|
Welcome To U.S. Border Fire Report
Last year, ABC unveiled a public relations 13-episode "reality" show on Homeland Security only to cancel it halfway into the season amid protests and lack of sponsorship. Now National Geographic is doing a new series depicting the lives of border agents protecting 2000 miles of the U.S.-Mexico border against "smuggling, terrorism and illegal immigration" and other socially constructed threats.Unfortunately, while playing a border agent might be an entertaining fantasy, the program runs into the danger of stereotyping Latinos as undocumented immigrants, drug-dealers, and human traffickers, while not giving a full dosage of reality. The available video segments do not paint a positive picture. It's Cowboys and Indians all over again-- with mostly White border agents playing the supposedly heroic Cowboys and people of color acting as either criminals or victims. The invading "Other" never gets to set the script, speak from their point of view, or play the central role.National Geographic has a lot of explaining to do, but the creator of the accompanying online game is already apologizing and defending the product as "balanced." In an email published on Latina Lista, J.S. Earls reached out to the Latino community with a personal apology and claim that it was not his or NatGeo's intention to offend anyone:
It's easy to hold up innocent intentions as a defense anytime someone is accused of racism. Notice that the complaint is not about the intentions of National Geographic or J.S. Earl, but their actions. Their intentions are not up for debate here. The action, as in the game and television show, perpetuates a discriminatory, stereotypical and hateful view of Latinos that does nothing to advance race relations and immigrant rights in this country. As a matter of fact, Border Wars seems like just another muscle-flexing, hyper-masculine entertainment simulation with nothing new to offer. A realistic "Border Wars" would also show border patrol agents taking bribes, busing undocumented immigrants to nowhere, raping immigrant women, and aiding human trafficking, and depict the rampant fraud within the agency.While we wait for the series to air on Sunday, check out the game. I was told that I was "the weakest link" at the border between U.S.-Mexico. I guess U.S. Homeland Security isn't employing me anything soon.Photo: MJTR (´・ω・)
For related articles go to: www.lagunajournal.com
|
************
|




