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.
They break the law to punish lawbreakers Unconstitutional conditions
and censorship policy They give us four envelopes a
month Expecting our return to society be successful with no
one They create these dungeons, punishing revolutionary
behavior Been alone so long with no telephone, mind and family
gone They believe they are gods chosen and we are Satan’s
spawn Going home to beat wives, child porn and manicured
lawns They mourn 9-11 like we didn’t deserve it Sending sons and
daughters off terrorists hunting patriots They hate prisoners,
Blacks, Latinos and First Nations White dark night killer deserving
of understanding and forgiveness They wonder why the world hates them
beyond words Military bases spread like cancer the earth over They
seem so pretty, smart, happy and photogenic Just the rich man’s
puppets on Broadway, Hollywood, Pennsylvania Ave Dropping bombs on
Nagasaki, Hiroshima, unmanned drone celebrations They could come in
the morning and shoot me like a dog But it’s not going to save them,
we will never stop
My security level was recently lowered and I was immediately assigned as
an inmate orderly, to my chagrin. It is like a trustee who works on an
assigned cell block, and I know of all the pigs’ malicious intent of
using certain prisoner orderlies as tools. Tools used to hurt other
prisoners.
I got my block assignment and was given the usual lecture about all the
things I could not do – basically anything that would ease my fellow
prisoners plight/suffering. I politely related to this sergeant, while
maintaining every intent to help those confined on this segregated cell
block. I was not too long ago confined behind the door, so it was an
obvious obligation to do so.
Anyway, that was Wednesday. By Sunday, another shift tried to enlist me
as a complicit to starve an individual prisoner, to which I declined.
But, the other orderly slaving with me agreed to help. Through
intimidation I was able to persuade this orderly to do otherwise.
I warned the target of the pig’s intent and, days later, the other
prisoner about the plot against them. Well, this orderly informed the
pigs that I was alerting all targeted prisoners. So the pigs tried,
through aggressive body language, to scare me. The pigs claimed that I
wasn’t playing with the team, blah, blah. Took all my property and
locked me down pending trumped up disciplinary charges.
A few days later, the other punk ass orderly gives another inmate an
empty food tray. This prisoner did not take it lightly. The target
became disorderly – and rightly so. This led to the individual being
administered chemical agents. And he refused to tap out after several
rounds of being gassed. Dude forced the pigs to run the cell extraction
team, which beat this man stupid. Eight on one.
All because of a stool pigeon. Shit crazy.
Even more crazy, I receive a kite from someone who was my neighbor
before classification made me an orderly. The kite informed that the day
after I left the cell block, a white shirt and four officers popped up
at the cell with a minicam. Long story short, the pigs were coming with
the intent to inflict bodily harm. The veracity of the event was
confirmed by an affiliate.
They missed me by one day!
My belief is this was planned because I was part of a core group which
gave voice to the rampant pig violence towards prisoners.
“MIM had come to the conclusion from the degeneration of numerous
genuine forces like the Progressive Labor Party in the United States
that such especially difficult ideological struggle is a permanent
fixture in the imperialist countries where the material basis for
degeneration is much greater than in the oppressed countries…”
“Since it is unlikely that imperialism will be able to come up with too
many more entirely new tricks, there will come a time in MIM’s
development where our principal task will be to unite those who can be
united around our very confrontational line. Right now we are emerging
principally from struggle against revisionism, imperialist economism and
pseudo-feminism. When we have finished going into detail on our
differences with others on the above questions we will focus on unity as
the principal way to advance the overall struggle. We will prepare for a
strategic length of time to do battle with imperialist economism,
revisionism, pseudo-feminism, Trotskyism, anarchism and so on in a
distinctive way. However, even in seeking unity, MIM will find itself in
struggle much more often than many parties in communist history for a
variety of reasons what MIM has said is rare to non-existent in the
imperialist countries. So even as the labor aristocracy thesis becomes
clear as day to us and ‘old hat’ it will seem fresh to many for some
time to come.” - The Journey Back to Maoism.
MIM Theory 5, Diet
for a Small Red Planet
So what do these passages mean? We’re so bought off it’s ridiculous!
Worse still, as a result of our being bought off we’re that much more
susceptible to bourgeois manipulation a la ideological
trickery. Therefore we cannot obtain a proletarian mindset without some
hard study.
