Showing posts with label Michael Vick. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Michael Vick. Show all posts

December 29, 2010

Execute Michael Vick

Hat tip Hot Air.  

Tucker Carlson shoots off the line during his guest host spot on the Beck program.



The comment was a minor part of a larger discussion about whether or not the President should have made a call to Philadelphia Eagle's owner Lurie praising him for giving Vick a chance despite his felony record for dogfighting and animal cruelty (which was some pretty nasty stuff). Carlson repeats this assertion presumably to underscore his sincerity of feeling on this point.  It was provocative the first time...silly, but provocative, its an opinion program, I get it.  But upon hearing the second repetition, my brain immediately responded <idiot>.

Ed Morrissey opines:
Lurie didn’t hire Vick for selfless reasons; he hired Vick to exploit his talent, and the investment has paid off well. Why that requires a presidential salute is beyond me.
The call struck me as a bit superfluous as well, considering all the other things on Obama's plate to make a call about.  On the other hand, I figure the President has a right to be moved by something and comment on it just like anybody else; he simply has the misfortune of occupying a job where his slightest utterance can provoke endless debate.

Here's where I think his comment to Lurie adds value: we have a serious problem with how we manage the reentry of ex-offenders back into our communities in this country.  The United States has a huge prison population, which is a natural consequence of being a nation of laws administered via a justice system created by flawed human beings.  We jail people for a lot of different things, some we arguably ought not.  Those who are released back to the community but remain under some level of custody to the state are subject to be sent back to prison for a host of reasons ranging from the serious and deserving of consequence to the trivial, cut off your nose to spite your face variety. The cost of maintaining this approach is breaking the back of state corrections budgets and they are all trying to drive those costs down.

The single biggest predictor of whether or not an ex offender will re-offend is whether or not they are employed.  Its not drug use, its not family connection, its not the level of services available to help them re-enter.  Its whether or not they have work. However, the bitter reality is that if you're an ex-con and you check yes in the box on the employment app that asks if you've ever been convicted of a felony, its going in the circular file. Not even a question. So the reality is that 90% or more of ex-cons enter the ranks of the permanently unemployable upon release, with devastating results for their families and communities.

In that context, Vick, while assuredly not the typical ex-offender released from jail, is a powerful conversation starter with employers about the role they can play in helping ex-offenders re-enter our society and stay on the straight and narrow. Were Vick and the President to make that the dominant narrative of his story, they might actually contribute to moving the problem of reentry closer to a better solution.

August 27, 2007

ConVick? The NAACP and too many others have no perspective

Michael Vick in a locker room interview follow...
Michael Vick in a locker room interview on
 September 3, 2009. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)


RICHMOND, Virginia (CNN) -- Atlanta Falcons quarterback Michael Vick arrived Monday at the U.S. District Court in Richmond where he was expected to plead to charges related to dogfighting.
art.vick.pool.jpg

Michael Vick arrives Monday at court where he is expected to plead guilty to charges related to dogfighting.

Vick was met by cheering supporters as his attorneys and federal marshals escorted him into the building. A group of protesters also was on hand.

In legal papers filed last week, Vick admitted financing a dogfighting operation and participating in the killing of dogs that did not fight well.
The Michael Vick story has been dominating media for several days now. In addition to the coverage, we have now been treated to the silly spectacle of the local NAACP in Atlanta and the national spokesperson making excuses for Michael Vick. For an organization with such a storied civil rights history, it truly nauseates me to see them interjecting themselves into a non strategic, non important sensationalist mess.

First off, lets get it on the table. I don't feel sorry for Vick. I don't think he has been treated unfairly. If his career ends up being over because of this foolishness, tough. Why so cold you say? Because Vick got paid a $27 million signing bonus and he was pulling down a multi million dollar annual salary. So if he didn't understand that he had left the ghetto behind, thats just too bad. I'm a working brother, father of three and a husband. In the natural, I don't see $27 million coming my way anytime soon. I don't have any sympathy at all for this young, single brother on top of the world who thought it was a good idea to fight dogs with his boys from the hood. I just can't dredge up any sympathy at all for him. Could it be because....there is no reason to be sympathetic? He didn't have enough common sense to think about how his behavior might be a problem for him, for his team, for his contract, for his career? Not even with $27 million reasons?

Now, in defending himself, he's got resources. He is not getting railroaded in the legal system. He's got the best defense money can buy. So he needs no help on that score. So why is the NAACP feeling it necessary to come to his defense? Why do they tarnish their reputation and brand by sparing one moment to defend this BS? This at the same time they are totally SILENT about the heinous crime committed against the gang rape victim in Dunbar Village or the way that case has been handled in Florida? No perspective. None at all. They have nothing to say about the Dunbar Village victim or the Lavena Johnson case, but for dog killer ConVick, they have much love. That kind of stupidity is why the younger generation is paying little attention and the NAACP's relevance will continue to dwindle.
Enhanced by Zemanta