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How Gonzales Destroyed the American Dream

By Roberto Lovato, New America Media. Posted September 4, 2007.


Gonzales loved to tell the story of his rise out of poverty -- a Latino version of the American dream. But it is that same dream that he and his backers helped destroy for many Americans.

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Alberto Gonzales went down dreaming.

While announcing his resignation earlier this week, Alberto Gonzales deployed one of his most powerful and romantic rhetorical weapons. "I often remind our fellow citizens that we live in the greatest country in the world and that I have lived the American dream," he stated. "Even my worst days as attorney general have been better than my father's best days."

More than any public official in recent memory, the often smiley and sometimes smirking Gonzales -- and his supporters -- consistently framed his story as a brown embodiment of the American dream.

His rise from "extremely poor" circumstances in his hometown of Humble, Tex. became the stuff of small-town mythmaking and tear-inspiring speeches in Washington corridors, especially on those occasions when he had to be confirmed -- or rebuked -- by Congress.

During Gonzales' nomination, Republican Sen. John Cornyn, a fellow Texan, said, "The nomination of Judge Alberto Gonzales to serve as our nation's 80th attorney general -- and our first of Hispanic descent -- is the American dream come true."

Following the Tejano Horatio Alger script, many -- but not all -- of the leaders of the largest Latino organizations lent their credibility to the Gonzales dream story. Hector Flores, former national president of the League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC) called Gonzales "the American dream personified." Janet Murguia, president of the National Council of La Raza (NCLR), said his was "a compelling American success story."

As we watch the Gonzales' compelling personal story wind down to a tragicomic resolution, it becomes clear that the meaning behind his smile and the moral of his story has nothing to do with whether or not he expanded the American dream (he didn't). It has everything to do with manipulating his story while he did the dirty work of defending powerful interests against the death of the dream.

Rather than look at his story through the looking glass of political and media spin, it is best to view the story from the vantage point of its authors: the rich and powerful.

Viewed from the optic of elite political and corporate interests, who know better than anyone of the death of the American dream (they are, after all, the ones who created and killed it), Alberto Gonzales did his job.

He may have left too much evidence of state-sanctioned torture and lying and malfeasance and corruption (he may also still be put on trial for perjury in the attorney firing scandal).

But he did what he was supposed to. More than anyone, he was responsible for securing the legal systems necessary to better control a citizenry that was increasingly angry and frustrated at big government and big business for destroying the American dream. his saga provides an object lesson in how to hide elite interests behind a dreamy haze of real-life ethnic success stories.

While many of us were debating whether or not the son of migrant workers was or wasn't the embodiment of the dream, he worked loyally -- as fiercely as his farm worker parents -- to lay the legal foundation to make it easier to snoop on, arrest, prosecute and jail a population growing less and less patient with the status quo.

In the time it took most of the country to admit that it no longer believed in the dream -- a July poll by veteran pollster Celinda Lake found that only 18 percent of people in the country believe they are living the American dream -- Gonzales prepared for the fallout by helping fashion the Patriot Act. This made it easier for government to define as "domestic terrorists" those who choose to speak out against the Iraq war and other dream (and budget)-killing policies.


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Roberto Lovato former director of CARECEN, representing Central American immigrants and refugees, is a New York based writer and an associate editor at New America Media.

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Going....Going....Gonzalez!
Posted by: Tom Degan on Sep 4, 2007 3:46 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When all is said and done, poor, pathetic little Alberto will be remembered as nothing more than an impotant little "yes" man. It was more than likely Karl Rove, at the First Fool's behest, who was calling the shots at the Department of Justice.

There can be little doubt now that the eight or nine attorneys who were fired were let go because they wouldn't persecute Democrats who were guilty of nothing or they insisted on going after Republicans who were guilty of everything! Political persecutions are an old Rove specialty. As the late, great Molly Ivins once opined, "That's soooo Rove 101".

First Alberto gonzalez, then Karl Rove and now Tony Snow. Who do you think is going to be smart enough to get out of Dodge next week? Bush will soon be left all alone to twist - agonizingly - in the wind as the rats flee this sinking ship of a White House. Soober or later, the hideous little thug will be held accountable for the crimes against humanity that were committed in his name and under his orders....
and I'm going to love every freaking minute of it! I'm positively giddy!

