The Kevin Jackson Show
Nothing says ‘we defeated the racism’ like requesting a W-9” from the white supremacist you just hired. What a story. Allegations reported in a lawsuit and summarized in reporting by Just the News show that when they SPLC was approached by a former white nationalist who wanted out of the movement, they hired him. The dude declared that the SPLC had won. Dude went to the KKK and declared, “I’m done. I would like to return this ideology. Please process my refund.” When he told the SPLC, they said, “Can we get you to reconsider?!” Now pause right there, because in normal reality, that is what we call a win. That’s the moment you spike the football, ring the bell, and maybe even send the guy a fruit basket that says “Congratulations on your life upgrade.” But instead, the allegation says the system looked at that and said something closer to: “Wait… don’t go anywhere.” And this is where it gets almost poetic in its dysfunction. Because the story isn’t just “they didn’t celebrate the exit.” The allegation is that they allegedly turned the exit into a job opportunity. Which is a very modern kind of American efficiency. Other organizations try to solve problems. This one allegedly offers the problem a consulting contract. Think about the psychological elegance of it. A man says, “I want out of extremism.” And the response is, “Great news. We’ve upgraded you to ‘ongoing engagement.’” That’s not de-radicalization. That’s corporate retention strategy with a morality badge on it. Somewhere between HR onboarding and Batman hiring the Joker as a “special advisor on chaos mitigation.” And look, I understand incentives. Everybody understands incentives. But there is something uniquely American about building an entire moral industry and then discovering that moral success might accidentally threaten payroll stability. Because if fewer people are extremists… fewer grants get written. If fewer extremists exist… fewer conferences get hosted. And if fewer extremists exist… somebody in the back row has to ask the most terrifying question in modern nonprofit history: “So… what do we do next quarter?” And that is when ideology meets budget reality. Now, while that story is unfolding, we have another subplot playing out in Maine that feels like it was written by a committee that ran out of coffee and gave up halfway through proofreading. There is a Democratic candidate controversy involving a tattoo reportedly linked to Nazi imagery. And the reaction from parts of the political world has been less “deep concern” and more of a gentle shoulder shrug that says: “Well… have you seen the polling?” See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy [https://art19.com/privacy] and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info [https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info].
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