From worker-brc-news@lists.tao.ca Mon Aug 20 12:09:08 2001
From: Tim Wise <tjwise@mindpsring.com>
Subject: [BRC-NEWS] Drugs and Race in the ’Burbs
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Date: Mon, 20 Aug 2001 06:12:25 -0400 (EDT)
http://www.alternet.org/story.html?StoryID=11330
Here we go again.
In a time of multiple school and workplace shootings, middle-aged mass murderers, drug-saturated rave parties, and moms who drown their kids in tubs, lakes, or dump them in garbage cans, one question comes to mind. How long will suburban white America get away with expressing shock at the criminal proclivities of its progeny, without media exposing their presumption of incorruptibility as fallacious and patently racist? Especially when government statistics indicate deviance and dysfunction are quite commonplace with such folks and in such places.
On Sunday, August 12, the front page of the Washington Post brought us
yet another story about white suburban youth, who, to the amazement of
their parents, friends, and the media, turn out to be stone cold
criminals. This time the headlines emanate from ice
neighborhoods,
in Northern Virginia: places where sinister crimes
aren’t supposed to happen.
But, as authorities have discovered, one of the most significant drug
operations in the region’s history was being run from this
nice, safe
place. And not by dark-skinned street-hustlers
preying on vulnerable teens and getting them hooked; but rather, by
the former soccer-playing little leaguers who this nation grooms to
run major corporations, hold political office, or merely typifies as
normal, all-American boys.
In this particular drama, one of the principal players, named (I kid you not) Owen Merton Barber IV, stands accused of murdering Daniel Petrole Jr., one of his drug-dealing colleagues at the behest of yet another fellow-dealer, Justin Michael Wolfe.
Seem implausible? Surreal even? Thanks to well-worn stereotypes about drug users, dealers, and criminals in general, we’ve come to expect the bad guys to look like them. Black and brown people, not those who are white like us. When we have to protect ourselves from folks with names like Owen Merton Barber the Fourth, well, what is the world coming to?
Actually, although underreported, drug data has long confirmed that the stereotypes of users and dealers (poor, black or Latino, and urban-dwelling) are not only racist, but also wrong.
According to the National Institutes on Drug Abuse, the Centers for Disease Control, and the Department of Health and Human Services, whites are equally or more likely to use drugs than their African American counterparts, despite common misperceptions to the contrary.
Although blacks and Hispanics tend to try drugs for the first time at a slightly younger age than whites, by the end of high school, whites have caught up and surpassed them in every drug category. White seniors are a third more likely to have smoked pot in the past year, seven times more likely to have used cocaine, three times more likely to have used heroin, and nine times more likely to have used LSD. And it’s not just that there are more white users, as this would reflect mere population percentages, but rather, that the white rate of use is that much higher than the rate for blacks.
It’s the same story for young adults. Whites are 66 percent of 18-25 year olds, but 70 percent of drug users that age. Blacks are 13.5 percent of persons in that age cohort, but only 13 percent of young adult users, while Hispanics are nearly 15 percent of that age group, but only 12 percent of drug users 18-25.
When it comes to drug dealing, the picture changes only slightly. According to the Justice Department, drug users tend to buy from same-race dealers. So the nearly three-quarters of users who are white, mainly rely on white dope peddlers, not the Jamaicans or Dominicans of popular imagery. And when it comes to drugs like Ecstasy—a hot product for the Virginia cartel—the dealers and users have long been known to be mostly white, middle class males between 14 and 32.
But one would know none of these things from reading the Post story on the recently uncovered suburban drug empire, or drug related articles in any other nationally-prominent paper. Instead, white suburban dealers and users are presented as exceptions to an otherwise law-abiding rule.
In the instant case, the accused, from the Prince William County
hamlets of Chantilly and Centreville are youths who reporter Josh
White describes as good kids,
who went bad.
When was the
last time a black or Latino drug dealer or gang-banger was described
this way? To those who study media, implicit in most news coverage
when they do it is the suggestion that it’s because they were
congenital criminals; it was their IQ or pathological underclass
families. They don’t go
bad, they just are
bad.
But when stories are written about pale-faced killers or dealers, or in this case both, sympathetic adjectives fill the pages. Crime becomes human interest—a cautionary tale. We are encouraged to identify with the instigators of the mayhem in ways we never would be were they dark or poor.