We in the imperialist countries have the distinct strategical advantage
of not having to be in armed struggle at this time. And in connection to
this fact we have a responsibility not only to the international
proletariat but to our own oppressed that when conditions do begin to
change and armed struggle actually becomes a possibility we’ll be ready
to not only lead, but lead right! We have the advantage of learning from
and building on all the rational and empirical knowledge left to us by
our predecessors, both the good and the bad; especially the bad! We have
to learn from past mistakes so that we don’t commit future ones, or
worse still, repeat the old ones. It’s too late in the anti-imperialist
game for us to be messing up the way some of our leaders did before us.
Have we learned nothing?! What part of “ideological struggle in the
imperialist countries is a permanent fixture” are we not understanding?
It’s almost as if the revolution really is dead.
The fact that more and more of the oppressed nation imprisoned lumpen
are beginning to finally wake up to the reality of imperialism is a good
thing - a very good thing! However, the fact that most of these new
lumpen organizations aren’t taking the time to study and learn from the
concrete lessons of history and movements passed speaks volumes for the
dire need of these new groups to formally hook up with MIM(Prisons) and
United Struggle from Within (USW). It indicates the need for individuals
to remain within USW much longer to develop theoretically before forming
new single-nation revolutionary cells or parties. USW should serve as a
place for the most advanced to sharpen their swords together until
conditions do change within the prison population in general and within
the prison movement in particular, before calling for the building of
new organizations.
Comrades behind bars have all the time in the world to study and hence
develop themselves and others theoretically. Therefore, those of us who
are serious about revolution have no excuse for such low levels of
theoretical development within our ranks, especially those of us working
directly with MIM(Prisons).
A big part of the problem is the failure of some of us within USW to
correctly grasp the philosophy of dialectical materialism, which results
in a failure to apply it to the prison movement, and as a result we have
paralysis within the prison movement. The need for us to seriously study
dialectical materialism is directly linked to our ability to put it to
use; without a concrete understanding of dialectical materialism all
will be lost. Is this an over-exaggeration? Of course not; it’s a hard
truth. Within our conditions MIM(Prisons) makes up part of our external
causes and therefore is a part of the conditions of change with us being
the basis of change. Based on what I’m seeing, or rather not seeing,
there hasn’t been any real change thus far. Are my words too harsh? If
they are, then that’s too bad. What is MIM(Prisons) here for if not to
help us develop politically?
Related to this point is a prisyner’s letter I just read in the
revisionist Revolution newspaper of the Crypto-Trotskyists
RCP=U$A. This article was filled with the usual, flowery verbiage of
“much love to y’all beautiful people at the RCP…” and “Bob Afakean is my
daddy” type nonsense, typical of their articles. Half the articles in
Revolution don’t really say anything, while the other half are
filled with imperialist country oppressor nation chauvinist politics.
Anyways, there was a California prisyner’s letter featured that was
speaking on the Pelican Bay Short Corridor new directive. This prisyner
was writing in to basically agree that it was about time that the
prisyners put a stop to the fighting and come together for change.
However, towards the end of the letter this prisyner made a call for the
Pelican Bay Short Corridor to separate themselves from the lumpen if
they were to really have a shot at victory in their struggle.
Yup, leave it to the RCP=U$A to spread division in the guise of unity to
the prison masses at such a critical time. But how, pray tell, is the
Short Corridor to achieve its goals in their struggle (which is all our
struggle) if they separate themselves from the prison masses? Not only
does this prisyner’s line attempt to separate the Corridor leaders from
the wider prisyn movement, but it essentially makes the petty bourgeois
argument that only individual groups of prisyners should be designated
as political prisyners, and not the entire U.$. prisyn population. As if
the Short Corridor prisyners were on a different plane than the rest of
the population, or as if the short corridor weren’t lumpen-based
themselves. That RCP=U$A article makes it seem as if the mass of
California prisyners were holding the movement back. Quite the contrary:
without the prisyner masses the Short Corridor prisyners are like
generals with no soldiers, or a gun with no bullets. Instead it is the
prisyner masses that will push the prisyn movement forward.
My point here is that the RCP=U$A prints this garbage, and lots of
prisyners just eat it up. And we at USW know where “new synthesis” (old
revisionist hat) leads the movement to: oblivion.
