Police State & Prison Time
In this terrifying, informative and gripping book, Parenti cuts back and forth between the outrages of the East and the excesses of the West, as New York and California play different leadership roles in the new policing. As he zeroes in on New York as the hotbed of the re-engineered, amped-up policing of the 90s, the NYPD stars throughout the book. Its policies have led the revolution in policing across the country. And in California we see a hybrid between traditional beat policing and a military buildup that is worthy of the Balkans.
Parenti prompts us to wonder what happened to the United States that we find ourselves moving toward police statehood at the end of this century. There are economic forces that create populations who must be kept in line because they have no role in the new global economy. But Parenti's analysis lacks the punch that gritty, real-life tales would give it. Lockdown America gives readers of all perspectives plenty of fodder to chew on when pondering what happened to all the opportunities we've had in the past 50 years to develop a civil society, yet provides few answers.
Parenti presents one creepy factoid after another to illustrate his argument that this total quality management-style policing works in goosestep sync with increased militarization of American police forces. The result is a country where an aura of rifle-enforced purity of lifestyle is becoming the norm, and where more people are employed in the prison industry than in any Fortune 500 company except General Motors.
Clinton's proposal to put 100,000 more cops on the streets is fingered as a root of the malignant growth. In Lockdown America, the 1994 Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act (VCCLEA) is the starring ogre. Featuring nearly nine billion dollars in federal matching grants for police funding, and only one billion less than that for prison building, this Democratic spending juggernaut also allowed for the expansion of federal capital punishment and three billion dollars to be spent on the war against immigrants.
In California Parenti finds the big guns?western style. The book's most vivid and disturbing chapter describes the marriage between SWAT teams and beat policing in Fresno, an out-of-the-way frontier through which America's new love for paramilitary policing is sweeping the (nonwhite) populations. Policing the people with machine guns, "flash-bang grenades," blunt trauma ordnance and smoke bombs, cops in camouflage and body armor cruise in helicopters over hollowed-out suburbs. This is Fresno's Violent Crime Suppression Unit. Parenti rode with the VCSU, so that chapter has a hyperreal vividness of point-of-view dramatic narrative, reading like tales from Blade Runner.
Lockdown America leans hard on the drama inherent in visions like these, and the suggested images of the Army and the Navy SEALs encroaching on white suburban America. For readers who are likely to be insulated for the time being from the terrors of "dynamic entry" policing, it would be helpful if the militarization were explained more clearly. Parenti assails his readers with descriptions of MP-5s, APCs, AR-15s and M-79s. Unless you're a regular reader of Guns & Ammo, the fear these acronyms generates is generalized to firepowers that can only be imagined. The book could be improved by detailing the names, characteristics and firepowers of the various weapons described, adding a dose of reality to the text that would surely be more frightening than the specters of mysterious?and therefore unreal?arsenals.
The armored, SWAT-enhanced and high-tech police systems Parenti declaims would be terrifying enough by themselves, but, as he reports, police forces are also cross-fertilizing with other nonpolice paramilitary forces such as the INS' Border Patrol. He describes a "growing trend toward increased cooperation and 'cross-deputation' between law enforcement and immigration authorities." This is the militarized war on immigrants that is being fought across the country, as the INS in places like Jackson Hole teams up with police, the FBI, the DEA and the military to create "multi-agency interior enforcement operations."
Parenti meticulously details this iron grip that the nation's police forces hold on marginalized populations. His report is so graphic and convincing that the few tales of successful civilian opposition stand out starkly, and then are largely ignored. For example, he describes what happened after Border Patrol agents in Fresno stormed a high school and arrested and deported three Latino youths: "The next day students walked out in protest and managed to get one of the youths brought back from Mexico." We're left wondering how they managed to do that. For one thing, the protesters are teenagers?a marginalized population?even if they happen to be white and middle-class.
Although Parenti acknowledges that his book is "short on tales of protest," he doesn't explain why. Whatever those kids did, it was awfully effective if they managed to get a deported alien allowed back into the country. Lockdown America would be more powerful if more stories like that were mined from the dirty depths of American criminal justice.
In the rundown of America's big growth industry, the prison industrial complex, it is clear that modern incarceration exists more to neutralize the unwanted than to rehabilitate the deviant. For example, prison literacy has basically been banned. In spite of ample evidence that literacy and education are powerful tools that enable people to escape poverty and criminal association, the VCCLEA wiped out Pell grants to prisoners. "With the loss of that money, degree-granting programs in thirty-two prison systems simply ended." Within the Prison Litigation Reform Act (PLRA), prisons have also eliminated law libraries, in line with punitive anti-access legislation that harshly restricts prisoners' ability to use the legal system.
I wish that Parenti had done more to connect the horrors he describes to the lives of his safe, educated readers. Most Americans live comfortably indoors with their television versions of the news, indifferent to the arsenals building up around them. As they watch Cops and the like, the police state becomes normalized as entertainment. In Portland, OR, Parenti reports that recent police acquisition of military AR-15 rifles has "provoked very little political complaint," in contrast to the public acrimony that accompanied the police's acquisition of shotguns in the 1970s.
Apparently, brainwashing with banality may be the American state's most effective weapon against its people?inside the joint as well as out. Literacy for prisoners is being downsized, but, as Parenti quotes convict journalist Adrian Lomax discussing Wisconsin's prisons: "[H]aving your own TV is not permitted, it's encouraged? Prisoners who can't buy their own TVs can borrow the state owned sets at no cost."