MIM(Prisons) is a cell of revolutionaries serving the oppressed masses inside U.$. prisons, guided by the communist ideology of Marxism-Leninism-Maoism.
www.prisoncensorship.info is a media institution run by the Maoist Internationalist Ministry of Prisons. Here we collect and publicize reports of conditions behind the bars in U.$. prisons. Information about these incidents rarely makes it out of the prison, and when it does it is extremely rare that the reports are taken seriously and published. This historical record is important for documenting patterns of abuse, and also for informing people on the streets about what goes on behind the bars.
I write this in support and in reply to the couple articles regarding
Support
for the People of Palestine I recently read within ULK’s
September/October 2014 issue #40.
A little over a month ago, I awoke to a PBS early morning segment
concerning the struggle of the Palestinian people to liberate themselves
and their land from Israeli occupation and oppression. In this
documentary I witnessed personnel of the Israeli military serve eviction
notices to Palestinian people in Palestinian housing on Palestinian
land, claiming to be taking control of the housing under the authority
of the state of Israel. I also witnessed the recently built Israeli
settlements being moved into by Israeli civilians as flustered
Palestinian fathers, seemingly not 100 yards away on the opposite side
of some sort of security fencing, had to attempt to explain to their
children how it was no longer their (Palestinian) land, one even
pointing to where his store used to be. Imagine trying to explain
imperialism to a child who is barely old enough to tie his own shoes.
The United States and Israel, the Middle East’s neighborhood bullies,
seem to think it acceptable to propose ‘peace’ and ‘tolerance’ while
they exploit a people and their land. They seem to think the victims
should ‘get over’ the loss of their lands and the heartless slaughter
and oppression of their people. When the victims wage armed struggle the
oppressors scream “foul/self-defense” as if to say “why do you hate us
so?” And in keeping with the bully analogy, of course, when a bully has
historically, and is continuously oppressing a people, the bully always
has to worry about retaliation. Israel has no moral ground in this
scenario, at all. You stole their land and oppress their people,
therefore the Palestinian people reserve the moral right to liberate
themselves when and how they see fit. Trip off of this: while the U.S.
feeds Israel arms as Israel takes Palestinian land, the U.S. condemns
Russia for absorbing Crimea. On behalf of New Afrikans, I declare
solidarity with the righteous Palestinian people!
And, of course, some Zionist Jews shall read this and cry
“anti-Semitic,” because to them such a claim trumps truth. Well, let me
remind them ahead of them proclaiming such a factoid, the Palestinians
are semites too! The definition of semite is “a member of any group of
peoples (as the Hebrews or Arabs) of Southwestern Asia.”
The hard line confederacy (Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, South Carolina,
Texas, Virginia) attack on prisoner’s religious rights to hair and
beards while incarcerated has led to a blatant case of perjury in the
State of Arkansas, in an attempt to justify this religious repression.
In an effort to deny a prisoner his right to a beard as a Muslim,
magistrate Judge Joe J. Volpe, U.S. District Court, ruled that while a
prisoner has a right to his religious practices under the Religious Land
Use/Institutionalized Person Act (R.L.U.I.P.A., 42 U.S. Code § 2000cc)
the prison could overwhelm his constitutional rights if there was a
credible, reasonable ‘security penological necessity’ to trample those
rights.
In quick order, the District Judge rubber stamped this, once Ray Hobbs,
the director of the State of Arkansas Department of Prisons, stated in a
sworn deposition that he personally was aware of one single example of
one type of dangerous contraband being smuggled, concealed in a
prisoner’s beard. (A long laundry list of horrors, which the state
claimed ‘may’ be hidden in a quarter inch beard but not, presumably,
elsewhere on the body, included cell phone SIM cards, knives, drugs, and
homemade darts).
The U.S. Supreme Court will now take up this case. Last term, this court
ruled (by the five right wingers) that corporations have religious
rights that trump women’s civil rights. (“Hobby lobby” case). Now, the
same lawyers who argued for the corporation in that case, to create
civil rights for non-living corporations, will press the prison’s case
to deny religious rights. The lawyers are specially appointed by the
court that will hear the case. No one dares complain, after all, since
to do so would be to attack the judges you hope will rule in your favor,
as “biased.”
In a bizarre twist discovered after the lower courts ruled based upon
the sole example of a dangerous, and in this example deadly, razor blade
smuggled in a prisoner’s beard, perjury most foul was exposed. And it
was dripping off the lips of none other than director Roy Hobbs, top
good ol’ boy in the Arkansas department of corruption.
Roy Hobbs swore that a prisoner named Steven Oldham smuggled a razor
blade within his beard, and when the opportunity arose, he proceeded to
commit suicide with that very razor blade. My goodness. How simply
awful, and of course, how clear it is that beards are a deadly threat to
security.
The magistrate, district and circuit judges all agreed.
Let’s peek behind the perjury veil.
As was well known to Roy Hobbs, prior to and during his part in the
conspiracy to defraud the courts, the razor that dealt the lethal wound
was a bright orange plastic single blade item purchased by Arkansas
Dept. of Corruption. This molded plastic unit with a steel blade encased
within it was not ever suspected of being smuggled, hidden, or illicitly
possessed. It was handed to the prisoner by prison staff, with orders to
shave off his beard.
The lying director, desperate to manufacture even one tiny example of
any kind of ‘beard smuggling’ to justify his blatantly racist attack on
the religious rights of persons who, in the southern states, face a lot
of this special treatment in prisons, had knowingly concocted this
‘boogie man’. It worked. Only if the razor had been used against a guard
would the fantasy incident have carried more weight with the tsk tsking
judges all the way to the country’s supreme court.