Now assuming that a prisyner actually wrote that letter (and not just
another revisionist weed, we all remember agent Quispe and the attempt
to derail the Sendero Luminoso: strategical equilibrium) what does that
say about the theoretical development of politically-conscious and
class-conscious prisyners? And these are the leaders?!
We need real proletarian-based political development if we are to
succeed in the years to come, and the only place prisyners are gonna
find that is by working directly with MIM(Prisons). Our liberation as
oppressed nations and as a class is inextricably bound with Maoism, not
“new synthesis” politics. Don’t believe me? Go ask the klan in the
RCP=U$A where they stand with respect to the liberation of Aztlán, New
Afrika, and the various First Nations. Watch how they dance and shuffle,
deflect the question, and fake left in order to go right.
Still too busy to study theory seriously? Busier than the New People’s
Army in 1970? Good question: who or what is the New People’s Army? Who
was the Tupac Amaru for that matter? And what’s the difference between
lumpen and lumpen-proletariat? How is this question relevant to our own
conditions? And what about Kautsky – who’s his contemporary, and why
should we care?
The tenet that the revolutionary vanguard be made up of professional
revolutionaries is a Leninist tenet. Anything less than putting
revolutionary politics in command means watering down correct political
line. And correct political lines could only be put forward if there was
an organization consisting chiefly of people professionally engaged in
revolutionary activity that would devote their entire lives to the
movement subsuming the persynal for the good of the cause. We don’t need
no weekend revolutionaries and we don’t need those just in it for the
remainder of their imprisonment; we need better than that. “Better,
fewer, but better.” It’s not enough to simply read an article in
Under Lock & Key. The bulk of our imprisonment should be
spent developing the mind.
Take the sample of the prison artists. How did they get so good? By
drawing here and there, or only when there was something in it for them?
No, they developed their skills via a passion for the arts, and as a
result they’re now pretty damn good. We now come to them whenever we
need to send something home.
What about the legal-beagles? How did they get so good? They too
developed their skills with a passion, a passion to make it back home.
And as a result of that, some of them actually make it back home despite
having the deck stacked against them. Unfortunately some of them don’t
make it out. But through the skills they’ve developed some of them make
it their mission in life to file grievances, lawsuits, etc., in the name
of the prisyner population. And who do we go to when we need legal
advice or something filed?
Just as those people are great examples within their field and are
derived directly from the prisyner population, so should USW and our
allies aspire to become great examples within the revolutionary prisyn
movement so that when the time comes we can be damn well sure we don’t
lead the prisyn masses into oblivion.
Comrades breaking away from USW in order to prematurely form their own
organizations when their revolutionary skills are not yet developed are
perfect examples of being ultra-left in matters of “one divides into
two” dialectics and a form of adventurism as well.
Once again, are my words too harsh? Hell no! We’re not yet in the stage
where we should be seeking to unite all who can be united. We’re still
in the ideological struggle. The fact that I have to write this to say
as much should prove it.
Revolutionaries in the prison movement should have a concrete
understanding of Marxism-Leninism-Maoism and not a fragmentary one. We
should be well versed in political economics and revolutionary theory.
Indeed, this is our own strategical equilibrium. “Better, fewer, but
better.” There is no other way.
MIM(Prisons) adds: We have laid out the five principles of the
United Front
for Peace in Prisons (UFPP) to unite all who can be united at the
mass level in U.$. prisons. We do this alongside the tasks Ehecatl
describes for building ideological unity within USW. And this is a
different practice than MIM had when writing the article quoted in the
beginning of this letter. We find ourselves in a position similar to the
Communist Party of the Philippines at the time (discussed in that
article) who were also trying to lead a broad united front and a
vanguard party at the same time. We learn from their mistakes and
rectification campaign in order to maintain the independence and
leadership of the vanguard within the UFPP, and separate party work from
united front work.
Comrades in MIM(Prisons) and USW work hard to facilitate study groups
for prisoners who are interested in developing ideologically and not
just reading ULK. A new introductory course starts every few
months, so write us to get on the list. For more on the question of
forming new organizations, see MIM(Prisons)’s 2011 Congress resolution
on
“Building
New Groups vs. Working with USW and MIM(Prisons)”, published in
ULK 21. And if you want to know more about the history of
Ehecatl’s criticisms of the RCP=U$A, check out our
study pack on the
Revolutionary Communist Party (USA). If we don’t study, we will
lose.