And to think that Robert Francis Kennedy once ran that department! I need a drink.

Tom Degan
Goshen, NY
"The Rant" by Tom Degan

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» RE: Going....Going....Gonzalez! Posted by: carriejean
» Thank you Carrie Jean! Posted by: Tom Degan
» RE: RFK Posted by: purplewarrior
» RE: FK Posted by: Tom Degan
» RE: FK Posted by: purplewarrior
» RE: Going....Going....Gonzalez! Posted by: braxxian1
» RE: Going....Going....Gonzalez! Posted by: Tom Degan
» Alright TOM! Keep it up brother! Posted by: Michiganman
tokens are easily dispensed with
Posted by: aislinnluv on Sep 4, 2007 4:13 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
ah specks lil ole fredo was dubya's token messkin, just as condi is his token nigra. he needed the look of credibility with the latinos and blacks to garner votes (not, apparently, that he really needed votes to achieve the white house...) when you've gotten all the work you can out of your mule, and there is no further worth in keeping it, you put that luckless animal down. do we really believe that gonzales chose on his own to leave? i doubt it.

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Destroying a dream "By Design"
Posted by: ~Fiona~ on Sep 4, 2007 5:40 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Personally, I believe this administration's willfull destruction of the american legal system along with all the other intentional criminality were by design... The evil cheney purposefully installed mindless cronies in all the essential places in government in addition to the justice system to insure minimal interference from anyone or anything and then fine tuned this treason along the way with their puppets in the judicial system.

In the vein of Forrest Gump, "Evil is as Evil does..."

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Gonzales of Harvard Law
Posted by: Laches on Sep 4, 2007 6:38 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Here we have a Harvard law grad, a former justice of the Texas Supreme Court, who embarassed both himself and this Country before the World in his egregious performances as a witness before the Senate Judiciary Commitee. He not only contradicted himself among his answers to questions in the very same appearance but also contradicted responses he had given in his previous appearances. He presented himself as a witness unworthy of belief for his evasiveness in his obvious, feeble effort to avoid the truth. Some of his answers betrayed his utter lack of knowledge of what was going on in his own Department in terms of policy and of procedure.

So much for the prestige of the Harvard law degree or for what competence (or the lack of it) is required for appointment to the high post of Justice of the Texas Supreme
Court. Fortunate indeed for all of us that Gonzalez was not nominated for a seat on the United States Supreme Court.

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» RE: Gonzales of Harvard Law Posted by: blitzmesser
» RE: Gonzales of Harvard Law Posted by: JSquercia
Paper dolls and puppets
Posted by: mgloraine on Sep 4, 2007 6:45 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Republicans have been using "poster boys" and "paper dolls" to stand in for real thinking humans with great success for years. Like Ronald Reagan. All he had to do was look "presidential" and sign the papers his sponsors told him to sign. It didn't matter that he was a walking vegetable - in fact that made him more useful when the illegal and unconstitutional actions of agents of the NSA, CIA, etc., began to surface. "I really can't recall..." And he couldn't!!!
The Reagan White house gave us such paper dolls as Clarence Thomas and Sandra Day O'Connor, who were very photogenic and looked "judicial", but who routinely voted according to their instructions from the RNC to oppose or roll back civil liberties at every turn. So they were looking "black" or "female", but acting like the ultra-rich white men who were pulling the strings and putting the words in their mouths.
Then along comes BushCo with their poster-boy, the "Great Decider" who is keen for photo-ops and publicity stunts which portray him as being "in charge" despite the obvious fact that he couldn't locate his backside with both hands and a GPS system. "Mission accomplished!" "Bring 'em on!" "I'M the Decider!!"
BushCo wants to continue the successful attack against the Constitution and American Justice using the tried-and-true tactics developed by previous Republican crime waves, so they pack the former Supreme Court with partisan stooges who wear robes well. And they appear to place minorities in significant positions. But as with earlier paper dolls, Gonzales, Rice, and others who have allowed themselves to be the puppets of the RNC corporate sponsors, have had to abandon any connections to their cultural or gender groups in order to join that team. They have to toe the party line if they want those kick-backs to keep rolling in, so they, too, now espouse the views of ultra-rich white men.
Is that the American dream? To sell out your race, your ethnic group, your culture, gender, sexual orientation, religion, and everything else in order to get rich, powerful, famous? I don't think most Americans think so.
BushCo likes to sell its products with potent buzz-phrases like "American dream", "smoking gun in the form of a mushroom cloud", etc., all of which is rhetoric-for-hire from speech writers, and should not be confused with reality.
Gonzales is just another guy who thought he could get ahead by hooking up with a gang; it remains to be seen if he will ultimately be proven correct or otherwise. But he doesn't represent the aspirations of the rest of the Mexican-American community. He's no hero. He's no role model.
Compared to a giant like Cesar Chavez, Alberto Gonzales is a pimp, a pipsqueak, and a nobody.