Roy Hobbs did the usual finger-pointing maneuver when caught red handed
committing perjury, he blames everyone in the world for misleading him
into stating he knows for a fact that which any cursory investigation
reveals as false. In California, where I reside on death row, penal code
§125 declares that when a person states under oath that which he does
not know to be a fact, that is identical to knowingly lying. Even if the
‘fact’ happens to be true. That means, in this state at least, Roy Hobbs
was guilty of perjury for stating as fact this ‘razorblade in the beard’
lie, even had it been true. Which of course, it was obviously not.
The country’s highest court is now reviewing whether the ‘security
claim’ by the prison director is sufficient to overcome a prisoner’s
religious rights. Even when the single faked security claim was
blazingly criminal perjury. This should be an opportunity for the high
court to write the rules about what level of proof of flat out
corruption prisoners may use to destroy the court’s own rule about how
prison officials get deference when they shriek “security!”
Let’s see what pretzeled logic and tortured theories the rat pack at the
supreme court come out with. The only evidence of any security risk was
conspired criminal perjury. Roy Hobbs keeps directing Arkansas’ prisons,
rather than occupying a cell in a federal penitentiary.
MIM(Prisons) adds: The entire criminal injustice system, from
police to prisons, is set up to serve the interests of the imperialists
running the government. So it’s no surprise that false evidence is
sufficient to deny prisoner’s rights. This case is unique in that the
perjury was actually exposed. Unfortunately, the courts don’t serve up
justice, and so we can expect little from them in defending the rights
of the oppressed. The imperialist courts will never lead to liberation
for the oppressed. We must continue to expose these cases to educate
people about the systematic nature of injustice as we build an
anti-imperialist movement that can overthrow the system that relies on
injustice for its very survival.
This is a comment on the
United
in California article from ULK40. It is crucial
MIM(Prisons) recognizes SNYs work or have worked with the prison
administration against other prisoners. While as Maoists we know no
oppression is overcome until all oppression is overcome, we can’t
possibly ask anyone affected by their actions to turn around and work
with them. Would Mao have worked with Deng Xiaoping? I don’t know Saif
[the author] but the idea that there are “some good strong comrades” on
SNY is not a convincing argument to administer against the overwhelming
evidence of SNYs helping pigs at every opportunity. Even if it’s by his
exposing himself as a “leader.” You’re a man not a “leaf” if you can’t
hold on to the branch and fall, I can accept that, but we’ll keep
climbing without you.
While I don’t promote violence against SNYs and in fact wish them well
in any anti-imperialist work. I would strongly advise anyone against
incorporating any SNY inmate into any work that may lead to repression
from any government entity.
SNYs should keep using MIM(Prisons) as a guide in their work. But in
promoting unification of SNY and “mainline” convicts in general terms
MIM(prisons) blurs a crucial line. SNYs can challenge their SNY status
administratively. I am a General Population inmate. Do you have
“sensitive needs?” I don’t. I can be housed around anyone, accept people
who don’t want to be around me, i.e. people with “sensitive needs.”
Being scientific in our assessments of individuals involves being
honest. SNYs work to reinforce the stigma that all GP convicts are
inherently violent by allowing the administration to use them to say “if
this inmate is housed on a GP line it may jeopardize institutional
security.” This stigma in turn imposes harsher restrictions on GP
inmates and SNY inmates reap the benefits of the distinction….jobs,
rehab programs, vocation, education, conjugal visits, etc. are given
priority on SNYs, especially on the level IV yards.
MIM(Prisons) should analyze the SNY/mainline distinction in the same
manner as oppressed nations within the U.$. It is my personal assessment
that SNYs chose to work with the administration against other prisoners.
They get to the SN Yards and realize that “no, the administration is not
your friend” and then want to whine about it. Their issues are distinct
from ours and while there are issues with the administration that are
shared on both sides, I would not risk my standing with other GP
prisoners by helping someone who is likely to have hurt them.
SNY/GP unity is not possible. The promotion of this idea undermines
MIM(Prisons) credibility on GP yards. UFPP doesn’t rely on this theory
because SNYs chose to not be housed with us. So theoretically they can
continue to uphold the principals on those yards, while we do ours.
MIM(Prisons) responds: For those new to ULK, we have
explained
our
line on SNY in the movement in more depth elsewhere. We completely
understand the reactions that many have to our position on working with
those in SNY after the torture that so many people in California have
gone through at the hands of the state prison system, with the
complicity of many who went to SNY. Yet, practice seems to be proving
our line correct both in terms of the contributions that SNY comrades
make to building USW, and the direction that the CA prisons system is
going overall. We do not take this question lightly, nor does working
with SNY comrades mean we take security lightly. If this issue is
important to you, please write to us to get a more extensive discussion
of this topic.
The above comrade’s contribution to this long-stading debate over the
role of SNY status in the pages of Under Lock & Key is a
unique perspective because unlike most anti-SNY writers, s/he advocates
that SNY prisoners can do good anti-imperialist work, as long as they do
it separately. The argument that SNY prisoners cannot be trusted or
united with is based in the idea that all SNY prisoners have debriefed
and sold out comrades on GP. But we know that
debriefing
is not required to get SNY status. This writer is correct that the
administration plays SNY against GP, but we can’t let them dictate who
we work with. We must make that decision ourselves based on each
individual’s work and political line.
