesse.
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sasha031 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Dec-15-05 03:40 PM
Response to Reply #1
2.  I think his intentions are noble
Didn't realize the cameras left when he would leave. He may not be aware himself. I am sure he doesn't show up at these events for the fun of it, he believes he is helping. As for Shiavo, I don't remember him there advocating keeping her alive, I thought he was more of a middle man, instead of the right completely dominating that situation.
I guess I don't like seeing the left trashed, Jackson has done allot of good things.
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BOSSHOG Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Dec-15-05 03:43 PM
Response to Reply #2
3. Relative to the Katrina episode
it was extremely poor planning on his part. It was his idea and he was in charge and yet so many non-residents got on the busses with no checks or balances. The thought was great, the idea noble. I've been a big Jackson fan for years but plans take thoughtful action. The Mayor of New Orleans asked him not to proceed with the grandiose plan. Jackson would be an incredible team member; he doesn't always have to be the leader.
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sasha031 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Dec-15-05 05:19 PM
Response to Reply #3
4. agree
I love seeing Jackson, it reminds me about what this country was striving for once., but he doesn't have to always lead.
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