“There are no victimless billionaires.”
The
Best Democracy Money Can Buy
Greg Palast is an investigative journalist who has worked
for the BBC and The Guardian. The Best Democracy Money Can Buy, is a
documentary feature that chronicles his search for the truth about voter
suppression in America.
The film begins at a frenetic pace, lots of flashy graphics
and cartoons, but if you stick it out, it calms down. They likely put the film
together in this way to appeal to the Facebook/Twitter/Instagram addicted
people in society, short attention spans and a need for stimulation. Keith
Tucker was in charge of animation. He also worked on the Roger Rabbit comic.
Greg Palast looks every bit the newspaperman going after a
story, with his fedora and trench coat, crashing elegant parties for the rich,
asking the tough questions until overweight white bouncers escort him out. I
appreciate a journalist who is willing to put himself on the line for searching
out the truth, and then presenting it to the public in a documentary such as
this one. Today’s news outlets could use an army of such muckrakers.
I went to see it in the theater with my husband and two
friends. It made us sad, and it made one of my friends cry. Palast reveals
details about the program called Crosscheck, which was initiated by moneyed
white men and carried out by elected white officials. It’s to benefit
Republicans who fear they can’t get elected any other way. More depressing than
anything I’ve seen lately, it shows how minorities in America were put on lists
claiming they voted twice, with the result being their single vote was not even
counted.
This is voter fraud in the worst way, and a large part of
how Trump got elected. Rich white men who want unlimited wealth see to it that
Democrats, those politicians who would actually work to secure the rights of
underprivileged poor people, especially African Americans, Hispanics, and Asian
Americans, are not voted in. If all the minority votes count, no Republican
would ever get in office!
If someone showed me these lists, and said these people
voted in two different states, I’d say your sampling techniques and data
collection are flawed. People with even a high school education should be able
to figure this one out. I’ll leave the details of the scam for you to see for
yourself in the movie.
This was a chilling tale and left us feeling helpless and
hopeless. But knowledge is power. Even if we don’t know how to combat voter
suppression at this time, just knowing more about it is a start. It may also
make you angry, but I urge you to find it on Amazon or Vimeo, and educate
yourself. Have a viewing party with your friends and talk afterwards about what
you can do to make a difference. Ask your representatives to have the Department
of Justice open an investigation on the Crosscheck system for starters, and don’t
let up.