The author asks if Mao would have worked with Deng Xiaoping, as an
example of working with enemies. And Mao already answered this question:
yes. Deng was kicked out of the Communist Party of China and readmitted
under Mao’s watch. Communist China’s prison system was focused on
re-education, not punishment and ostracization. People who betrayed the
revolution or took actions that harmed others were locked up to study
and learn from their mistakes. This is a revolutionary model that we
should emulate, even while we don’t hold power.
After being transferred here to Northwest Florida Reception Center -
Annex, I have been faced with a number of confinement injustices. First
of all I have written a number of grievance to the warden about food
service. We have received breakfast trays with roaches crawling in them.
If you report it to these pigs they don’t do anything about it. In
confinement with no food items we are left with no choice but to eat the
three trays that they give us even if they are infested with roaches.
That’s just one small example of the conditions here.
And recently we had a peaceful sit down. No one posed a threat to
security, and no one was injured. It happened after Ramadan, a month of
fasting for the Muslims. It all started when we were going to the chow
hall to eat lunch. The pig called out one brother for talking in line.
That’s when all the brothers were getting disruptive, and as Imam
(Islamic leader) my job is to calm them down. So, as I was calming them
down, the pig called me out of line for talking. Once I stepped out of
line 22 other comrades set out of line, along with me, which led to the
situation I am in confinement for. The pig saw the other 22 comrades
join me and he panicked. They saw that I had influence where comrades
move on my move. And they don’t like that.
Previously I had to speak to the Assistant Warden, because someone
snitched to the pigs about my leadership. And he told me that “no inmate
runs this prison”, and that if my name came up again he was “going to
get rid of us” referring to the Muslims. And that’s exactly what
happened. I am going to close management with no prior disciplinary
reports. The prison administration says that I don’t deserve to be in
general population because I am disruptive to security.
MIM(Prisons) adds: Control units are often used to isolate
leaders in prison, even when those leaders are involved in keeping the
peace. This is because the prisoncrats don’t actually want peace. The
prisoncrats frequently encourage violence between prisoners, because
that provides an excuse to lock more prisoners on higher security units,
and because it prevents leaders from organizing unity against the
criminal injustice system. So when they see an Imam with influence the
prison moves to isolate him. This use of close management in Florida
mirrors the use of control units for social control throughout the
Amerikan prison system. Our best weapon is our unity. We need many
leaders so that the isolation of one will not cut off our work.
La propaganda de conflicto esta a niveles altos en los Estados Unidos,
aparentemente no se ha tomado ninguna lección positiva del 11 Septiembre
2001. Se tomó por lo menos una década para que los Amerikanos perdieran
interés en la Ocupación de Afganistán e Iraq por el EE UU Esto
contribuyo a que casi dos-tercios de Amerikanos estuvieran opuestos al
empuje de Obama para invadir Siria hace menos de un año. Ahora, por lo
menos dos-tercios de la población esta de acuerdo con Obama en controlar
el gobierno de Siria más bien que las Cabezas de periodistas Amerikanos
se mantengan pegadas a sus cuerpos.
El militarismo se conduce con un sistema económico que esta construido
alrededor de la producción de armas y requiere guerra para mantener su
demanda. Embarques de armas han incrementado recientemente para I$rael,
Ucrania, Siria, e Iraq en donde EE UU ha reasumido campañas de bombardeo
que están destruyendo cientos de millones de dolares en valor de equipo
militar Amerikano ahora en las manos del Estado Islámico. Cada golpe que
se hace de cualquier lado en esa guerra es un dar para negocios
Amerikanos.
Entretanto, Russia ha sido muy claro que no va a permitir que Ucrania se
una a la Organización del Tratado del Atlántico Norte (OTAN - North
Atlantic Treaty Organization, NATO). Los Estados Unidos y Russia son los
poderes nucleares mas grandes del mundo. Aún así Obama esta empujando a
Ucrania para que se una a la NATO, y el sentimiento Amerikano anti-Russo
esta aumentando apoyándolo. Conflicto abierto con Russia solo
incrementaría enormemente el ya inaceptablemente riesgo de un catástrofe
nuclear debido al militarismo.
Los últimos 15 años han probado que el militarismo del EE UU no se puede
parar con el movimiento Amerikano anti-guerra. Mejor dicho,
revolucionarios en los Estados Unidos se deberían de enfocar en empujar
la lucha por la liberación nacional de las semi-colonias internas en
solidaridad con el Tercer Mundo. Campañas como la que apoya a Palestina
por prisioneros de California son positivo para construir
anti-militarismo en los Estados Unidos.
Actualmente los medios y políticos del Occidente promueven la linea de
que el Estado Islámico es la amenaza más grande hacia la paz mundial.
Están lejos de la marca. Ese papel siempre se ha mantenido en las manos
de los Estados Unidos y su industria militar.
The good old boys are at it again. These slipper suckers, who feed off
other people’s misery, are upset about the closing of
Tamms
Supermax in Illinois a few years ago. Rather than let Tamms sit
unoccupied, Illinois Department of Corrections (IDOC) officials have
devised a plan to put pressure on the legislature to open up the 500-bed
hell hole again.
Suddenly they claim we have a major gang problem here in Illinois. IDOC
officials are rounding up all the Latinos who they can claim are a part
of a security threat group (STG) and sticking them in administrative
detention (A.D.).
Some guys haven’t caught so much as a disciplinary ticket in years and
were quietly toiling away in the kitchen or some other form of
servitude. Next thing they know they’re on a bus and sent to A.D. Some
guys, after serving their segregation time for disciplinary tickets,
found themselves in Phase 1 of A.D.