I refuse to lay down, in my struggle against the
oppressor. Anti-imperialist efforts, settling for nothing lesser.
Striving together with my brotherz and sisterz – Utilizing
knowledge, wisdom and understanding. “We’re fighting for world
peace!” Is what my comrades past and present is demanding.
Anti-imperialist, anti-capitalist, fuck it! I’ll be devoted to
fighting against that old slave mentality that my older peers seem to
keep holding.
We rise together and never fall. Nor stumble in sudden speech. So
to the brotherz and sisterz down in this struggle – Without
initiative and motivation you’ll forever remain stuck with your slave
mentality!
Have you forgot all the struggles and oppression, a look at the real
big picture is needed. And all I hear is talk about a recession.
Remember it was about standing for a cause when sticking together no
matter what was the main thing. Remember together we stand divided we
fall.
When there’s a will there’s a way so right now get your will
back. Like everything else struggle and oppression have an end and
a price to pay, there’s no turning back.
On Friday, December 28, 2012 at approximately 8pm I witnessed an
unnecessary and excessive use of major force. The main perpetrators were
correctional officer Mendez, Correctional Officer Burns, Lieutenant
Patrick R. Eady, and Sergeant Gundacker. The victim was a prisoner, (B)
a Black man, who was housed on F-wing at the High Security Unit on
Estelle; which is located in Huntsville, Texas. Please note it is well
documented that prisoner B has a history of mental health issues that
stem from his long-term confinement in 23 hour a day lockdown settings.
It is further worth noting that B’s hands were cuffed behind his back
during the assault which left significant bruising, swelling, and
lacerations to his face.
I observed Officer Burns, Officer Mendez, and an Officer Bake approach
B’s cell (F-125) and inform him to prepare for a “shake-down” or cell
search. B was cuffed and removed form his cell. During the time outside
his cell, B engaged in profanity laced name calling with Burns and
Mendez, all three were talking major “trash.” Officer Mendez seemed to
have been offended; he (Mendez) pushed B in the back shoving him in his
cell.
Burns and Mendez entered the cell and you could hear blows being given
to B, who was cuffed! A female officer named Yancey was working the F
wing. Apparently, she sounded the alarm and many officers and
supervisors arrived at the scene of the crime. Upon arriving, Lieutenant
Eady and Sergeant Gundacker did not stop the assault on B, they joined
in. Punching and kicking B in the head and face while officer Yancey
stood by in obvious shock. Lieutenant Eady saw the look of shock and
revulsion on officer Yancey’s face and he ordered her off the wing and
that is when the “cover-up” was put in full effect.
The Cover Up
The attackers quickly exited the cell as B writhed in pain on the floor
of his cell - his face a bloody mess. B’s cell door was shut, he was
left cuffed. Lieutenant Eady was attempting to make it look as if B had
refused to relinquish the handcuffs. Sergeant Harrison arrived after the
fact and he was bamboozled by Lieutenant Eady. Lieutenant Eady placed
Sergeant Harrison in charge of the use of force. I immediately yelled
out at Lieutenant Eady “you’re not going to get away with that Eady I
got you!” His response “I got away with that, now shut the fuck up or
you’re next!” and with that I shut my ass up. Fearlessness is a
wonderful trait but we must learn when to be quiet and let our pen talk!
The Aftermath
After the incident, officer Yancey, who was actually the wing officer,
came to my cell visibly upset. She said “that physical abuse of
was uncalled for, they know he is a psyche patient, we all know!” She
continued “I think some of these officers were bullied as kids because
it seems they get off on hurting inmates.”
I wrote the incident up via a Step 1 (I-127) Special Use of Force
grievance. B was shipped to another unit 2 days after I filed. This is
one of the many tricks the pigs use in Texas in order to obstruct
justice. I suppose that would work if they were dealing with “willy lump
lump” or “flunky bob” but I am a highly motivated, well trained USW
comrade and in the words of comedic genius Damon Wayans “Homey don’t
play that!” I have contacted many prisoner rights activists and
discussed ideas that may serve as solutions to protecting mentally ill
prisoners held in captivity by the State of Texas.