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» RE: There's a word for it Posted by: xi_people
AMERICAN DREAM???
Posted by: VZEQICVA on Sep 4, 2007 7:03 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
A fair trial is not an American Dream, it's what we do. It's who we are. I don't care where Gonzales was born and I'm not interested in his father. Most first generation Americans are too damned grateful to be here to destroy the very system that made it all possible. My gandparents and their generation would have run him out of town. And we should have done the same. I'm glad he's gone, but it took too long. Thanks, ANNA

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» RE: AMERICAN DREAM??? Posted by: panama420
The Rot
Posted by: zooeyhall on Sep 4, 2007 7:48 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"we continue to live under the boot of unprecedented legal structures designed to rein in what the elite haves clearly consider a threatening -- and rapidly growing -- populace of have-nots."

The author of this article is spot-on with his conclusions. I am sick and tired of having the flag waved in my face by the politicians whenever someone brings up problems in this country. Or being given a Horatio Alger lecture as I claw and struggle to maintain my standard of living (lower middle class and slipping fast).

I really wish people would read history more. The present state of the U.S. body politic mentality is eerily reminiscent of the nobility immediately prior to the French Revolution or the Russian Revolution.

I am reminded of Thomas Carlyle and his great history of the French Revolution, and his comment on the ancien regime--"It is remarkable how long the rotten will hold together, provided that you don't handle it too roughly".

This may well be the epitath that future historians will someday apply to the U.S. in the first decades of the 21st century.

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» RE: The Rot Posted by: Loe_I_Am_Me
» RE: The Rot Posted by: anonymous black writer
Some of my fellow Latinos
Posted by: hurricane hugo on Sep 4, 2007 9:47 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
need to pull their heads out of their asses. You wouldn't necessarily know it from the last couple of stories Alternet's posted on this topic, but more than a few of us had this Gonzales asshole pegged for yet another right-wing bootlicking incompetent from the very beginning. Why? Because Bush hired him - that was all we needed to know! Alberto did not in any way, shape or form embody the American dream, and he's just another punk who destroyed himself. The dream itself still is as it was.

plur

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» RE: Some of my fellow Latinos Posted by: Brasilaaron
» I was addressing Posted by: hurricane hugo
Gaining The World and Losing Your Soul
Posted by: global_butterfly on Sep 4, 2007 11:06 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Alberto Gonzales might have achieved wealth, position and influence but he certainly lost his soul and traditional cultural values in the process. I have never met his father but I would guess that in his worst days he was not seen as a man without honor and integrity. Nor as a man who would take advantage of a man who was in a hospital bed. Alberto Gonzales is a disgrace and if he represents "the American Dream" then we all need to stop dreaming.

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AGREE 10,000%
Posted by: Michiganman on Sep 4, 2007 7:11 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This article hits the nail on the head.
Great Job!!!

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Cultural Defectors
Posted by: pnsuitec on Sep 5, 2007 3:39 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Judging by their respective records, I would venture to guess that Alberto Gonzales and Clarence Thomas, should personal loyalties ever become an issue, would rather see bombs rain on East L.A. and Harlem than see a tear fall from the master's eye.

Paul Howard Nicholas
Author of "Extinguishing the Flames of Hell"

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» RE: Cultural Defectors Posted by: anonymous black writer