R.
Kelly, renowned Rhythm & Blues artist and winner of several
Grammys and more than 100 other popular music awards and an accused
sexual predator and pedophile, who has been able to retain his fan
base until now, could teach Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam a lesson in
denial of heinous acts. His modus operandi, like that of our
alleged sexually assaulting President Donald J. Trump, is to DENY,
DENY, and DENY.
Gov.
Northam, in his explanation of the picture of racist blackface and
KKK characters on his medical school graduation yearbook page, when
it was publicly exposed, admitted last Friday, in a press release,
that he was in the photograph. Less than a day later, after venomous
public criticism, he recanted his confession and stated in a press
conference that he was not in the snapshot and that he wanted to
rebuild his voters’ and the general public’s trust in him
rather than to resign his office.
In
the meantime, R. Kelly was likely somewhere saying, “white
boy please.” Didn’t you see how I handled my
situation after being shown on videotape (which I shot for my own
enjoyment) having sex with an underage girl, then went to trial, was
found not guilty, and continued on my merry way as a sexual marauder
and deviant. In addition, after some discussions and financial
transactions, I had the girl and her parents also say under oath that
she was not on the tape. In other words, she and her parents said,
“it wasn’t her.”
R.
Kelly was dumbfounded by Northam’s press conference, possibly
articulating that, you should have called me “white boy”
before you admitted to being in the yearbook picture and other
blackface antics and moonwalking like Michael Jackson in a dance
contest to his hit song, “Billie Jean.” Moreover, you
were about to pull out a white glove and moonwalk at the press
conference behind the lectern before your wife told you that “it
would not be appropriate.”
Northam
is also taking a page from Judge Roy Moore’s political playbook
by hanging on despite almost unanimous bipartisan calls for him to
leave office. He is holding on to the position that, “it
wasn’t me,” despite the drumroll for his abdication.
(Northam is getting some breathing room because his successor, Lt.
Gov. Justin Fairfax, is being dogged by an uncorroborated {he said,
she said}, fifteen-year old #Me Too sexual assault accusation that he
vociferously rejects as a smear.) Elsewhere, there are several
announced 2020 Democratic presidential candidates who may use this
hackneyed phrase, “it wasn’t me,” in the
coming months.
First
up will be Sen. Cory Booker, who has served as the Koch Bros.’;
Betsy DeVos’s; Mark Zuckerberg’s; the Arnold, Bradley,
Walton, and Gates Foundations; the Manhattan Institute’s; and
Wall Street Bankers’ and Financiers’ wingman in
aggressively promoting vouchers, corporate charter schools, the
destruction of teachers’ and other public-sector unions, and
the overall dismantling of K-12 public education from his election to
the Newark, New Jersey City Council from1998 until 2002, through his
terms as Newark’s Mayor from 2006 until 2013, and his service
as a U.S. Senator from 2013 until the present.
In
October 2006, after being Mayor for three months, he wrote every New
Jersey Assembly person and Senator an individual letter beseeching
them to pass legislation to publicly fund private school vouchers for
religious and private schools and for a major increase in the number
of charter schools. He later sent his then ally, African American
City Councilwoman Dana Rone, chair of the Council’s Education
Committee, who ran on the slate he funded, to testify before the
legislature’s budget committees, where she asked members to
significantly defund the majority-minority Newark Public Schools, one
of the state’s poorest districts, because it was wasting the
money.
Over
the next decade, Booker gobbled up tens of millions of dollars in
campaign contributions from conservative individuals and
corporations, while preening as their public-sector privatization
darling. While an Obama surrogate in the 2012 presidential campaign,
he criticized Obama’s attack ads against Bain Capital, private
equity, and Mitt Romney, on NBC’s Sunday Meet the Press on May
20, 2012, as being nauseating. He was eventually forgiven for
carrying the water for the private equity community because it was
known that it had donated millions to his political races. After
Trump’s unanticipated victory in 2016, Booker was forced to do
the electric slide toward progressivism after the Democrats triumphed
in the 2018 midterms.
He
has been forced to recalibrate as he pursues the 2020 Democratic
presidential nomination and is now promoting progressive policies:
backing Medicare for All, a Green New Deal, more funding for public
schools, and better pay for teachers. But on February 1st,
the Wall Street Journal sent a shot across his bow, reminding
him of his previous rabid support for school choice policies and
warning him that he will be held accountable by Democratic primary
voters and teachers’ unions for his earlier attacks on public
education. Booker has to find a way to say that despite his
functioning as a pawn of the Cartel of corporate education reformers,
“it wasn’t me” pushing public school
privatization, or his campaign will quickly go up in smoke.
Meanwhile,
Sen. Elizabeth Warren has to continue walking back her earlier
support of charter schools. When Question 2, raising the cap on
charter schools, was placed on the Massachusetts ballot in 2016, she
finally joined with state teacher unions and ordinary citizens in
opposition, stating that she did not support unconstrained
charter school development because local districts can be harmed.
But
only after local Massachusetts media called her out did she finally
take a position on the Question 2 charter cap, which was defeated.
Realizing that continuing to embrace her initial position on this
matter would put a crimp in her presidential aspirations, she got out
in front of the mounting opposition to this initiative as she
prepared to campaign across the nation as a populist who was in firm
support of public education and other progressive programs.
Like
her fellow newly progressive colleague, Sen. Booker, she has
undergone an educational transformation. Both recognize that
America’s public education teachers, as well as many in charter
schools, are antsy and angry about the current status of their
profession. The recent successful public school teachers strike in
Los Angeles and the current strike at four Chicago International
Charter School campuses are clear examples of teachers’ unrest.
Despite
the billions of dollars that the right-leaning education reform
Cartel has invested in decimating K-12 public education during the
past thirty years, teachers in red and blue states are now
systematically fighting back without fear or deference. In the
coming weeks, we will examine the progressive bona fides of
Sens. Kamala Harris, Kirsten Gillibrand, and other viable members of
the expected large group of candidates who have entered or will enter
the 2020 Democratic presidential race. These are interesting times,
and many contenders will crash and burn as they try to moonwalk
around rank and file Democrats and America’s teachers.
They
will be vetted as to their goodness of fit with the current ethos
among the nation’s Democratic polity. Look for a repudiation
of some of their previous political stances as they are confronted by
the electorate. Be prepared to hear approximations of R. Kelly’s
mantra, “it wasn’t me.” It will be
the preferred response to the many inquiries about their past
political and policy positions, especially regarding K-12 public
education.
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