For example, Kip Kinkel, 1998’s poster boy for school shootings,
was likened in the major media to MAD Magazine’s Alfred
E. Newman: freckle-faced, and the boy next door.
Similar
descriptions were offered for the school shooters in Arkansas,
Georgia, Pennsylvania, Kentucky, Mississippi and Tennessee. Even
Columbine shooters Dylan Klebold and Eric Harris, described by
classmates as dark and brooding,
were still referred to by many
as basically normal,
and gave off no warning signs in the eyes
of Littleton families, teachers, or law enforcement. Andrea Yates, the
Houston suburban mom who killed her five kids in their bathtub was
described by one major newsmagazine as having loved her children
too much,
and having been overwhelmed
by the
responsibilities of keeping hearth and home together.
And listen to those quoted in White’s story. First there is
Prince William Detective Greg Pass who explains, None of this
happened in bad neighborhoods...It bothers everyone involved that in
many ways these kids are mirror images of the detectives working the
case, except they have chosen to go the wrong way.
Sympathy,
recognition, identification, and all of it, by the officer’s
admission, due to the fact that these kids are mirror images
of
the detectives themselves. And what does one see in the mirror after
all? One’s face: one’s white, middle class suburban face,
to be precise.
Throughout the Post piece the ringleaders of this marijuana and
ecstasy empire are described as kids who went to church,
sold Christmas trees at the mall parking lot,
were polite,
shy, friendly, non-threatening,
clean cut,
cautiously
pensive,
kind and gentle,
fun-loving,
the class
clown.
The kind of boys who you’d want your daughter to
date,
and who have been known to nurse sick birds back to health,
romp down the soccer field,
and whose hooliganism was limited
to writing their names in wet cement.
The alleged shooter, relished fishing with his father along the
Virginia coast, where the two would exchange high fives when reeling
in a catch.
Barber’s father—that’s Owen Merton
the third for those keeping count—insists the family was solid
and led a normal life.
Forced to contemplate what went wrong
with his fishing buddy, he speculates that perhaps watching his mother
die of cancer convinced his son life wasn’t important
anymore.
Again, sympathy conjured up for the wayward white youth,
in ways that would be highly unlikely for an inner-city kid: even one
who had watched his mom die of cancer, as many have, or perhaps had
friends who had been killed or jailed.
The young man accused of ordering the hit on Petrole is described as a
role model for his brother and sister,
a religious
Catholic,
who is intensely spiritual.
For his part, Justin
Wolfe is presented as a helpful son, who assisted his single mom in
caring for his younger siblings. When was the last time the child of
a black, inner-city single mom was applauded for helping out around
the house?
And throughout the story we learn that the parents of these budding
gangsters never suspected anything, even as their early-20’s
offspring jet-setted to Hawaii or Atlantic City, and bought $200,000
townhouses with their own money. As an additional sign of the times
and the stupendous denial that afflicts so many white upper-middle
class families, Petrole’s father actually believed that his son
was able to buy his own home because he had been lucky dabbling in the
stock market. After all, said Petrole Sr., his boy always wanted to be
an entrepreneur. As indeed he was. So should we now expect national
condemnation of the culture of affluence and the capitalist emphasis
on moneymaking as being implicated in these crimes? Don’t count
on it. That kind of analysis we reserve for the underclass
values of ghetto-dwellers.
As evidence of how strong the stereotypes are, consider that at the
height of his criminal activity, Justin Wolfe dated the daughter of
the head of the DC regional office of the Drug Enforcement
Administration, without being suspected of anything. The agent, having
no doubt memorized the darker profile of a drug dealer used by law
enforcement, naturally had no clue. Wolfe, according to DEA agent
Frank Chellino seemed well-mannered
and stable.
Perhaps white folks in the `burbs need to stop listening to the voices
of officialdom or the media, and start listening to the only folks who
seem to know the score: the dealers themselves. As one associate of
the accused explained: American society doesn’t want to face
the fact that white kids deal and use drugs. They simply can’t
look in my face and see that a nice-looking white kid is selling drugs
to their kids, because that would mean that their kids could do this
too. The fact is, we do sell drugs to their kids, in their rich
neighborhoods and in their rich schools.
Just as the media generally deracializes
incidents of white
deviance, portraying them as the aberrant, inexplicable acts of
aberrant, inexplicable individuals, (unlike the same from the dark and
poor which are often portrayed as group tendencies), so too did Josh
White in his piece on Wolfe, Barber and Petrole. Instead of pointing
out the fallacies of white suburban denial and the blindness that
besets so many of the residents in these nice,
places, White
and the Post offered up a quixotic melodrama: good kids gone wrong;
sympathetic, misguided youths posing as hardened criminals and coming
to a tragic end.
Powerful to be sure, but far too narrow a truth, lacking as it did the contextual information necessary to understand the common phenomenon of white substance abuse. Unfortunately, facts unspoken or unreported tend to remain hidden. The debilitating stereotypes they might unravel remain firmly in place. And those who have convinced themselves that it couldn’t happen here remain in danger.