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Jewel Apologizes For Inauguration Event Performance, Cites Mental Health Advocacy
Of all the stars who agreed to perform at Donald Trumpâs inauguration day events, Jewel was perhaps the most surprising. Country singer Carrie Underwood, who sang during the presidentâs inauguration ceremony, has been elaborately apolitical, while itâs not even clear if the ârealâ Village People was on stage at the Liberty Inaugural Ball. Then thereâs Nelly, who likened the invitation to the military draft. An odd argument, to be sure, but not as confusing as the one presented by the 1990s pop sensation, who says sheâs certain that Trump is committed to ending our countryâs mental health crisis.
Jewel made this claim in an emotional Instagram post on Friday, saying that she performed at Robert F. Kennedy Jr.âs âMake America Healthy Againâ inauguration celebration ball because âI am a mental health advocate.â Itâs an assertion that likely made the millions of people who have felt their mental wellness crumble in the past week gnash their teeth in frustration, especially when the singer continued, âI believe I can help, and if I believe I can help, I have to try.â That meant serenading RFK Jr. and his wife, actor Cheryl Hines, with a rendition of âSomewhere Over The Rainbow,â though itâs unclear how the performance of the famous song made an impact on the fight for our nationâs sanity.
It appears that to Jewel, Trump was the only candidate ready to tackle the issue. âWe cannot wait another four years,â she said of the mental health crisis. âIf I can help shape policy, make sure mental health is in the conversation when it comes to American health, if I can help put resources or mental health tools into the hands of the most vulnerable who need it, Iâm going to try, and Iâm going to fight.â
Jewel attends Project Angel Food’s 2023 Angel Awards Gala at Project Angel Food on September 23, 2023 in Hollywood, California.
Tommaso Boddi
As reported by NPR in October, Trumpâs policies around mental health include forcing people into mental hospitals and gathering the unwellâwho he referred to in a campaign video as âdangerously derangedââinto tent cities. His positions on treatment for people with mental illness have been widely condemned by mental advocates who are not Jewel, with the National Alliance on Mental Illness saying that he is perpetuating false stereotypes and saying that he refers to mentally ill people as âmonsters.â
âWords matter, Mr. President,â NAMI Acting CEO Angela Kimball said in a statement. ââThese peopleâ are our friends, neighbors, children, spouses. Theyâre not âmonsters,â âthe mentally ill,â or âcrazy peopleâ â theyâre us. Talking about reinstitutionalization only further marginalizes and isolates the one in five people with mental illness. Instead, we need to be talking about the power of early treatment and effective intervention to change lives.â
Jewel didnât address that contradiction in Fridayâs post, in which she said that she is âSo sorry that I caused pain, especially in my LGBTQIA+ community, because you guys are treasures.â The singer, who Joe Rogan once called âone of the most interesting people Iâve ever had the pleasure to talk toâ (she reciprocated by defending the podcaster in 2022 after he was accused of spreading misinformation about the pandemic), also didnât address the contraction of speaking out against the horrific sexual harassment sheâs faced during her career while performing for RFK Jr., who has been credibly accused of sexual harassment. Not to mention that the performance in question was to celebrate Donald Trump, a man who has been accused of sexual violence by a number of women.
The singer, who in 2023 made a point of tweeting in support of the misinformation-packed and highly fictional film Sound of Freedom, which was widely criticized for perpetuating false narratives about child sex trafficking, might benefit from taking a page from Nellyâs book. In explaining his presence at the Liberty Ball, the âHot In Herreâ singer suggested that he was essentially drafted into performing.
âIt doesnât matter who is in office,â Nelly said. âThe same way that our men and women, our brothers and sisters who protect this country, have to go to war and have to put their life on the line for whoever in office. So if they can put their life on the line for whoever in office, I can damn sure perform.â