The common thread that binds these guys together seems to be that they
are alleged members of an STG. It doesn’t take much to validate someone
as an active member these days. Most guys were members as kids, and
their record preceded them to the joint. Some were identified by gang
tattoos. And of course there is always that elusive confidential
informant (CI), and only the gang intel officers seem to know for
certain if the CI even exists. Personally I believe the correctional
officers (COs) make up the CIs because the COs know that all they have
to do is say the CI’s identity is being withheld for the safety and
security of the institution, and no one can or will inquire further.
These brothers sit with no recourse in the courts, stuck in limbo
waiting in administrative segregation for some sadist to stop using them
as a means to obtain a bigger piece of the tax dollar pie so they can
re-open Tamms Supermax, and give themselves a pay raise for a job well
done while they are at it.
MIM(Prisons) adds: Tamms Supermax opened in 1998. As 2008
approached many who opposed the torture chambers in Illinois formed the
Tamms Year Ten campaign to bring attention to it and get it shut down.
By January 2013, the unit was completely closed. This campaign was one
of a handful demonstrating that the closing of control units is a
winnable campaign under imperialism.
That said, almost as soon as Tamms was closed we are getting reports of
increasing use of control units in Illinois again. This is why our Shut
Down the Control Units campaign uses a
specific
definition of long-term isolation rather than just counting the
prisons officially labeled as “supermaxes” as many bourgeois press do.
The above example of pushing false gang validations for more or higher
security prisons should not surprise us because prisons are a tool of
social control for the imperialists, and that social control includes
long-term isolation cells for anyone who challenges the system. The
oppressed must organize to build power to change this.
This situation also provides a good example of how we know prisons are
not run for profit. The government regularly uses funds to open control
unit prisons, which are more expensive to run than lower security
prisons. In 1999, MIM Notes reported “Tamms’ budget works out
to well over $34,000 per year to control each prisoner, not including
the $73 million the state reports spending on building the dungeon.
Tamms’ cost per prisoner is more than three times the $11,006 estimated
cost of living for a University of Illinois student at the
Urbana-Champaign campus.” The employees (COs and other staff) make out
with nice high salaries (totaling $17 million at Tamms when it first
opened), but these salaries, and everything else in the prison, is
funded by the government, with prisoner labor offsetting some of the
costs. The imperialists don’t mind spending money to sustain their
system of social control. It’s money they got from the exploitation of
workers in the Third World, and they will spend it freely to maintain
their way of life and position of power.
At this point Leavenworth Detention Center has no gang validation or
step down program. Actually it seems that the administration does very
little to address gang violence. This is a detention facility housing
mainly pre-trial prisoners but it seems more like a war zone. No effort
is made to separate rival gang members or to place people in a safe
environment. For example it is common for the pigs to house a white
supremacist with a Muslim.
They pit us against each other and sit back and enjoy the show. We must
look beyond the tip of our noses and begin to see the bigger picture.
United we stand, divided we fall.
Recently we had a major victory! The food here is substandard at best
but the meatloaf in particular is undercooked and rancid. White, Black
and Latino all stood together and refused to accept trays and refused to
lockdown until we were fed. The pigs brought in tear gas canisters to
try to intimidate us but we simply refused to go to sleep without food.
Finally we were brought sack lunches and they took meatloaf off the
menu. If we stick together and stand up for what’s right peacefully
anything is possible.
MIM(Prisons) adds: This writer reminds us that prisons can play
lumpen organizations both ways. On the one side we oppose the validation
of people as gang members because this is used to punish and isolate and
it is used to target activists and leaders. On the other side we oppose
prisons throwing rival organizations together to try to create conflict
and violence, which is further used as justification to isolate and
lockdown whoever is perceived as a leader, activist or troublemaker.
None of these actions are for the purpose of promoting safety or
security of the prison population.
It is good to hear about people coming together in spite of the pigs
attempts to foment conflict. Winning one change in food is a small
battle, but it gives people the chance to see what is possible through
unity, and hopefully will lead to greater unity in the future. Those
conscious comrades in Leavenworth should take this opportunity to spread
political education, and try to unite all against the criminal injustice
system. If everyone is on the yard together, this is a good opportunity
to start study classes. Write to MIM(Prisons) for help getting a study
group started in your prison.
Captive Genders Trans Embodiment and the Prison Industrial
Complex Eric A. Stanley & Nat Smith, Editors 2011, AK
Press Available for $21.95 from AK Press: 674-A 23rd St, Oakland, CA
94612
This book is a compilation of essays from various transgender
individuals, activists, prisoners and researchers. The unifying theme is
progressive in that the book is not only devoted to exposing gender
oppression faced by transgender people, specifically the criminalization
of gender variance in the United $tates, but also to the abolishment of
the current United $tates prison system itself. It tackles the often
incorrect focus of queer activists who call for expanded laws and
punishment, correctly exposing this strategy as reactionary and
counterproductive. Unfortunately, although this is a pretty long book,
it includes only vague anarchist solutions to the problem, with no
coherent strategy to abolish the criminal injustice system.
Before going into detail I will briefly mention that
MIM(Prisons)
disagrees with the use of the term “prison industrial complex” (PIC)
which is found throughout this book. This phrase implies that prisons in
the United $tates (and other First World countries when applied there)
are part of a money-making industry. In reality prisons are a
money-losing enterprise, built and sustained by the state as a means of
social control. Anyone making money off of prison contracts are just
participating in the shuffling of imperialist wealth stolen from the
Third World, not making profits off of prisoner labor. The use of this
term in this book is perhaps not a surprise as a failure to grasp the
underlying purpose of a system is going to lead to mistaken analysis of
how we can fight that system.