A Call to Action
In closing I must remind all of you “We are all (B)!” just like we all
are Oscar Grant, Trayvon Martin, Jordan Davis and the countless number
of oppressed lumpen under class people who have died at the hands of a
fascist imperialist pig. Our fallen comrade Fred Hampton said “theory
without practice ain’t shit!” Practice is theory in action. Will you
stand by and do nothing while your fellow comrade/humyn being is
unmercifully beat and abused? Are you really about “this life?” Ask
yourself when is enough enough? Dare to struggle, dare to win, all power
to the people.
MIM(Prisons) adds: The original article included information
about the diverse races of the prison staff involved in this assault of
a Black prisoner. These references were removed but we note that it
demonstrates that there are willing servants of imperialism found in all
nationalities. Sometimes that
contradiction
bites the oppressor in the ass. But either way, that doesn’t change
the nature of national oppression, or the criminal injustice system’s
role in perpetrating this oppression.
At the heart of the triple C Creed it is about practicing exemplary
science. Don’t just talk about it, be about it. We’ve had too much
talking. Too many jack-leg preachers. Too many fakers and haters acting
like they know it all. Meanwhile, we keep losing young Black lives at
alarming rates. We keep losing family to drugs. Our men keep vanishing
from our communities to feed this insatiable carceral beast.
Here is the fundamental science: when we act we achieve! Over the past
year we have acted in unity to exemplify our collective strength. We
joined a nationwide grievance petition. We campaigned for a non-violent
resolution. We organized with the Islamic community and an on point
social network. We conducted round table discussions. Many brothers
enjoyed our track and field events, and we conducted a mass rec
grievance campaign so that we could hold these events. We ended with a
unit wide collective fellowship meal.
In 2013 we are refocusing our efforts on our primary function of sharing
information. If you look back over the trajectory of the African history
in this land you will see that every time we gained knowledge and acted
on it we advanced. This must always be the comrade’s conscious focus.
Acquiring and distributing intelligence. We understand that roughly 95%
of prisoners won’t put in the effort to do this, and it may well be true
that 4% of the ones who do will only seek to acquire certain knowledge
for personal profit and gain. OneLife intends to focus its developmental
efforts on that critical 1% who will both actively seek to inform
themselves as a part of their daily routine and exercise due vigilance
in passing that intelligence along to others in a sustained, structured
way.
Our vanguard development understands the importance of knowing what is
going on in Syria, Mali, or Nigeria. Understanding our u.s. economy, how
it impacts other world peoples, and what is our place and power of
potential in determining the greater scheme of things. We want to learn
about specific political actors, the actual function of their office,
and how specific policies impact our lives and the lives of our families
and communities. Then we want to learn how to affect these processes.
The 1% must lead such struggle. This is what is meant by movement. Any
single campaign or event is pointless without solid comrades who are
committed to sustained struggle.
As I’ve said before, you don’t have to be with OneLife to be serious
about this movement, but you do have to be consistent. If your word
ain’t shit, neither are you. Comrades preach what they practice, knowing
it’s not about them. It’s about the people. Real lives are at stake
based on what we do or don’t do.
MIM(Prisons) adds: We print this leaflet as an example of what
organizations that join the United Front for Peace in Prison are doing
on the ground in their prisons. This group has declared its agreement
with the UFPP five points of unity, and is striving to implement them by
organizing and educating others, and fighting winnable battles for
change. As they point out, you don’t have to be with their organization
to be in the movement, but you need to be doing something.
October 2012: A captive, B (an old white man), a known writ writer, was
placed in G1112 cell with a younger Black captive, R. Lt. Harrold and
Sgt Green told R that B is a racist, causing R to beat up B. R was
rewarded with the head orderly job in G-Dorm, while B is to never get
off close management due to receiving constant fabricated disciplinary
reports against him because he is a writ writer. The beating occurred
between October 13th and October 31st in G1112 cell.
Early November 2012: another writ writer was beaten and cut with a razor
blade by another prisoner placed in G1106 cell working for Sgt Patton.
This is not his first time he was set up by the police. Currently he is
on CM-1 slapped with numerous fabricated Disciplinary Reports (DRs) and
won’t get off CM until he is broken.
Early November 2012, prisoner W, a mentally ill prisoner in G1103 cell,
after continuous daily harassment, was gassed by Sgt Green and his crew,
for no other reason than implementing mass terror and intimidation. He
was made an example of via procedural lynching for all to see and fear.
