Sunday, June 1, 2008

Part II The Collaborator Felicia J Nu'Man

In the first part of the work, "The collaborator Felicia J Nu'Man..." I summed up with the question: Why are two-thirds of criminal defendants in Louisville, Kentucky Black.

Nu'Man, as those of her ilk stranded in the abstractions of American Political-Economy with no where to go find recriminative solace with Cosbyesque rants and diatribic skews of organic social phenomena which when done by their aped status quo masters goes unchallenged but when done by the less fortunate the gall of critique is unleashed.

Nu'Man in her essay, wrote: " My job is not that off a social worker or a social scientist. I was hired to enforce the law as drafted. I have a duty to the citizens of the Commonwealth of Kentucky, including all the Black victims of the drug culture. Felicia Nu'Man is deceptive in her motive. Criminality and deviancy runs the gamut, so why is her focus on the drug culture?

White-collar crime is twice, thrice as destructive on society than the desperation of the drug culture, yet her feigned altruistic fastidiousness seems to ignore it.

With the zeal of the rote trained, Nu'Man declares as if epiphanously that she is not social scientist. What does she think is the determinative definition of which crimes focus should be on, isn't it Sociological? Law, which is essentially the political realities of an environment is intrinsic social science and it does not exist in a vacuum. So to callously deny it because it lays waste her worldview is just as farced as that tired ass, Standard Operating Procedure or I was just following orders, which is what her disingenuous, "I was hired to enforce the law as drafted', is.

Prosecutors wield enormous amount of authority. Their actions almost go unchallenged. Their unjust deeds as just ones are done in the name of the people. Yet the peoples will doesn't play as much a role in the practice of their duties as the utopic fancy of Law and Order propagandizes it. A society with an inordinate and excessive amount of judiciary and policing activity is inherently an unjust one.

Felicia J. Nu'Man as a Black female Prosecutor defending a Political-Economic reality which is at odds with a part of the economical motive of a significant amount of it's citizens is a collaborator.
By Apropos

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