Once is an accident, twice is a coincidence, three
times is a habit. Lack of political courage by some and lack of character on
the part of state Sen. Troy Brown may
yet reveal knocking
around women as habitual for him as is his political allies' penchant for acting hypocritically.
For the second
time in a year, Democrat Brown faces charges of domestic violence; this time
concerning his wife after last year’s incident involving his mistress. Neither
case has come to trial, and while he deserves the presumption of innocence
until judicial resolution, he already had garnered a small punishment by Republican
Sen. Pres. John Alario who withheld
any committee chairmanships of vice chairmanships, which usually come to a
reelected senator of the governor’s party.
The Constitution grants
the Senate the ability to discipline or to expel a member, by a two-thirds
vote. No other body of law relative to the Senate has information about various
disciplines available, but Alario made no move to invoke any since last year.
Again, this may be appropriate given no conviction of Brown at present, but at
the same time the alleged impropriety has brought shame to the institution.
Sometimes the right thing doesn’t get done for the
appropriate reason, but better that than doing the wrong thing. That describes
the Southern Christian Leadership
Conference’s national office suspending
the head of the organization’s Baton Rouge chapter in calling for a boycott
of some area retailers in the wake of the shooting death of black resident
Alton Sterling two weeks ago at the hands of white Baton Rouge police.
Rev. Reginald Pitcher, along with leaders of the
local chapters of the National Association for
the Advancement of Colored People and Nation
of Islam, called for residents to refrain from shopping at the Mall of
Louisiana, Cortana Mall and area Wal-Mart stores over the Jul. 8 weekend to
protest Sterling’s shooting. The SCLC has a policy that local actions must
receive clearance from the national organization when it involves a national
issue or agent; Wal-Mart has a nationwide presence and a large portion of mall
tenants also represent national corporations.
Even deposed, the defiant Pitcher said the chapter
planned to continue rolling boycotts aimed at various sellers in the near
future, with the idea of putting economic pressure on businesses until the arrest
of the white officers that struggled with Sterling. The campaign pause came as
a result of the assassination of area law enforcement officers by a disturbed black
nationalist, ironically
once affiliated with the Nation of Islam, who apparently became upset over
Sterling’s death and travelled specifically to Baton Rouge to wreak some
twisted form of revenge.
When Gov. John Bel Edwards announced
earlier this month he would launch
a review of Louisiana’s Motion Picture Investor Tax Credit, policy-makers
should have responded by telling him to cut to the chase in making the program
efficient with its state subsidization.
We don’t need to study the issue more; we already
know the film tax credit wastes taxpayer dollars – a lot of these. Unusual
among any of the other hundreds of such breaks, the law requires biannual
reporting of these and the related music, sound, and digital credits. Every
report since introduction of these has found a tremendous negative return on
investment for the state, although the last of those, through 2014, revealed
the least bad news ever – credits now only
lose 77 cents for every buck given out (maybe 10 cents fewer if including
local tax revenues, although local incentive programs also affect this number).
That loss, about $172 million in fiscal year 2014,
will find itself trimmed over the next three years, due to legislation that
tightened up program eligibility rules and put a cap on reimbursement – which differs
from issuance as reimbursement may occur at any time in the indeterminate
future – at $180 million annually (although a halt in automatic state buyback
of credits at 85 percent for FY 2015 crowded that figure a bit) through FY
2018.
If Baton Rougeans can find any solace in the senseless
murders of Officers Montrell Jackson and Matthew Gerald and Deputy Brad
Garafola, it didn’t spring from the city’s loins. What else is known provides
guidance so that the city can move beyond simmering tensions left from the
event that apparently precipitated this heinous crime, the death of Alton
Sterling at the hands of Baton Rouge police.
A federal government investigation will determine
whether the shooting of Sterling, a black man, came as a result of police
negligence or misconduct. On the surface, it would seem the white officers
involved, having to make a quick judgment in a matter of seconds in chaotic
conditions, very well may have felt a legitimate threat to their lives that led
to the fatal decision to use deadly force. Sterling was a career
criminal engaged in a criminal enterprise and known to have an illegal gun when
police approached him; also having had a recent arrest for possession of drugs,
he may have been in an impaired state at that time and not using good sense by
not following police orders and then struggling even after having a Taser used
upon him.
But having a record and acting illegally doesn’t
deserve getting killed. The events as understood by some in the community,
particularly among blacks, pointed to insufficient provocation to justify lethal
force. The investigation will sort this out, mistake or accident, but almost
certainly will not proffer a third option: the white officers killed a black
man because of some deep-seated, if not recognizable on the surface, racial
animosity.
You reap what you sow, a lesson some candidates
running for political office around Baton Rouge need to learn, to the community’s
regret.
While many area politicians called for peaceful
protesting over the death of Alton Sterling, a black man allegedly shot by a
white Baton Rouge police officer, a few of them went further. Democrat state
Reps. Ted James
and Denise
Marcelle attended marches where meritless accusations, often made by
frequent-flyer protesters from outside Louisiana but also
issued from some local leaders, flowed about alleged state-sponsored
oppression of blacks. James
called the shooting “murder” and questioned “what it really means to be
land of the free and home of the brave.” Marcelle
wore a shirt with Sterling’s name over mimicked gunshots wounds. Marcelle
is running for mayor-president of Baton Rouge later this year; James flirted
with the idea before passing.
At the funeral for Sterling, Democrat Rep. Cedric Richmond echoed
the theme, calling America “this discriminatory system that under-educates,
over-incarcerates, a system that perpetuates income inequality,” or a repeating
of tired talking points that attempt to blame “the system” (presumably run by
non-blacks) for lower quality of life among blacks generally, when in fact
liberal policy failures stemming from Democrat leadership have produced this. Richmond
seeks reelection this fall against Democrat current and term-limited Mayor-Pres.
Kip Holden, who did not
attend and has made only brief, nonpolitical comments about the incident except
to note that, in his opinion, Richmond’s travel from his New Orleans base only
served to aggravate the situation.