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Opening Insights: Power of the Mob

Prisons do not disappear problems, they disappear human beings.
ANGELA DAVIS

Great power, without discipline, soon spirals out of control. There is no greater example of this than the free of speech and free press that is central to America's ability to self-govern and protect the freedom of its citizens. When there are no checks and balances on power, the power itself becomes the authority. In this case, the people are no longer self-governing.

Bill Cosby knows this well, as it is the power of the voice from the mob which landed him in prison. It was an angry mob and a mockery of the justice system that put him there. A moral compass and the rule of law hold little sway over the mob.

Those who stoke the fires in the mob know exactly what they are doing - seizing power. They steer an unstoppable juggernaut of idealistic emotional extremism. In today's national culture of political correctness and thought police enforcement of issue ranging from politics to sexual identity, Americans are fearful and are no longer their own masters.

Americans know, that to speak up against the mob is to become one of its next targets. Bill Cosby's message of community and individual maturity is counter to the anger and hate culture of the mob, but that's not why he was destroyed.

Informational Insights: Silencing Reason

The following article was published by NNPA Newswire, "a trade association of the more than 200 African American-owned community newspapers from around the United States." It was written by Stacy M. Brown, Freelance Journalist and "National Correspondent for Black Press USA; Sr. Writer for Washington Informer and Baltimore Times."

NNPA NEWSWIRE — He revisited his famous 2004 “Pound Cake” speech and clarified that he probably should not have addressed that controversial dissertation to all African Americans – the residents at SCI-Phoenix make for the perfect audience, Cosby stated. Cosby said he remains concerned, however, for all of Black America.
 
November 24, 2019 — Bill Cosby breaks his silence, granting his first exclusive interview since beginning his sentence at SCI-Phoenix, a maximum-security Pennsylvania penitentiary near Philadelphia.
 
Today, in a special phone call with the National Newspaper Publishers Association’s BlackPressUSA.com, Cosby said he’s spending his time helping to teach and encourage a large population of African American inmates – men he calls residents — via Mann Up, a prison reform program.
 
The 82-year-old educator and award-winning TV producer/director/comedian was sentenced to serve 3-to-10-years in Pennsylvania’s prison system following his September 2018 conviction on charges of aggravated indecent assault.
 
Unless he receives relief from the state’s appellate courts, Cosby said he fully anticipates serving his entire sentence, saying he’s not guilty and will never admit to something he didn’t do. Displayed remorse is generally a required prerequisite to obtaining parole or a shortened sentence.
 
During the exclusive interview with NNPA, Cosby was candid, vivid and outspoken.
 
Andrew Wyatt, Cosby’s spokesman, was also on the call, where Cosby stressed that there would be no ground rules or restrictions. No topics were off-the-table for discussion.
 
Cosby received no special treatment from the facility for this interview. Because inmates are only allowed to remain on phone calls for 15-minutes, Cosby had to call back multiple times in order to complete today’s interview.
 
“I have eight years and nine months left,” Cosby stated. “When I come up for parole, they’re not going to hear me say that I have remorse. I was there. I don’t care what group of people come along and talk about this when they weren’t there. They don’t know.”
 
He said his trials were a sham, unjust and not fair.
 
“It’s all a set up. That whole jury thing. They were imposters,” Cosby stated.
 
“Look at the woman who blew the whistle,” he said, alluding to the potential juror who overheard a seated juror proclaim before the trial that, “he’s guilty, we can all go home now.”
 
“Then she went in and came out smiling, it’s something attorneys will tell you is called a payoff,” Cosby stated. “I know what they’ve done to my people. But my people are going to view me and say, ‘that boy looks good. That boy is strong.’ I have too many heroes that I’ve sat with. Too many heroes whom I listened to like John Henrik Clarke, Kenneth Clark, and Dorothy Height. Those people are very strong, and they saw the rejection of their people. This is political. I can see the whole thing.”
 
“I am a privileged man in prison,” he stated.
 
During the call, Cosby referred to his small cell as “my penthouse.”
 
He revisited his famous 2004 “Pound Cake” speech and clarified that he probably should not have addressed that controversial dissertation to all African Americans – the residents at SCI-Phoenix make for the perfect audience, Cosby stated.
 
Cosby said he remains concerned, however, for all of Black America.
 
“They are under siege. This thing with the drugs and the different pockets of the neighborhoods where it’s going on. When you look at what drugs are doing… things that make these people drive around and shoot into crowds,” Cosby said.
 
“The insanity of what is the cause to the brain by all the drugs these people are dealing with. It’s exactly what I warned them about in 2004. They’ve thrown education out the window.
 
“They’ve thrown respect for the family out the window, and they’re blaming each other for what’s going on. There is post-traumatic stress syndrome, and there are also bad manners.”
 
