I was going to write about the need for
politics and government to be separated but after I read the first line I
keeled over from the pain in my belly, as I was laughing too hard. Although
the ultimate goal would be to have politicians campaign from their political
parties and then disengage from the political arena after they were elected
to office so they could better connect with their constituents and do the
work they were elected to do without due influence of their political
parties, this notion will always remain a pipedream. Politics is embedded
into our governmental system and there is little, if anything at all, we can
do about it. What we can do is point out when gross inequities, hypocrisy
and out-right lying occurs. Therefore, I introduce to you (as if he needs an
introduction) the Good Reverend Jesse Jackson.
As I watched the coverage of the California Recall Election it was hard not
to see the good reverend Jackson at Gray Davis’s side much of
Election Day. The Good Reverend was on the podiums with Davis standing just
to his side and a bit back; the Good Reverend walked into the polling places
ahead of Davis and exited prior to his exit. He traveled with Davis in his
motorcades and was even afforded an all access pass for the party that would
encompass the last moments Davis would be governor of the State of
California. Jackson was with Davis as he turned from shining star of the
Democratic Party, a possible Democratic presidential candidate in years to
come and a Clintonian favorite, to a fallen icon of the tax and spend
liberal machine that is the Democratic Party in the United States today.
Now,
I wasn’t all that surprised when I saw the Good Reverend Jackson at Davis’s
side. Having grown up in the Chicago area I have become quite aware that
whenever there is an opportunity for him to show up on television you can
count on him being there. Good or bad, appropriate or not, if there is a
media opportunity that the Good Reverend Jackson can exploit he will be
there, rhyming quip in hand, to tell you how the event, or the lack of one,
affected the African-American population more adversely than any other
portion of the population. He has a gift for being able to see the gross
inequity affecting the African-American community in just about any
situation. To try to sum him up in a simple op-ed piece is to not pay enough
homage to a spectacular man, or should I say a spectacle of a man. Truth be
told, he has fallen quite a bit from the heights he held during the years of
the Civil Rights movement that saw him marching with Martin Luther
King. One wouldn’t be out of line if they asked what had happened to
the Good Reverend’s vision, sense of fairness and moral compass. It seems
that for the Good Reverend Jackson the goal of racial equality has been
replaced by the opportunism of special interest, a sad state for such a
noble dream.
But back we go to election night.
As I sat listening to so many talking heads contemplate the "what ifs” of
the recall vote I was vindicated in my thoughts about the Good Reverend’s
opportunistic style. Sure enough, there he was at the Gray Davis Campaign
Gala, earpiece in place, ready to talk to Sean Hannity of Fox
News Channel’s Hannity & Colmes. As the wide ranging political
spectrum could be accurately defined by placing Sean Hannity on the right
and the Good Reverend furthest on the left, I turned up the volume and
waited for the verbal jousting to begin. I wasn’t disappointed.
It would seem that the Good Reverend was in California, and at Gray Davis’s
side, to protest the fact that there weren’t enough polling places available
for the many Californians that were expected to vote in the recall election.
Wearing the term "disenfranchised” like a Sheriff from the Old West would
wear a badge, the Good Reverend was in rare form as he touted the incredible
obstacles that kept the disenfranchised voters from exercising their rights
to vote. Ironically, the polls were still open, and would remain open for
another hour, when he was making these assertions. He went on to somehow
connect the disenfranchisement of voters who still had time to vote with the
Presidential Election of 2000 and the Florida debacle and then the financial
mess that the Democrats in the California Legislature brought upon their
state while blaming all of these things on President Bush who
purposely refused to get involved with the California recall in the first
place. You have to hand it to the Good Reverend; he is good at the spin.
George W. Bush was to blame for there not being enough polling places for
the Good Reverends phantom disenfranchised voters in California.
But there is a flaw in the Good Reverend’s thoughts on this matter, a flaw
that even Sean Hannity didn’t pick up on. Although it was true that there
were a smaller number of polling places available in which the California
voters could cast their ballots, the voting process was open to early voting
and absentee voting. Therefore, there were no incredibly oppressive time
constraints by which the California voters had to adhere. They could have
voted early, and I mean days early not just hours early, or they could have
voted absentee if their situations satisfied the criteria for receiving an
absentee ballot. It is hard to argue that anyone was disenfranchised from
the voting process because of the smaller number of polling places simply by
virtue of the fact there was an extended voting period that spanned days,
not hours. The blame for someone not being able to cast a ballot during the
time afforded by the State of California in this recall election must lay
with the individual and not the system, contrary to what the Good Reverend
would have you believe.
Now,
I wouldn’t be the first to say that the Good Reverend Jackson is a political
opportunist and royalty within the propaganda machine that is the Democratic
Party in the United States today, but when asked if he would be pressing the
matter of disenfranchisement should the impossible come to pass and Gray
Davis were to be retained as governor do you know what he said? The Good
Reverend looked straight into the camera and said, "Well, no!” Can you
imagine that? His response was tantamount to saying, "If Gray Davis wins
then no voters will have been disenfranchised but if anyone else wins (which
is now the case) then voters must have been disenfranchised.” Hannity’s jaw
dropped, Colmes started to stutter as he does when something incredibly
partisan and transparent is said on the show and I had to start giggling and
shaking my head. The Good Reverend had brought hypocrisy to a new height. He
didn’t disappoint any of us at all but instead raised the bar for future
demagogues that will surely come forward from within the ranks of the
Democratic Party.
So, as Arnold Schwarzenegger takes his seat behind the
governor’s desk in Sacramento to do battle with the tax and spend Democratic
California Legislature and as the Democratic machine in California does its
best to pin the problems the liberal California Legislature brought upon the
state itself onto President Bush somehow, you can rest assured that those
who are blinded by the Good Reverend’s bogus assertions of
disenfranchisement will be claiming Schwarzenegger’s rise to office was as
illegitimate as President Bush’s victory in Florida in 2000. They will march
on, defiant of the facts and ignorant of the truth, as minions in the Good
Reverend’s congregation, wherever that may be.
Come to think of it, the Good Reverend Jesse Jackson is like a superhero.
Look up the sky, it’s a bird, no a plane, it’s Reverend Man, appearing at
media events all over the world in an effort to spread fictitious facts,
questionable truths, spin, hypocrisy and inequality in the name of liberal
special interest and the Democratic Party everywhere. Just watch out you
don’t step in what he is dropping on all of us, it’s hard to get off your
shoes.
Frank Salvato is a
political media consultant and the managing editor for The New Media Journal.us. He is a
contributing writer for The Washington Dispatch, GOPUSA, OpinionEditorials,
Men’s News Daily, Canada Free Press & AmericanDaily. His pieces are
regularly featured in Townhall.com. He has appeared as a guest on The
O’Reilly Factor, The Kevin Matthews Radio Show (Chicago) and The Brad Messer
Radio Show (San Antonio). His pieces have been recognized by the Japan
Center for Conflict Prevention and are occasionally featured in The
Washington Times and The London Morning Paper as well as other national and
international publications.
|