see also:

http://www.commondreams.org/headlines04/0510-06.htm
Bush Circles Wagons, But Cavalry Has Joined the Indians

http://www.commondreams.org/headlines04/0510-07.htm
Bush's Backing of Rumsfeld Shocks and Angers Arabs

http://www.commondreams.org/headlines04/0510-03.htm
Red Cross Was Told Iraq Abuse 'Part of the Process'

http://www.counterpunch.org/fisk05072004.html
Robert Fisk: Betrayed by Images of Our Own Racism

http://www.blackcommentator.com/89/89_cover_change_world.html
The Black Commentator: US Unfit to Change the World

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http://www.counterpunch.org/zaitchik05072004.html

May 7, 2004

>From Terrell Unit in Texas to Abu Ghraib Doesn't It Ring a (Prison) Bell
By ALEXANDER ZAITCHIK

If the president wasn't so forthright about his disinterest in the world,
it would have been hard to believe him Wednesday when he said the abuse in
Abu Ghraib prison "doesn't represent the America I know." But who can
doubt him? To represent the America George W. Bush knows, there would have
to be explosive snapshots of Iraqi detainees lounging by the Abu Ghraib
pool, barbequing ribs and snorting primo Bolivian coke off empty cases of
Coors Light. There would have to be shocking reports of prisoners with
family members on the Iraqi Governing Council being handed sweetheart
deals on professional sports franchises and energy firms.

But being stripped, hooded and urinated on while your friend is forced to
masturbate next to you? The only member of the Bush clan who knows about
that kind of thing is Jenna.

Of course, if the President were more of a newspaper-reading sort of
feller, he wouldn't have been so shocked by the pictures. As a
tough-on-crime Texan, he would have recognized such treatment immediately,
perhaps even feeling a little swell of pride. If he'd ever put down the
Bible for a broadsheet after his conversion, he'd know that "Texas prison"
is one of the most feared phrases in the languageŠand he'd know why. When
he sat down in front of Arab tv audiences on Wednesday to explain the true
American way, he could have pointed to an October, 1999 story in the
Austin American Statesman that detailed how female prisoners there were
regularly kept in portable detention cells for hours at a time in summer
heat with no water. "In fear of more time in the cages," the article
explains, "many women submit sexually to their oppressors and are raped,
molested and forced to perform sodomy on their captors."

And in 1996, if Bush hadn't so busy handling the transfer of $9 billion in
public funds over to the University of Texas Investment Management
Company, the governor might have had time to read about the videotape that
surfaced that year depicting prison guards brutalizing inmates in the
Brazoria County Detention Center in Angleton, TX. The tape, which was
originally shot for use as a training video, showed riot-clad guards
beating prisoners (arrested on drug violations) and forcing them to crawl
while kicking them and poking them with electric prods. Had Bush cleared a
little time to watch this video, he would had an easier time digesting the
images out of Abu Ghraib, and thus saved himself those few moments of
humiliating supplication in front of all those Arabs, based as they were
on the faulty assumption that those pictures "weren't America."

If only some governor's aide had told him in 1999 about the hunger strike
at the notorious Terrel Unit facility in Livingston, TX, where death-row
prisoner Michael Sharp said before his execution, many guards "think it is
their patriotic duty to torture and brutalize prisoners." If only he had
not been so busy reclining in box seats at Rangers home games, the
governor might have known that prisoners' attorney Donna Brorby had
described Texas' super-max prisons as "the worst in the country," where
guards reportedly gas prisoners and throw them down on concrete floors
while handcuffed. Then the president might have been better equipped to
recognize his country in those pictures.

Considering all the downtime the President has spent in the Lone Star
State since 2000, he might have even heard about the 2002 conclusion of
the 30-year legal battle Ruiz v. Johnson. In its write up of the case, the
Austin Chronicle reported the words of Texas Judge William Wayne Justice,
written after hearing lengthy expert and inmate testimony on prison
conditions:

Texas prison inmates continue to live in fearS More vulnerable inmates are
raped, beaten, owned, and sold by more powerful ones. Despite their pleas
to prison officials, they are often refused protection. Instead, they pay
for protection, in money, services, or sex. Correctional officers continue
to rely on the physical control of excessive force to enforce order. Those
inmates locked away in administrative segregation, especially those with
mental illnesses, are subjected to extreme deprivations and daily
psychological harm.

But no, the abuse at Abu Ghraib does not represent any America that George
Bush could possibly have known about. The America he knows never sets foot
inside prisons. It just owns them and fills them and builds them. Anything
that happens after that, well, it might as well be another country.


Alexander Zaitchik can be reached at: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

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