December 3, 2012: CO Maguire and another CO beat up a prisoner in G1209
cell, while the prisoner was handcuffed behind his back. After being
beaten the prisoner was slapped with a fabricated assault on a CO DR.
How do you assault a CO with your hands cuffed behind your back?
December 5, 2012: two prisoners in G1203 cell were gassed by Sgt Harvey,
all in retaliation intended against one of the prisoners due to some
incident months prior.
December 9, 2012, A prisoner was taken from G1103 cell in handcuffs,
hands behind his back, and jumped on in the hallway by Sgt Green and his
crew. Sgt Green had planned and called in the incident moments prior to
its actual occurrence.
December 17, 2012: A prisoner in G1210 cell was gassed for simply
declaring a psychological emergency. All captives declaring a
psychological emergency are gassed and slapped with fabricated DRs to
justify and cover up the gassing.
December 30-31st, 2012: Two prisoners in F1213 and two other captives in
F1214 cell were placed on strip (72 hour property restriction - no
mattress, no bedding, no clothes - left in only boxer shorts) the
temperature outside was in the 20s and the heaters were off. They were
placed on strip for fabricated reasons by Sgt Fisher.
December 31st, 2012: two prisoners in F1110 cell were gassed and slapped
with fabricated DRs because they refused to speak to Sgt Kelly when he
approached their cell in his two faced (smile in your face, stab you in
the back) manner.
Jan 5, 2012: Sgt Kelly placed two captives beefing with each other on
strip together in F2103 cell so they could fight, they’re fighting as I
write.
These prison guard brutalities are only a few of the many that occur
here on Close Management at Suwanee Correctional Institution here in
Florida. Many of the identities of the victims are unknown to me, but
can be obtained by simply viewing camera/document evidence which can be
obtained by anyone via request of public information pursuant to the
Freedom of Information Act. Do not just take my word at face value,
please request the evidence and speak with the victims mentioned for a
more detailed truth of what transpired. (Some may fear staff retaliation
and refrain from speaking). We beg that you help by simply calling in or
emailing concerning these brutalities.
Just recently in October 2012, Taylor and Union CI underwent a major
purge by higher authorities during which approximately 60 officers of
all ranks were escorted off institution grounds due to their brutal and
tyrannical practice. Suwanee CI needs to experience the same purge of
its tyrants like Lt Martin (aka white widow), Lt Harrod, Sgt Harvery,
Sgt Patton, Sgt Silver, Sgt Green, Sgt Kelly, Sgt Fisher, CO Barton, CO
Maguire, CO Lynblade, CO Diaz, CO Landrum, CO Lane, CO Murman, CO Pope -
who brags to captives how he pays captives extra lunch trays to beat up
other captives - and all their superiors - captains, majors, colonels,
classification officers and warden and secretary of FDOC - who all
encourage, condone and even orchestrate these many use of excessive
force brutalities and procedural lynchings and fabrication coverup
reports.
Many captives are falsely accused of gunning (masturbating) by female
COs just so captives can be jumped on, gassed or placed on strip by
these male COs. These tyrants and sadists will not stop on their own.
MIM(Prisons) responds: The list of people this writer suggests
need to be purged from Suwanee demonstrates our point that it is not
possible to reform the Amerikan criminal injustice system. This is not a
case of just a few bad apples, but rather a system of oppression and
violence, in which employees must participate to receive a paycheck. We
must expose the brutality, and fight the individual cases to create some
livable space for our comrades, but we will only end the violence by
dismantling the criminal injustice system entirely.
by a Massachusetts prisoner January 2013 permalink
Welcome to MCI Shirley Prison where low-level drug dealers are turned
into murderers. Where minor felons are instilled with such anger and
resentment that they are talking mayhem as they depart through the razor
wire gates. Where un-professionalism and abuse are the norm and the
seeds of future killings are being sown one thousand at a whack. It is a
place where it is hard to distinguish the real criminals. Do they wear
gray scrubs? Do they wear paramilitary jump suits and badges, do they
wear a shirt and tie, or do they wear Dolce & Gabbana skirts with
Prada shoes? It is truly hard to tell.
Young men enter MCI Shirley (or “ShirleyWorld” as it is largely known)
thinking they may be able to get an education through college courses or
the trades. Those hopes are dashed upon the rocks of guard overtime,
administrative nepotism, and complete lack of any semblance of order.
