12/9/2007
MIM,
What’s good? Check it out. I just had my review for the publication
violations for MIM Notes that I sent you last month and the violation
stands. They’re reasoning is that due to the fact that my comrades are
reporting the very real abuses that are occurring Under Lock & Key
in the California institutions of incorrection and throughout the U$ in
general, that this information has the ‘potential’ to threaten the
safety and security of the institution and therefore, to alleviate this
concern, they will not allow those particular copies of MIM Notes into
the institution. I don’t think I need to tell you what kind of precedent
this will set, especially since the Under Lock & Key section is
specifically set up to allow us incarcerated to express our concerns
regarding the reality of our existence in these gulags. With that being
the case, the institution now has a ready made excuse to violate not
only MIM Notes but any other political literature you comrades send.
Again, all these prisonkrats are doing is verifying everything that’s
said about them in your literature [MIM(Prisons) adds: In their own
efforts to protect their political interests the oppressors dig their
own political grave. That is what the censors have mostly failed to
understand.]. Still, I’m getting real tired of this bullshit.
I am enclosing 3 articles from the local metro section of the Oregonian,
which is a ‘newspaper’ that is allowed in this institution everyday.
Given the fact that rapists, child molesters and your general so-called
“weirdos” are targets of all types of abuse ranging from extortion to
murder within this prison environment, I would think that the
information in the Oregonian has the potential to threaten the safety
and security of the institution, unlike MIM Notes which these
authorities cannot point to a single incident instigated by anything
written in that paper. In fact, MIM teaches that all prisoners are
political prisoners under the present system of imperialism. So one
who’d adhere to what he learned in MIM Notes in all actuality would not
be riled up by the Oregonian articles, whereas your average prisoner who
does not receive MIM Notes but reads the Oregonian would find the 3
enclosed articles inflammatory indeed. But oh! I forgot. Under Lock
& Key deals with police and CO misconduct. We must protect the
unnamed COs and police who abuse their authority, while the so-called
“scum” named in the Oregonian who will more than likely (potentially)
end up in one of this state’s institutions will have to fend for
themselves. Of course, that poses no threat to the safety and security
of the institution. What a crock of shit.
12/17/2007
Yo, check it out, comrades. I just received your letter dated 12/8/07.
Most peace on following up on the review process. I was finally able to
gain access to ODOC Mail Policy. Under OAR 291-131-0010(9), Inflammatory
Material is defined as:
“Material whose presence in the facility is deemed by the department to
constitute a direct and immediate threat to the security, safety,
health, good order, or discipline of the facility because it incites or
advocates physical violence against others.”
As I mentioned earlier, none of the rejected/violated Under Lock &
Key articles can be shown to have actually incited or advocate such
action.
The rule continues:
“No publication shall be considered inflammatory solely on the basis of
its appeal to a particular ethnic, racial, or religious audience. No
material shall be considered inflammatory solely because it criticizes
the operation, programs or personel of the Department of Corrections,
the State Board of Parole and Post-Prison Supervision, or any other
government agency.”
So this is what we have. MIM Notes, which is a political news source
protected under the Constitution, contained commentary concerning the
operation of department of correction facilities in the state of
California and the very extreme unprofessional behavior of its
personnel, of which these commentaries were critical, and of course that
is the duty and responsibility of any citizen, to express criticism of
injustices and illegal acts, especially when done by those who are
entrusted in positions of authority by our government. After all, how
else do we begin to address and correct problems if those problems and
the source of the problems are not criticized and exposed?
In addition, the criticisms leveled did not advocate physical violence
against anyone, nor did it incite such action. The commentaries,
according to the designee who performed the administrative review,
upheld the publication violation based upon his finding/opinion that the
commentaries were inflammatory and hence a threat to the safety and
security of the institution based upon the “potential” for the alleged
inflammatory material to incite violence against DOC personnel. However,
this decision is in violation of OAR 291-131-0010(9). So I have appealed
the designee’s decision to the functional unit manager. If he/she does
not overturn the decision, I will appeal to:
Mail Administrator Randy Greer
Central Administration
2575 Center
St. NE
Salem, OR 97301-4667
where it is already on file that this mailroom here at SRCI and its
officials go out of their way it seems, to clearly find excuses to
prevent MIM’s publications from being received by prisoners here.
MIM(Prisons) adds: Prisonkrats across the country are
claiming that our literature is a threat to security because of our
articles about censorship and other repression within prisons. But if
prisoners are going to commit acts of violence due to censorship and
repression, wouldn’t the prudent thing be to get the prison employees to
follow their own rules to prevent such outrage? As this comrade writes,
our literature gives prisoners the ideological understanding that allows
them to put such frustration into more productive outlets and actually
reduce violent interactions. But rather than do their job and improve
safety, the prisonkrats shoot the messenger and encourage the reading of
literature that will divide prisoners thru violence and abuse.