Border Patrol Nation
Dispatches from the Front Lines of Homeland Security
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- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
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نقد و بررسی
Starred review from January 13, 2014
Journalist Miller tells an alarming story of U.S. Border Patrol and Homeland Security’s ever-widening reach into the lives of American citizens and legal immigrants as well as the undocumented. He describes the militarization of the Border Patrol and concurrent dehumanizing of “unauthorized” persons; American citizens routinely harassed and arrested in Constitution-free zones that extend 100 miles from all borders; the expulsion of a exemplary Border Patrol agent for expressing his Mexican identity in casual conversation; and the Border Patrol’s Explorer Academy for children, which, with its lock-step marching, black boots, law-enforcement training, and indoctrination is eerily evocative of fascism and Hitler Youth. Miller reveals the “complex and industrial world” looming behind the border patrol, spanning “robotics, engineers, salespeople and detention centers” and the new generation of Explorers. “It is the world in which we now live,” he states, “where eradicating border violations is given higher priority than eradicating malnutrition, poverty, homelessness, illiteracy, unemployment.” In addition to readers interested in immigration issues, those concerned about the NSA’s privacy violations will likely be even more shocked by the actions of Homeland Security.
May 1, 2014
Solid, absorbing reportage on the government's racist and constitutionally questionable notions of border security in the post-9/11 world.Independent journalist Miller takes a critical look at the U.S. Border Patrol from several angles, looking at the agency's operations near Tucson (where he currently lives) and Niagara Falls, N.Y. (where he grew up), as well as El Paso, Detroit, Tampa, New Mexico and even South Carolina. When most Americans think of borders that need sealing, they tend to think of the southern one. Since its formation in 1924, however, the Patrol has had its eyes on the northern one as well. It was through Canada that many Chinese immigrants evaded the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882. But since the apprehension of Ahmed Ressam, the would-be "Millennium Bomber," in 1999, and especially since 9/11, the Patrol, its funders in Congress and others in the security-industrial complex are focused warily on the north. As one specialist put it, of the 4,000-mile border Canada and the U.S. share, "only 32 of those miles are categorized as what we say are acceptable levels." The war on terror has brought about a boom in the security industry as the government has poured billions of dollars into Homeland Security, and the resultant expansion of the department's power has had an effect on the older, equally fraught politics inspired by the southern border. Miller sensitively explores the effect of border insecurity on Mexican-Americans, including one unfortunate member of the patrol whose mixed sympathies cost him a promising career, and of the agency's brutal subjugation of the ancient Tohono O'odam people, whose nation has been forcibly divided to keep those on the Mexican side of the border out of the Arizona side.An unsettling but important read.
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