While inmates who spoke to NNPA Newswire said they were saddened to see an icon like Cosby imprisoned, each said they believe he’s serving a higher purpose. Cosby agreed.
 
“I don’t belong to the Mann Up Association, but it’s a privilege to come in and speak,” Cosby stated. “I never wanted them to lord me up (be put on a pedestal). This is a great privilege.”
 
A weekly highlight for Cosby since his incarceration, has been the reform program, Mann Up, where he is often the featured speaker. The program serves to encourage and empower African American men to strive for self-respect and dignity, and to put their family first.
 
Anthony “Benny-Do” Sutton, Tyree Wallace, Robert Groves, and Michael Butler, each spoke from SCI-Phoenix to NNPA Newswire about the program and Cosby’s influence.
 
“Every Tuesday, Mr. Cosby and I sit down and talk before the other residents come in and he explains to me what moves I need to make so that Mann Up can be a success,” stated Sutton, 56, who has spent his entire adult life in prison.
 
“He says to always remember to work as a team. We are all in this life together and Mr. Cosby is a political prisoner and he tells us that we’ve got to save our babies. We can’t be out there killing our children and our women,” Sutton stated.
 
Wallace, who has served more than two decades in prison, said Cosby has also opened his eyes because of his authenticity.
 
“This powerful man, one of the best comics, a legend and here he is with us,” Wallace told NNPA Newswire.
 
“Mr. Cosby comes into the room with his fist in the air and all of these men rise up and applaud him. He gives us so much wisdom and the Mann Up program is the perfect vehicle. He told us a story about his mother, and how she would have him clean the hallways after guys would go and urinate. He said he’d ask her why he had to clean it, and she told him that you have to clean where you live,” Wallace said.
 
Groves and Butler echoed their peers.
 
Both have served more than a dozen years in prison and said Cosby’s presence has helped them to see their lives differently.
 
Cosby recalled entering Temple University as a young man in the 1960s and his desire to become a teacher.
 
“I’m not a psychiatrist, and I’m not a psychologist. I’m an educator, and what I look forward to is talking to this group of 400 or so men. Some of them here are in their 70s, in their 50s, their 40s, 30s, and 20s,” Cosby said.
 
“I tell them what I know and what I feel. I feel that everything that I said in 2004, there is a light [behind it],” Cosby stated.
 
“The mistake I made [in 2004] is making it sound like all the people were making the infractions, and that’s not true.”
 
Cosby stated that he believes he’s in the right place at the right time because he’s spent his life and career trying to reach African American men.
 
“I’m looking at a state [Pennsylvania] that has a huge number of prisons, and the one I’m in, thankfully, has the largest population of African Americans,” Cosby stated.
 
“These are guys who are also from Philadelphia, where I grew up. Many of them are from the neighborhood. Michael Eric Dyson said ‘Bill Cosby is rich and forgot where he came from.’
 
“That’s not true. I’m not calling him a liar; I’m saying that’s not true. What I’m saying is that it’s not the same neighborhood as it was when I was coming up.
 
“The influx of drugs and what they’ve done with their own history. If they would pay attention to these things and put education first and respect for others first…it’s almost insane to hear someone say they don’t know how to be a father.
 
“As I said earlier, the revolution is in the home, and we’ve got to put it there. Marvin Gaye’s ‘What’s Going On,’ is very prophetic in that too many of us are dying in these neighborhoods. Too many of us dying and, another quote from the song, is ‘we’ve got to find a way.’”
 
It’s easy to see the devaluation of the Black family by others, Cosby stated.
 
He said the shelving of his iconic “The Cosby Show” is proof that those in power have long conspired to remove anything positive from the Black community.
 
“When ‘The Cosby Show’ came on with the Huxtables, just think about it. While it was running, other networks and even the media were doing jobs on trying to belittle whatever it represented,” Cosby stated.
 
Then, with ‘A Different World,’ they really ramped up the rhetoric. “While new shows were coming and we had gone off the air – this is the worst time in the history of television – I remember hearing shows coming on advertising saying this is not ‘The Cosby Show,’ which is an indictment in itself.
 
“They did not like what ‘The Cosby Show’ looked like for us, and many of us traded into it. Now, look at what has happened. They’ve taken everything that I’ve done and swept it into a place where it would not be shown.
 
“Thank goodness for TV One and BET, but we’ve got to respect ourselves. We’ve got to have a very, very strong respect for our history.”
 
Behind the steel walls at SCI-Phoenix, Cosby said he’s at peace.
 
His fellow residents often ask about his contemporaries like Richard Pryor, whom Cosby once encouraged to use profanity because it fit Pryor’s act.
 
“It’s a huge smile in my spirit. I can… use their own profanity back at them. I’m saying things to them like, ‘how many times if you have a lamp, do you rub it, give it three wishes. And, how many times can you say mother f—-r and things will come true?” Cosby stated.
 
