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Gonzales Appointment Latest Step in Browning of Justice
Commentary/Analysis
By Roberto Lovato, Pacific News Service
The ascension of Alberto Gonzales to the nation's top law
enforcement position embodies the nation's changing demographics, as
well as Latinos' growing place in the criminal
justice system as both prisoners and prison guards, defendants and
prosecutors.
Jan 11, 2005 - People living along California's bucolic highway 99 in
the San Joaquin Valley are of different minds about Bush Attorney
General nominee Alberto Gonzales, a man who will soon be crowned the
nation's first Latino Attorney General. Following a recent drive along
the 99, I saw some Latinos living in towns along the highway who, like
most national Latino civil rights and political leaders -- Democrat and
Republican alike -- consider it an act of ethnic fealty to support the
Gonzales nomination.
Their sentiments in the Valley resemble those of former HUD Secretary
Henry Cisneros, who expressed his "immense sense of pride" and of newly
elected Senator Ken Salazar, who trumpeted Latino triumph as he waxed
emotional about Gonzales's "humble beginnings." Senate confirmation
panelists, pundits and public-relations people know that talk of tough
origins digs deep into the heart of farm workers, farm worker-descended
families and other peoples of humble origin in the green Valley and
across a browning United States.
But a friend who grew up in the Valley and who was accompanying me on
the trip reminded me how a growing number of these same Latinos have
sons, daughters, husbands or wives who are housed and growing up in a
less-than-idyllic land some refer to as "Prison Valley." She told me
that not everyone here is happy that Latinos incarcerated along the more
than 200 miles of prisons sprouting along Highway 99 are now an
exponentially-growing majority cash crop for businesses, prison guard
unions and local governments in income-starved places like Avenal,
Corcoran, and other towns across the country. These towns are reaping
millions in prison-related funding and subcontracts for services to the
prisons, guards and the incarcerated themselves.
In this sense, Alberto Gonzales represents a milestone in the browning
of Justice, which refers to how Latinos are interfacing with and
becoming part of the justice system. Young Latinos are the fastest
growing and largest population in California prisons -- (36 percent,
according to a recent report by the Justice Policy Institute). And they
are the fastest growing and largest population being employed in
criminal justice jobs, jobs that pay as much as three times a teacher's
salary, jobs as police officers, probation officers, and prisons guards
that will be administered by Gonzales if he is confirmed.
As current trends continue in California and across the country,
increasing numbers of Latinos in police uniforms will send increasing
numbers of Latinos to prisons to be guarded by increasing numbers of
Latino prison guards.
The implications of browning of justice are huge for Latinos and for the
country as a whole. Traditional notions of a united Latino community, a
united Latino political family crumble before the gray walls of new
prisons that divide the Latino family in unprecedented ways: some
Latinos lose money and the chance for a better future because their kids
are incarcerated, while other Latinos build on their kids' future with
money gained by arresting, prosecuting and jailing Latino youth. At the
same time, traditional critiques of "white man's justice" become
problematic when the head cop, head jailer and head prosecutor is a
brown man with many brown folks working beneath him. Alberto Gonzales
can be seen either as a symbol of justice in a community long left out
of the economic and political pie, or as a brown front man for a gray
system that imprisons Latinos and others with Soviet-like ferocity.
At a time when Semitic and mestizo features have become a liability to
many since 9/11, failure to understand the browning of justice leads to
dangerous consequences in what is a radical political moment. As
prosecutors in places like the Bronx and police chiefs like L.A.'s
William Bratton try feverishly to label, prosecute and imprison Latino
and other gang members as "terrorists," having clean-cut Gonzales
oversee the domestic application of the Patriot Act and other post-9/11
laws may ironically (or cynically) lead to an even deadlier
criminalization of Latinos.
Images of Latino gangs on newscasts, TV shows and in movies are, along
with a handful of other cartoonish and now embedded images of hot
dancers and "illegal aliens," among the predominant representations of
Latinos in U.S. media. In the same way that the Bush administration's
global and local attempts to divide "good" and "evil" and "good Arab"
from "bad Arab" have resulted in further demonization of Arab, Muslim
and South Asian Americans, the browning of justice and its too-clear
delineation of "good" Latino cop from "bad" Latino prisoner draws
Latinos even closer to the vortex of the domestic "axis of evil"
ideology gripping powerful interests in need of new enemies.
It will be harder to critique the soft-spoken Gonzales on these issues
than outgoing Anglo-Evangelical crusader Attorney General John Ashcroft.
Liberal-left critics of the Gonzales nomination are right to attack
Gonzales' alleged legal facilitation of the torture and abuse at Abu
Ghraib. But no one, no Senate panelist, no one in the leadership of the
mostly white left organizations, no one in the national Latino civil
rights organizations has expressed concerns about the implications of
Gonzales' alleged sanctioning of torture for domestic prisons like
Corcoran. That's where Amnesty International, the California State
Senate and the FBI have reported acts of sexual humiliation, torture and
even murder committed by prison guards (some of whom are Latino.) In
what may be a smart rightward tilt of the axis of racial and ethnic
realpolitik, Gonzales' humble Latino roots may grow into a
hard-to-penetrate dark forest obfuscating our view of justice.
Failure to understand and develop new critiques of the browning of
justice will lead to devastating and dangerous consequences. Alberto
Gonzales' humble origins and ethnic extraction must not divert our
attention from a trend that threatens to imprison generations of young
Latinos, blacks and others of humble extraction from towns like those
dotting Highway 99, where the browning of justice is yielding rotten
fruit.
PNS contributor Roberto Lovato (robvato63@yahoo.com)
is a Los Angeles-based writer. |