We Can’t Work Within the Criminal Injustice System
In the introduction, the editors wrote: “Mainstream LGBT organizations,
in collaboration with the state, have been working hard to make us
believe that hate crimes enhancements are a necessary and useful way to
make trans and queer people safer. Hate crimes enhancements are used to
add time to a person’s sentence if the offense is deemed to target a
group of people. However, hate crimes enhancements ignore the roots of
harm, do not act as deterrents, and reproduce the farce of the PIC,
which produces more, not less harm.”(p3) This is an important point for
activists of all stripes who fight for expanded laws to protect
whichever oppressed group they are working to defend. We cannot look to
the state to defend us against the state. And the prison system in
particular is a repressive arm of the state; anything we do to expand
that arm is inherently reactionary.
In “Transforming Carceral Logics: 101 Reasons to Dismantle the Prison
Industrial Complex Through Queer/Trans Analysis and Action,” S. Lamble
writes:
“Although some people believe that we can train transphobia out of law
enforcement agents or eliminate homophobic discrimination by hiring more
LGBT prison guards, police, and immigration officials, such perspectives
wrongly assume that discrimination is a ‘flaw’ in the system, rather
than intrinsic to the system itself. Efforts to make prison and the
police institutions more ‘gay-friendly’ perpetuate the myth that such
systems are in place to protect us.”(p. 239)
This author goes on to write: “The pervasiveness of state violence
against queer and transgender people is reason enough to fight the
prison industrial complex. But it is important to include anti-prison
work as part of antiviolence struggles more broadly. Too often
mainstream antiviolence work around hate crimes, sexual violence, child,
and partner abuse excludes or remains disconnected from struggles
against state violence.”(p245) We agree with the connections made by
Lamble here. It is important that people recognize that
state-perpetrated violence is far broader and more deadly than any
individual violence. It is laughable that some turn to our violent state
to protect them. The state will only protect those whose interest it
serves. In the case of the Amerikan government, that includes the vast
majority of the white oppressor nation, but often excludes oppressed
groups of like trans people.
Lamble concludes:
“Unfortunately, many LGBT organizations in Canada, Britain, and the
United States – particularly white-dominated and class-privileged ones –
are increasingly complicit in the forces of prison expansion: calling
for increased penalties under hate crimes laws; participating in police,
military, and prison officer recruitment campaigns….LGBT groups
nonetheless helped to legitimize imprisonment and channel further
resources into locking people up – despite a lack of evidence that such
measures reduce hate-motivated violence.”(p. 249-250)
In “Identities Under Siege: Violence Against Transpersons of Color[”,
Lori A. Saffin bolsters this point: “Arguing for the inclusion of sexual
orientation and gender identity in state hate crimes laws will
ultimately end in limited social reform because ‘equality’ within the
existing social system only accounts for and remedies the most blatant
forms of injustice.”(p155) And she concludes:
“By not taking into consideration the ways in which the criminal justice
system regulates, pursues, controls, and punishes the poor and
communities of color, LGBT hate crimes initiatives reproduce harm and do
not end it. Calling for an increased role of the criminal justice system
in enforcing hate crimes legislation is insular in that it assumes a
white, gay, wealthy subject while also soliciting victims of
hate-motivated violence to report into a penal system without regard for
the fact that people of color and the poor are disproportionately
punished. By ignoring racism and economic inequality in their arguments
for hate crimes statutes, national gay rights organizations assume an
assimilationist stance that reinforces the status quo at the expense of
communities of color and the poor.”(p156)
Queer and Trans People in the Criminal Injustice System
Captive Genders has some good data on the
incarceration
of queer and trans people in Amerika who are disproportionately
targeted by the criminal injustice system and face additional dangers
and abuse within prison. In “Rounding Up the Homosexuals: The Impact of
Juvenile Court on Queer and Trans/Gender-Non-Conforming Youth” Wesley
Ware writes:
“Further, the data tell us that queer and trans youth in detention are
equally distributed across race and ethnicity, and comprise 15 percent
of youth in detention centers…. Since queer and trans youth are
overrepresented in nearly all popular feeders into the juvenile justice
system – homelessness, difficulty in school, substance abuse, and
difficulty with mental health – the same societal ills, which
disproportionately affect youth of color – it should not be surprising
that they may be overrepresented in youth prisons and jails as well.”
In “Maroon Abolitionists: Black Gender-Oppressed Activists in the
Anti-Prison Movement in the US and Canada,” Julia Sudbury writes about
the gender binary in the prison system and the risks for transsexual
prisoners who have not had gender reassignment surgery. They are
assigned to a prison based on one part of their body, denied medical
care, and put in extreme physical danger.
Many trans wimmin are forced to take a prison “husband” by the guards
who think this will diffuse tension and make the prisons calmer. In “No
One Enters Like Them: Health, Gender Variance, and the PIC,” blake nemec
interviews Kim Love about her experience in the men’s prisons in
California. Kim describes entering the prison, when the Correctional
Officer (CO) assigned her to a cell and she objected to the placement,
and “They told me that’s gonna be your husband, and that’s where you’re
going to be and you’re going to love him.”(p. 222) She goes on to
explain why no one tries to take the COs to court: “We’ve had so many
transgenders that have been raped in CDC [California Department of
Corrections] and had proof. One of them even had the towel the CO wiped
his semen on. Today I haven’t heard of one case that a transgender won
against a law officer, against CDC.”(p. 222)
In “Out of Compliance: Masculine-Identified People in Women’s Prisons”
Lori Girshick writes about women “aggressives” in prison. These people,
most of whom identify as lesbians or trans men, are often treated more
harshly than feminine prisoners because they are breaking the social and
cultural norms the prisons seek to enforce. “Legislation is being
considered in California to segregate lesbian, gay, bisexual,
transgender (LGBT) prisoners who self-identify at receiving.”(p. 203)
The author explains that this gives staff even greater access to harass
and abuse them.