“Sometimes, you have to turn on the conjugation of things like slang. You speak it in the home, and that’s what I said in 2004. It was the shock of hearing, ‘Where you is?’, and ‘Where you at?’ and then hear the parents say it too.”
 
Cosby believes he’s reaching his fellow residents.
 
“I’m reaching them because they want to be reached. They’re in prison. I don’t forget a saying, one I quoted or read in a book, which says, ‘I don’t know the secret to success, but I do know the secret for failure.’ You can’t please everybody. I have a feeling that these people [Mann Up participants] really want somebody. They have rappers here who are strong and spirited people. They don’t just blame people; they say, ‘we’ve got to do it.’”
 
Cosby has also served as a voice of reason in prison.
 
“I heard a guy say to someone that if someone did something he didn’t like, he’d go out and get all his boys and they’d kill the fella. I said, how much sense does that make? You call your boys, and they want to kill him,” Cosby stated.
 
“I said to look at all the people you’ve got involved, and when you get caught, you are all going to jail, and you got one dead fella. ‘Call if off,’ I told the guy. I said to him that you need to call your friends, too.”
 
Cosby often tells his fellow residents about an epiphany he had while serving in the Navy, which has allowed him to remain in good spirits while behind bars.
 
“I got a wife, family, and friends who are so happy that I have something. I go into my penthouse and lay down and start to think about how I can relay a message and give it on Saturdays (during Mann Up sessions) so that they would hear it and feel it,” Cosby stated.
 
“This Saturday, I gave a talk dedicated to women. I told the story of my wife, who said to me when she got back home after bringing our 43-year-old daughter back home dead from the hospital. It was the most difficult thing she’s ever done in her life, to sit there and watch her daughter die,” he stated.
 
“From there, I went into the fact that mothers have something that we all have, which is a navel. We have to respect our mothers and our women. We’ve got to stop buying drugs. If you have no buyer, you can’t sell,” Cosby stated.
 
After calling back a third time to complete the interview, Cosby said he needed to express the critical role the Black Press has had in telling his story.
 
“Sixty-five years from now, they will be quoting what you’ve written about your fellow journalists. [Wyatt] has information on how these people have rejected the truth. You have the information too because you were in that courtroom,” he stated.
 
“I’m a privileged man. You talk to [NNPA President and CEO] Dr. Benjamin F. Chavis, Jr., and he will tell you that there is a history of Black political imprisonment in America, and it’s repeating itself in some kind of way.”  

https://blackpressusa.com/nnpa-newswire-exclusive-bill-cosby-speaks-from-prison/

This article originally appeared in NNPA NEWSWIRE: NNPA NEWSWIRE EXCLUSIVE: Bill Cosby Speaks from Prison

Possibilities for Consideration: Because they Could

Those in control of America's voice through online media expression, education and government-led initiatives used the power of the mob to silence a man who spoke up for something that flies in the face of a control agenda.

Bill Cosby didn't want to be placed on a pedestal. He knew that the moment he was raised above those with their messages of hate, he would become a threat. He asked us to be accountable for our actions, to grow up and take care of each other. He asked that we stop using drugs and violence as means to an end. If people did as Cosby asked then they wouldn't be so impressionable and the mob voice would lose strength.

Even though Cosby's message of love and personal responsibility is counter to the mob's agenda, that's not why they put him away. Power corrupts and power became the authority. That power sought to destroy a man just to see if it could, and to see if Americans would do anything to stop it. Now, Cosby's name is destroyed and he's spending his golden years in a hard place that just makes people harder. Americans did nothing to stop it and that makes us partly responsible.

Despite the volume, intensity and reach of the mob's voice, it is still a minority in the thinking of Americans. What social media and news networks show us are only hand-picked pieces of the truth. If we buy it all, without holding them accountable, then we deserve what we're getting.

When the mob leads America, we cease to be Americans, which means we cease to be free.

Add Your Insight

Take a moment and examine…

  • As you reviewed the material above, what stood out to you?
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I have been impressed with the urgency of doing. Knowing is not enough; we must apply.
Being willing is not enough; we must do.

LEONARDO DA VINCI

eMod SocraticQ Conversation


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FOOTNOTE of Importance


Our world is experiencing an incredible revolution powered by technology that has used its tools to:

  • deceive the public
  • disrupt tradition
  • divide the people

This has inadvertently resulted in a Fear-based Shadow Culture™ that has hurt many people.
A powerful group of influence has joined together to deliver a proven antidote by shifting from impersonal development of Artificial Intelligence (AI) to replace people to utilize AI to empower Human Intelligence (HI).

 

To Empower The People:

 
  

Distraction Junction

 
 

What is a Modern Hero?:

.

We invite Heroes and Visionaries
to explore accessing these powerful methodologies and resources
to achieve their individual visions.




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