The warden is deaf, the deputy is dumb, and the captain is blind. This
barrel of monkeys chews upon taxpayer dollars while the young prisoner
is further separated from the societal norms the rehabilitative process
was meant to instill. You can see the death in their eyes. It is scary.
This vast criminal conspiracy that is the department of corruption is as
much a killer as Charles Manson or Adolph Hitler were. They see with
perfect vision the folly of their ways but press on with malicious
intent: premeditated job security equaling death in the Mattapan
Corridor. Drunken guards bring in drugs and cell phones, take out their
ire on weaker prisoners and all the while talk about pay raises, time
off and pension plans. They are the thieves and murderers!
The prison system spends $517,000,000 per year to diminish the safety of
the streets. Criminal guards suck up $360,000,000 of that yearly budget
while rehabilitative programs and education are allotted only 2% of that
budget. An equation which is designed for failure. It assures repeat
customers but that assurance comes at the cost of far too many lives.
When will you, the taxpayer, become outraged? When will your ire replace
the apathy that belays commonsense? This is a state, a country, and a
land that is founded in second chances.
If you were ever afforded the tragic opportunity to tread the pathways
of MCI Shirley you would witness first hand the systemic failures. There
are guards everywhere – sergeants, lieutenants, captains, and multitudes
of line staff – but each and every day some rehabilitative aspect of the
prison is shut down due to “under-staffing.” It is a lie. The DOC has
5500 employees for about 12,000 prisoners. The guard’s union has
injected so much propaganda that even Hitler would be proud of their
achievements.
The time has come to reorganize the prison budget, to use these vast
taxpayer dollars to actually protect the safety of the public. We must
terminate the excess of secretaries, deputies, assistants, aides,
clerks, etc., and invest that revenue in expansion of the college degree
program. Prisoners who earn that degree in prison do not come back: they
do not commit any more crimes. The recidivism rate for in-prison Boston
University graduates is less than 1%. The statewide recidivism rate has
hovered at about 47% for over a decade. Did you know UMass offered to
come into the prisons and provide college courses for free? The DOC
rejected them. Did you know that Fitchburg State had a free program at
ShirleyWorld but the facility failed to support it? The reason for the
folly is that there is no money in it for the DOC to have these
programs.
Prisoners need real job training. Prisoners need transitional housing in
lower security prisons. Such prisons cost only a fraction of what it
costs to run the higher security prisons as they need less staff. This
is why the guard’s union fights this at every turn. Please join forces
with those who have a plan for real and effective public safety reform.
the time is now for you to get involved.
MIM(Prisons) responds: This comrade does a good job exposing the
Massachusetts prison system’s lack of interest in rehabilitation and
education. It is true that in Massachusetts, and across the country,
prisons are providing good jobs to guards who have formed strong unions
to lobby effectively for expansion of the system. It is a system whose
employees have every interest in expansion and no interest in
rehabilitation. The very fact that education has been proven to
dramatically reduce recidivism but prisons across the country have cut
or eliminated education programs is clear evidence. Further, programs
such as MIM(Prisons)’s led study groups are censored as a threat to the
safety and security of the prison. It’s not the criminal injustice
system that cares about safety and security, they care about job
security and social control. And prisons conveniently provide both:
locking up the oppressed nation lumpen who might organize against
imperialism and giving jobs to the labor aristocracy in the prisons.
But we disagree with this prisoner that tax payers are going to become
outraged and fight this system. Both the social control and the good
jobs are benefiting those tax payers. The labor aristocracy wants to
protect it’s own jobs: and the prison provides a good number of these.
If tax money didn’t go to prison jobs it would go to some other labor
aristocracy services. And these would not be jobs benefiting the
oppressed nation lumpen: that’s not something tax payers are going to
get behind. On the contrary, prison guard unions successfully campaign
for more pay and funding for defending white power, unlike most labor
unions.
With that said, we do think there is value in exposing the lack of
safety and security in the current prison system. We may gain some
allies in certain battles, people who will see that the streets of
Amerika are objectively less safe. But we don’t want to mislead them by
appealing to their persynal interests and pretending that substantive
change to the criminal injustice system is going to actually benefit
them in the long run. Anti-imperialism is not in the interests of the
majority of the Amerikan people, because they benefit financially from
this system. And the criminal injustice system is an integral part of
Amerikan imperialism.