How to Organize for Change
In the essay “Building an Abolitionist Trans and Queer Movement with
Everything We’ve Got”, the authors, Morgan Bassichis, Alexander Lee and
Dean Spade, tackle the critical question of how to organize. But they
completely miss several important points. First, they consider the
Amerikan workers to be on the side of the oppressed: “The US government
and its ally nations and institutions in the Global North helped pass
laws and policies that made it harder for workers to organize into
unions…”(p20)
Second, they push reformist organizing without a clear goal of
eliminating imperialism, as if we could abolish the criminal injustice
system within imperialism. They do however, correctly identify that
violence and discrimination aren’t just individual bad behaviors:
“Discrimination laws and hate crimes laws encourage us to understand
oppression as something that happens when individuals use bias to deny
someone a job because of race or sex or some other characteristic, or
beat up or kill someone because of such a characteristic. This way of
thinking, sometimes called the ‘perpetrator perspective,’ makes people
thing about racism, sexism, homophobia, transphobia, and ableism in
terms of individual behaviors and bad intentions rather than wide-scale
structural oppression that often operates without some obvious
individual actor aimed at denying an individual person an opportunity.
The violence of imprisoning millions of poor people and people of color,
for example, can’t be adequately explained by finding one nasty racist
individual, but instead requires looking at a whole web of institutions,
policies, and practices that make it ‘normal’ and ‘necessary’ to
warehouse, displace, discard, and annihilate poor people and people of
color. Thinking about violence and oppression as the work of ‘a few bad
apples’ undermines our ability to analyze our conditions systematically
and intergenerationally, and to therefore organize for systemic
change.”(p. 23)
We have a correct analysis here of the need for systemic change. But
their ultimate goal is summed up:
“Abolition is not just about closing the doors to violent institutions,
but also about building up and recovering institutions and practices and
relationships that nurture wholeness, self-determination, and
transformation. Abolition is not some distant future but something we
create in every moment when we say no to the traps of empire and yes to
the nourishing possibilities dreamed of and practiced by our ancestors
and friends.”(p. 36)
This is an unfortunate dive into individualism and the
persynal-is-political anarchist practice. We cannot create a culture
that enables better relationships between people and allows the
oppressed to have their own institutions until we eliminate the system
of imperialism that necessitates the exact opposite. Pretending that our
individual practice can get us there is the same mistake these and other
authors in Captive Genders correctly criticize when they talk
about the fact that one racist individual isn’t the problem but rather
it’s the whole system. We must dismantle that system first, then we can
build a just and equal society.
The essay “Maroon Abolitionists: Black Gender-Oppressed Activists in the
Anti-Prison Movement in the US and Canada” also gets the solution wrong:
“Movement-building that creates innovative models of justice that do not
pimp prisoners for the success of capitalism are possible. It is time to
view the current US economic hardships as an exit opportunity away from
dependency on conservative foundations and government funding vehicles
that bar groups from work that threatens pharmaceutical industries or
gender/sexuality norms. Transformative justice models that empower
lovers, friends, and groups of people to be accountable to one another
rather than rely on unjust and unsustainable US systems, can work to
abolish the prison industrial complex. We can, and are, creating these
in forms that facilitate a domino effect of cultural and economic
churnings.”(p. 230)
Again here we have this idea of “transformative justice” that is
anarchist individualism with people just holding each other accountable
outside of the United $tates’s criminal injustive system. Yet no matter
how hard we try, we do not have the liberty to exist outside of the
imperialist system. Take a look at the revolutionaries in the
Philippines or India who liberated base areas and set up their own
independent institutions only to have them attacked by the brutal
military (funded and armed by the United $tates). Or look at an example
closer to home: the MOVE organization, which attempted to set up its own
peaceful self-policing community only to be violently destroyed by the
Amerikan injustice system. There is a reason why the Black Panther Party
trained its members in self-defense. We are misleading people by
pretending that this transformation of the criminal injustice system is
possible by just creating some independent structures. The Amerikan
government will not just fade away without a fight.
“[A]s societal advancements have made being gay less stigmatized and gay
people more visible – and as the Internet now allows kids to reach
beyond their circumscribed social groups for acceptance and support –
the average coming out age has dropped from post-college age in the
1990s to around 16 today, which means that more and more kids are coming
out while they’re still economically reliant on their families. The
resulting flood of kids who end up on the street, kicked out by parents
whose religious beliefs often make them feel compelled to cast out their
own offspring, has been called a ‘hidden epidemic.’”
According to the Equity Project, leaving home because of family
rejection is the single greatest predictor of involvement with the
juvenile-justice system for LGBT youth.
Research done by San Francisco State University’s Family Acceptance
Project, which studies and works to prevent health and mental health
risks facing LGBT youth, empirically confirming what common sense would
imply to be true: highly religious parents are significantly more likely
than their less-religious counterparts to reject their children for
being gay.
LGBT people make up roughly five percent of the youth population in the
U.$., overall, but an estimated 40 percent of the homeless youth
population – an estimation that may be far too low considering that many
homeless youth may not openly identify themselves as LGBT when seeking
services.
