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NEWS & LETTERS, January-February 2002

Column: Voices from the inside out by Robert Taliaferro

'Profiling' and prejudice

A mainstream journalist friend, discussing the situation that many are finding themselves in after September 11, noted, "Now they know what blacks have been complaining about for years." What this person was speaking about is the Bush and Ashcroft doctrine of cultural profiling to detain (synonymous with "to question'' in post-September 11 vocabulary) Arab-looking, -speaking, or -acting  people.

Though these incidents are disturbing, what is even more disturbing is that the practice has been promulgated by the federal government for years. In prisons around the country, religious and cultural profiling has existed on the same—if not more aggressive—levels.

Did September 11 change anything with regard to this profiling? The answer to that is a resounding yes...it tended to legitimize processes that were already in place and being used. For several decades prison administrations have been using religion (and of course race) as tags that determined custody and classifications of prisoners.

Muslims have been especially susceptible when it comes to this profiling structure; Native Americans have also been subjected to discriminatory practices because of their religions. Prior to the events of September 11, prison administrations had promulgated rules that disrupted, if not ignored, the rights of prisoners to freely practice established religions. Even the U.S. Congress, during the Clinton years, amended laws such as the Religious Freedom Restoration Act to disallow prisoners to practice religious preferences under that act's protection. These changes were made based on complaints by state attorney generals.

There is an innate fear in this country of people of color, their ideals, religions, cultural nuances, and individualism in the context of blending in with the overall American precept of a cultural melting pot. Nowhere is this more prevalent than in small rural communities. Since the majority of prisons are located in these communities, being Black there is an alien concept, so it is not surprising that the variety of religions or cultural differences that non-white prisoners bring to that community might be a subject for paranoia.

In an effort to stem this feeling of national paranoia, we see commercials that highlight a plethora of individuals of all races and cultures stating that they are Americans. In theory, this is a grand scheme. What is confusing, however, is why such pronouncements are necessary in a country that prides itself on its multi-cultural composition.

The answer to that is simple, and unpopular to those who wish to sell the dream of equality. We may all be "Americans," but we live in a country that determines that identity by stereotypes, bias, and degrees. These biases are bred into the psyche of Americans during some period in their lives. All Blacks have the potential to be great athletes, but also a propensity to be criminals; Hispanics steal American jobs; Indians drink; Asians are potential drug dealers, and Arabs, Indonesians, Africans...Muslims, are potential terrorists.

Those convoluted ideas often are aimed at people who are the firmest believers in the American dream, the hardest workers, with ancestral heritages that helped to build this nation under harsher conditions than the majority of white Americans. That they "still" believe in the American dream despite the odds, is a tribute to them—not simply as Americans—but as humans.

Profiling people will get worse before it gets better. It will be interesting to see how extensive such profiles will become, and if they will extend beyond the line of color, language, and perceived "non-American" cultures. Perhaps we will see profiles that identify terrorists of every stripe, including white and homegrown, promulgating the access to "justice" that people of color have been afforded over the years, giving American justice a truly "color-blind" patina... then, perhaps not!

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