http://www.alternet.org/story.html?StoryID=18659

The America We Know
By J. Douglas Allen-Taylor, Berkeley Daily Planet
May 11, 2004

There is videotape of the beatings by the six guards, available on the
Internet for download. Soft, grainy and shot from a distance, still, what
is happening is unmistakable. Two prisoners are lying sprawled on the
floor, face down, unresisting. An L.A. Times news article graphically
describes the scene: "[One of the guards] sits astride [one of the
prisoners and] begins punching him with alternating fists, landing a total
of 28 blows. At one point, [the guard] can be seen lifting [the
prisoner's] head by the hair in what looks like an effort to get a better
angle for his punch. A few feet away, the tape shows [a second guard]
slugging [the other prisoner] and using his right knee to pummel him in
the neck area as the [prisoner] lies motionless. ... One [guard] is seen
shooting the [prisoners] with a gun that fires balls of pepper spray,
while another sprays their faces with mace."

The video also shows one of the guards giving a kick to the head of one of
the prisoners with the toe of his boot.

No, the videotape is not of Iraqi prisoners at the Abu Ghraib prison near
Baghdad. As far as I know, no such videos exist. The video of which I
speak documents the beating of two United States citizens – juvenile
prisoners under the control of the State of California – by guards of the
California Youth Authority at the Chaderjian Youth Correctional Facility
in Stockton, California. Chaderjian. Abu Ghraib. It is easy to get them
confused, I suppose.

(Both the San Joaquin County District Attorney's office and the office of
California Attorney General Bill Lockyer, by the way, have declined to
bring charges against the guards in the incident, citing their contention
that there was "no reasonable likelihood of conviction" of the guards in a
California courtroom.)

This week, President George Bush went before representatives of various
Arab-language television stations and stated-in reaction to the photos of
prisoner abuse by U.S. soldiers coming out of Abu Ghraib-that "[this] does
not represent the America that I know."

No, I suppose not. Mr. Bush has never been a black or Latino kid, locked
up by the CYA.

What one finds most disturbing about the Abu Ghraib prisoner abuses is
this national display of collective shock and surprise as television
commentators pass serious comments about the meaning of it all – the
widened eyes, the caught breath, the hand over open mouth, the calling in
of the multitude of expert commentators, the incredulity that Americans,
of all people, could be the author of such acts. Has no one been paying
attention?

"[This] does not represent the America that I know," says Mr. Bush.

The president must, one must guess, therefore never watch broadcast
television. The physical abuse by United States guards of prisoners
incarcerated in United States jails is so well known and widespread that
it is a running, national joke. Watch any sitcom long enough, and sooner
or later, someone will make a threat about someone going to prison and
having to "do the laundry of a 300-pound cellmate named Bubba." It is a
joke – if one misses the point – about people being raped in United States
prisons, a condition that does not invoke calls for investigation,
intervention and reform, but merely a David Letterman or Jerry Seinfeld
smirk.

Yes. How very funny.

America shocked – shocked! – at the Abu Ghraib humiliations? Why should we
be? The humiliation of individuals has become an American obsession; it
is, in fact, the growing American pastime, surpassing football and
baseball as our national sport. We used to hold contests in which people
competed, and then judges awarded a prize to the person who they thought
performed the best. It was the thrill of the victory in which we wanted to
share. The camera focused on the joyous, beaming Star Search winners while
the second- and third-placers, mercifully, were hustled offstage before
their frozen smiles shattered and their tears flowed over the loss of
just-missed dreams. Now, voyeurs of despair, it is the agony of the losers
on which we dwell. Televised contest after contest – from ESPN's new
announcer to Donald Trump's "Fired!" to American Idol to Elimidate – puts
the spotlight not on just the losing, but the degradation of those who
lose.

Our reveling wallow in the culture of suffering has become so widespread
that now one national automobile manufacturer – I cannot recall their name
because having watched it once, I have to turn it quickly off because I do
not want the sickening images in my head – begins with a montage of
horrific, swollen knots on people's heads, then moves to a young yuppie
admiring a car and, turning, still distracted, busting his head on an
overhanging fixture, knocking himself to the floor. My god. It is the
equivalent of selling hamburgers by watching photos of the carnage
resultant from highway accidents. "America's Funniest Home Videos" – the
once-backchannel program where we became comfortable in snickering at
people's pain like a kid thumbing through porno locked in the bathroom –
has now come out of the closet and moved into the mainstream.

But "[this] does not represent the America that I know," says Mr. Bush.

Oh. Really?

"That the way the United States treated its prisoners in occupied Iraq
would become a focal point of international scrutiny, and perhaps a
critical element in winning the confidence of the Iraqi people, should not
have been a surprise to anyone," the San Francisco Chronicle writes in an
editorial. "From the top down, the message from U.S. commanders should
have been crystal clear: Humane treatment of prisoners is essential to our
mission."

No, actually, it's more fundamental than that. How we treat prisoners
under our control is indicative of who we are. It is essential to our very
humanity. It is how we are defined, both by ourselves, and by others who
either observe or interact with us. Christian doctrine – and the right
insists, with pounded breast, that we are a Christian nation – teaches in
Matthew 25:40 that "the King shall answer and say unto them, Verily I say
unto you, Inasmuch as ye have done it unto one of the least of these my
brethren, ye have done it unto me." That, again according to New Testament
Christian doctrine, is how we are to be judged.

"[Abu Ghraib] does not represent the America that I know," says Mr. Bush,
in all seriousness.

If so, he must not have been paying attention.


J. Douglas Allen-Taylor is managing editor of the Berkeley Daily Planet.

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