The Center for American Progress has reported that there are between
320,000 and 400,000 homeless LGBT youths in the United $tates. The
National Incidence Studies of Missing, Abducted, Runaway and Thrownaway
Children put the number of homeless youth at 1.7 million. (Across the
country there are only 4,000 youth-shelter beds, overall). Approximately
one in five LGBT youth are unable to secure short-term shelter, and 16
percent could not get assistance with longer-term housing – figures that
are almost double those of their non-LGBT peers.
For LGBT kids who remain homeless, the stakes are clearly life and
death: they are seven times more likely than their straight counterparts
to be the victims of a crime; studies have shown they are more than
three times more likely to engage in survival sex – for which shelter is
the payment more often than cost. And every four hours a homeless LGBT
youth dies in the streets, whether it be from freezing to death, a drug
overdose, or assault.
The summer that marriage equality passed in New York, the number of
homeless kids looking for shelter went up 40 percent, reported the Ali
Forney Center – the nation’s largest organization dedicated to homeless
LGBT youth. Tragically, every step forward for the gay rights movement
creates a false hope of acceptance for certain youth, and therefore a
swelling of the homeless youth population. Up to 40 percent of LGBT
homeless youth leave home due to family rejection.
Amerikkka’s homeless LGBT youth is its hidden epidemic. Of the $5
billion the U.$. government spends on homeless assistance programs every
year, less than five percent of that is allocated for homeless children,
specifically. Amerikkka’s homeless youth, in general, is its next true
plague.
MIM(Prisons) responds: This comrade provides some useful data on
homelessness and queer youth and exposes a tragic consequence of gender
oppression for these youth. We do not, however, agree with the author’s
conclusion that homeless LGBT youth are a hidden epidemic in the United
$tates. Especially not with the implication that the U.$. government
should spend more money on homeless assistance, as if the imperialist
government can help end a problem that they created.
We don’t like to look at problems like homeless LGBT youth in isolation
as a “hidden epidemic” because this encourages an analysis of such
issues in isolation, and suggests that we should tackle them directly
and Amerika will be able to find a solution if only the epidemic is
exposed. While the United $tates certainly has enough money to eliminate
homelessness, the reality of homelessness in the United $tates is a
tragic byproduct of imperialist decadence and individualism. The
imperialist system exists to enrich the oppressors, at the expense of
the oppressed. And if a few citizens suffer or die in the process,
that’s not really a problem for the Amerikans in charge. While the vast
majority of Amerikan citizens are benefiting as either oppressor nation
(white) or beneficiary class (petty bourgeoisie), or both, there are
those who society does not bother to help. Most homeless are cast off
because they are part of oppressed groups: gender (including health
status) and nation play a big role here, and this is what’s behind much
of the homelessness of LGBT people.
We should expose the vast problem of homelessness in the United $tates,
as it is an embarrassing and clear example of a wealthy country that
doesn’t even care about the lives of its own citizens. Other less
wealthy countries do a better job addressing homelessness (i.e western
Europe, some Asian countries), so it could be solved within the
structure of imperialism, but only for the citizens affected. The many
people in the Third World who are permanently without home and living in
poverty because of the exploitation and plunder of imperialist Amerika
are the truly hidden homeless.
We should point out, as this author does, that gender oppression is
playing a significant role in LGBT youth ability to survive, and this is
something we must fight. Both of these elements of the homeless LGBT
youth issue are symptomatic of imperialism. And so rather than rally
people for more government attention to homelessness in Amerika, we
should focus on the root cause of global homelessness and organized to
overthrow imperialism.
One of the most damaging aspects of U.S. prisons today is the control
units. Control units and solitary confinement are the state’s biggest
guns in their torturous arsenal. Control units are called SHU, SMU, CMU
and a variety of other names depending on what state one is in, but they
all work to employ torture on the captives held therein.
When we look to the history of the U.S. prison system we find that the
oppressed nations held within have always suffered greatly at the hands
of Amerikkka. Prisoners in the United $tates have suffered unpaid labor,
lynchings, beatings, floggings and assassinations to name a few.
Although much of this still continues – at times more concealed and
shrouded than in the past – there are other new methods of national
oppression which are employed in this new era of United States
domination. I suspect that post-Obama (so-called “post-racial
Amerikkka”) we will continue to see more of these concealed forms of
oppression which inflict the same harm, but which slip through under the
radar of the average First World citizen. This makes liberals feel warm
and cozy and allows them to believe “progress” is obtainable in the
imperialist center.
One such method employed on prisoners in dungeons within the United
Snakes is the use of the control unit. The control unit is a modern-day
torture chamber, but it cannot be advertised as a lethal killer of
mostly Brown or Black minds because the liberals might even turn their
noses up at such a revelation. Instead the public must be told that
control units are only used on incorrigibles, savages, foreigners, gang
members or the sensationalized terrorists.
Who is Locked in Control Units?
Like our ancestors who may have been asked what got the shackle around
their ankle, what got them branded with their owner’s name on their
face, or what got that noose wrapped around their necks, our answer,
like theirs, is that it is the nature of our oppressor to seek to
eliminate all rebels and revolutionaries who oppose the oppressor
nation. This is ultimately what places one in a control unit.
Of course we are up against a sophisticated oppressor nation and the
placement of prisoners in control units is wrapped in flowery language.
We are told it is for “gang activity” or a “threat to the safety and
security of the institution.” I am sometimes given a chrono stating I’m
“actively engaged in a criminal conspiracy that threatens the
institution, staff and other prisoners.” This to the untrained mind may
sound like justification for torture. Not only is this character
assassination not true, but nothing justifies torture, absolutely
nothing!
