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The right’s vile Ferguson ploy: Why they really want to focus on “riots”
Rush Limbaugh and others, of course, have been focusing on the riots and blaming them on President Obama.
http://www.rushlimbaugh.com/daily/2014/11/25/i_can_understand_the_anger_of_african_americans_in_ferguson_after_50_years_of_broken_promises_from_democrats
Here is a nice article that discusses the reasons behind the focus on the riots, while ignoring the underlying reasons for the anger such as racism and lack of opportunity.
http://www.salon.com/2014/11/26/the_rights_vile_ferguson_ploy_why_they_really_want_to_focus_on_riots/
From the very beginning, before St. Louis County prosecuting attorney Robert McCulloch had uttered the first word of his defensive and dissembling speech, the fix was in. The conspiracy this time was not to protect Officer Darren Wilson from standing trial for the killing of Michael Brown, though that was certainly related. This time, the conspiracy was to organize the announcement of Wilsons exoneration in as provocative a way as possible. The ultimate goal was to manipulate the public and the press into forgetting the real story of Ferguson of police brutality and racial injustice and bickering about the morality of rioting instead.
At the very least, thats the impression Ive had throughout the Ferguson controversy, especially as the wait for news from the grand jury dragged on, and as the countys offices began leaking pro-Wilson factoids like a sieve. And after witnessing last nights spectacle, which was preceded by multiple delays and conspicuous readying of the states police forces, Im no less convinced that the powers that be in Missouri approached the Wilson verdict with little concern for accountability or justice. All they wanted was to improve the Ferguson power structures battered images not by doing good, but by making the protesters look even worse. Its a tried and tested strategy; as Rick Perlstein has documented, it helped make Richard Nixon president.
A quick look at the nations front pages on Tuesday indicates that the plan worked on some, but fewer perhaps than these would-be Pat Buchanans wanted. By maneuvering to incite disorder and polarize public opinion along race lines, these would-be Nixons probably thought they could cut the country in half, as Buchanan recommended, and walk away with far the larger half. But while some of the biggest names out there fell for the trick, focusing on the small number of rioters instead of Wilsons verdict, most editors understood that the controversy in Ferguson remains what its always been: A jarring and dispiriting reminder that the Declaration of Independences assertion of universal human equality (the promissory note, as Martin Luther King Jr. once called it) remains, for millions of Americans, a debt unpaid.
* * *
If we can combat the dual influences of a Ferguson elite that wants national attention to drift elsewhere; and a national media that dislikes policy and favors more watchable, clickable, shareable and fundamentally empty manifestations of the culture war if we can do that, theres hope that even though the killing of Michael Brown by Darren Wilson will always be an obscenity, it wont have been entirely in vain. So lets ignore those in American society who would rather debate the merits of trashing a bodega than the killing of a child, and lets not listen to those who would use this opportunity to relitigate the civil rights movement, the Rodney King riots or the Trayvon Martin case. Lets honor the wishes of Michael Browns parents and decline to just make noise in favor of making a difference.
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