Why ProJo changed my bio on “Why Cianci’s Conviction Matters” piece


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ProjoWhen ProJo ran my opinion piece, “Why Cianci’s conviction matters,” I knew what to expect.  Someone would probably bring up my past in an effort to shoot the messenger.  I figured it would be a Cianci supporter, or even a staffer, as any political campaign will typically have a comprehensive media strategy.  Perhaps it would be someone troubled by my community involvement.  The ironic part is it came from a left-leaning civil rights attorney who is actually reinforcing my message.

Oftentimes, one’s criminal history and the job they seek have little relation. Someone who sold drugs as a teenager may be a great chef, mechanic, or accountant. As a society, we should embrace those skills rather than send someone back into exile. And nothing is gained by continually referring to them as a “drug dealer” or “ex-con.”  Someone who was responsible for a financial scandal or someone who molested children, however, will naturally give us pause when hiring them around money or kids. It’s really that simple. This is the nuance advocates must use to counter the alarmists who would prefer to keep barriers in place.

The discussion around Buddy Cianci as a “twice convicted felon” has gone without nuance, and totally conflated issues regarding people like us who may need a second or third chance. My ProJo piece was a brief attempt to provide some clarity, and to put Cianci’s job application in context of thousands in Providence who have convictions.  I actually think he will be elected anyway, so its not an election I’m trying to influence but an issue I seek to discuss more intelligently than simple bashing and name-calling.

A Letter to the Editor followed my tepid piece on Buddy’s conviction in office (and I did not even get into his other alleged and admitted abuses of power).  In response, the ProJo altered my bio to include my murder conviction, as this constitutes “brief biographical data that might color a writer’s views.”  Color it how, one may ask?  My bio had already included my work in supporting people like Cianci, and myself, having the right to work.

Naturally there will be many who feel that my conviction history and time in prison is relevant to my position.  They may wonder what makes me a “criminal justice expert” beyond my years as an advocate, organizer, and my law degree. They might ask, as someone who fights so hard for the struggles of those of us with convictions, such as Buddy and myself, why I would not simply advocate for Buddy as “one of us.”  But others might find my history as relevant because they wish to muddy the message.

Clearly those seeking to sully a writer’s name are trying to undermine the content of the writing.  If I am a poor writer, don’t read it.  If my facts are wrong, seek a correction.  If my analysis is wrong, debate it.  But any effort that basically condemns my right to write, and my right to share, is not far from saying Buddy Cianci has no right to work.  As a limited public figure, I am open to criticisms.  If I worked for an organization, obviously it should be identified so our agenda can be a factor.

Buddy has been highly paid for his opinions on the radio, and I think that has been a perfect job for him since his release from prison.  He has added to the public discourse and clearly has a point of view to enrich many political discussions.  I, on the other hand, have not been paid for my opinions at all, nor for the learning that fuels the analysis.  Not by the ProJo, RI Future, or any of the other spaces through which I have shared.

If my conviction for interpersonal violence prohibits me from sharing an opinion from within the confines of my own home, how is that a Cianci supporter can justify a conviction for malfeasance in office not disqualify a man from working in that same office?

What does GoLocal’s purported Con-Con poll really show?


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DSC_5289GoLocal ran a story claiming that a Center for Freedom and Prosperity poll indicates that Rhode Islander’s strongly favor holding a Constitutional Convention. But the poll, as released, doesn’t show that at all. What the poll demonstrates is that 70% of likely Rhode Island voters think “things” are on the “wrong track” in the state, that 59% think the economy is the most important problem we are facing, that 77% believe that our political leadership deals with problems inadequately, and 79% believe that state government is more geared to “special interest groups.”

How is this news?

These results are hardly surprising given the state of the economy and government. Based on these poll results, Center CEO Mike Stenhouse urges voters to approve a Con-Con to address these issues, but the poll does not demonstrate that voters favor a con-con as a remedy. In fact, it seems that the results of the poll that might deal with a con-con, Q.8-Q.18, have been withheld from the public. You can view the poll here, and see plainly that the questions jump from Q.7 to Q.19.

In other words, the information released is only what the Center wants you to see, not a real picture of likely voter attitudes.

Some results from Q.16 were released by the Center. These are statements from participants on why they favor holding a Con-Con, but question 15, which perhaps asks participants if they favor a Con-Con, is not included. There are 96 statements in support of a Con-Con listed, out of 516 participants interviewed and weighted for this poll. If this is everyone in favor of a Con-Con, that’s less than 20% support. Even if this is only half of the support the poll found, we’re still left with less than 40% favoring a Con-Con.

Had the poll indicated a majority of likely Rhode Island voters were in favor of a Con-Con, the Center would certainly have included this in the poll results they released. In the absence of the full poll results, we can only assume that the Center did not get the results they were looking for, and that GoLocal made a huge mistake in mischaracterizing the results.

Based on the information released by the Center so far, it’s obvious that Rhode Island voters see the Con-Con for what it is, a chance for special interests like the Center for Freedom and Prosperity to alter the Rhode Island State Constitution in favor of the corporate interests they front for.

Let’s face it: Christopher Columbus was a monster


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Christopher Columbus StatueChristopher Columbus was a monster.

He saw people as commodities to be bought and sold. He destroyed lives for personal gain. His crimes include rape, murder, torture and genocide.

And today, many of us get to enjoy a beautiful Autumn day in celebration of the man who didn’t actually discover America.

Across the country people are also celebrating Indigenous Peoples’ Day, with Seattle Mayor Ed Murray signing the holiday into law Monday. The predictable cries of “going too far in terms of political correctness” are being heard, especially from the Italian-American community in Seattle. They are upset not because Columbus Day is being cancelled, (it isn’t) they are upset because Indigenous Peoples’ Day and Columbus Day are happening on the same date.

Mayor Murray says the new holiday “will add new significance to the date without replacing the Columbus Day tradition.” People will be free to celebrate either holiday, both, or neither, but many don’t want this new holiday to encroach on what they see as an ethnic, Italian-American celebration.

But let’s face facts: Columbus was a monster, and he doesn’t deserve to have a day of celebration in his honor. Really, this day off should celebrate any of the many great and positive things we enjoy about this world… but not historical monsters. We can certainly do better.

I know that this post will fall on many deaf ears. People will defend Columbus and Columbus Day the same way people defend the Confederate Flag and the antebellum South. Reality is inconvenient and history is fungible. Realistically confronting the legacy of Columbus opens up all sorts of questions about the exploitative nature of commerce and the erasure of indigenous cultures. It pries open the wound of first-world guilt: our wealth is built on the backs of slaves working stolen land.

For me, Monday is a day of contemplation, not celebration.

I’m going to take this day off to go apple picking with my family, catch the Pronk Parade, and be with friends. Along the way I’ll reflect a bit on the horrors people are willing to inflict on others in the name of profits, with a hope that we can work together to advance the fight to see inherent rather than economic value in others.

And I’m going to reread this awesome comic.