It was only after I began to write articles that spoke up for prisoners,
and began filing appeals and lawsuits on behalf of all prisoners, that I
was targeted for placement in the Secure Housing Unit (SHU). In short,
when I began to resist state repression was when I was isolated in
solitary confinement. I was allowed by the state to commit minor crimes
and fight other prisoners, until I started to become politically
conscious. I am not alone.
Most who work to advance and organize their nation, speak up on behalf
of others, or engage in jailhouse lawyering will end up in a control
unit. This is a common practice in colonized society: those who resist
and who are politically influential are imprisoned under a colonial
oppressor.
Why Does the State Have a Validation Process?
Our oppressor must devise ways of placing us in control units, and in
California it uses the validation process. The validation process
attempts to lend a legal aura to torture and national oppression by
claiming to undergo a fair and unbiased process to validate someone as a
“gang affiliate.” This process is about as unbiased as asking the fox to
guard the henhouse.
The fact that the validation process continues to use things as
ridiculous as a birthday card, an Aztec drawing, or a book written by
George Jackson as evidence of gang activity proves that there is nothing
unbiased about this validation process. The kourt cases which supposedly
stopped the prison from using these items show how much of a joke the
injustice system is and how much it really is an extension of an
oppressive state. Our victories will never come from massa’s kourthouse.
The validation system helps pacify prisoners into thinking that there is
a legitimate process they are undergoing to end the torture. That
somehow if we are patient and do as we are told that we might get out of
the SHU. This of course is ludicrous. We will stay in SHU until our
oppressor feels we no longer resist, until they feel we are broken.
Sometimes they want to train their agents and attempt to capture all who
associate with us out on the mainline, as if we were live bait. But so
long as we remain resistant to their oppression, we will not be allowed
to freely associate with others. The validation process only works to
uphold our national oppression.
The Step Down Program is More Repression
When we go to committee in California SHUs we are given a form called
the “CDCR Advisement of Expectations.” This form gives a list of
supposed STG behavior which includes “participating in STG group
exercise, using gestures, handshakes, possession of artwork with STG
symbols.” Note that we are not informed what STG symbols are.
We basically cannot socialize with anyone, or we might be accused of STG
behavior. We are not told who is validated as part of a STG or given any
information about STG behavior. We are simply told we better not
associate with STGs or engage in their behavior. The state will decide
if we are behaving properly and allowed to proceed in the Step Down
Program. They claim they are the experts.
I have heard of some being put on this “Step Down” Program, but the
state is picking and choosing who they put in the program. In my opinion
it is a pacification program and I am not going to participate in it.
Participation masks the oppression of the state while also allowing them
to attempt to coerce me and any participants of being guilty, of
confessing guilt, even if only guilty of what they deem to be incorrect
thoughts.
Recent news of a federal class action lawsuit challenging policies and
conditions at the Pelican Bay SHU is welcome and something we all should
be following. Ashker et al. v. Governor of California et al., No. C
09-05796 claims that being held for more than ten years in SHU is
cruel and unusual punishment and that the validation process is a
violation of due process.(1) But here’s the kicker: if you have joined
the Step Down Program you are not included in this class action. So
already we see how the new Step Down Program is serving the state by
making it more difficult for prisoners to challenge their conditions.
My behavior is no more incorrect today than it was the first day I was
captured and housed in the SHU. The state will not be let off the hook
and I refuse to step down from resisting oppression. The Step Down
Program continues the same oppression that the validation process
started: it attempts to justify what the state is doing to the oppressed
nations.
What will End the Validation/Step Down Program?
The Step Down Program is not only similar to the validation process, but
here in California many prisons are still using both methods, so we need
to end them both.
From the beginning I saw the need to struggle for closing the SHU. From
the first hunger strike I knew that if we don’t close the SHU
altogether, the state will just have us fighting the same problem under
new names for decades via strikes/lawsuits. This will never accomplish
our goal. We need to keep all justifications for the use of solitary
confinement in our scope. No matter why someone is held in solitary
confinement, it is always torture and it should always be opposed.
At the same time we have made improvements in many prisoners’ lives and
some have gotten out of SHU, and I am happy for this. However validation
and Step Down Programs will keep us locked in the SHUs until we can make
resistance to oppression a hip and common thing. When hunger strikes
occur more often than once every ten years, and peaceful protests are as
frequent as spring cleaning, then maybe we will finally end
validation/step down programs.
MIM(Prisons) adds: Most civilians would say that controlling gang
violence is a good thing, and that perspective is exactly what the
California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation (CDCR) is
relying on for its gang validation and Step Down Programs. The
assumption is that all groups classified as gangs are engaged in
criminal activity, and anyone in contact with the gang must be a member.
Let’s put aside for now the reality that the U.$. military and police
force is the biggest gang in world history. If anyone is organized in
criminal activity and terrorism, it’s them. That any U.$. government
agency claims to be against gang activity without being critical of
itself is just a joke.
Lumpen organizations that are not necessarily revolutionary are also
targeted as gangs, whether or not they break U.$. laws. The real threat
is not the activities that the lumpen are engaged in, but that they have
any level of unity and organization. STG labels and Step Down Programs
criminialize the association, not actual crime.
The U.$. government will do everything it can to protect its
international hegemony. Controlling any potentially subversive
population within its borders, especially the internal semi-colonies, is
a high priority, no matter how much they dress it up with fancy titles
and administrative process.