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.
Excuse me if I haven’t tapped in as often as I should or used to…
I’ve been on a mission and roller coaster fighting these administrations
not only by exposing and being the example as to how not to fear the
oppressor when involving yourself and others in direct action politics
and hard line… It’s a way of life, it’s a way of existing that comes
with much sacrifice. What are you willing to sacrifice? What are you
willing to be without? Luxury items? Food? Nice clothes or any clothes
at all and have nothing but the fire inside? A loved one or
communication with your people? I mean this is what’s at stake when
fighting the enemy, this is the truth and all reality specially being a
captive in these golden gulags.
I fight for my people and i fight to stay alive every fucking day
homie, even when the people I fight for don’t have a spine to stand em
straight, no voice to speak fact, no heart to love it’s community nor
hand and fire to fight back… But I still do. Doing this guerrilla shit
and living as an example ALWAYS send me back to the SHU’s, ASU’s,
Solitary Confinement, Control Units of terror. Why? Because I’m a
captive warrior of Brown skin, Brown eyes, shaved head and tribal tats
smashing the oppressor with my heart, mind, hands, weapons, and pen.
There’s gonna come a time when we stop saying “Enough is Enough” and
actually start putting that dialectical theory of knowing and doing into
motion homeboy… make these dungeons unlivable, ungovernable, fuck
kicking your feet up and being stuck on your tablet all day popping
suboxone and snorting bottle… Huh? Sounds familiar Gee? Keep that shit
raw and 100% then souljah.
So again to everyone on the streets, yea those street prisoners
living lives like robots and that talk about eliminating prison
plantations, for that we need a revolution first and foremost… and to
all my camaradas/comrades stuck between a hard place and a rock up in
them dungeons – what are you willing to sacrifice??
It’s fucked up to say this but I’m living a life where the systems of
oppression are actively trying to end my existence for one reason or
another… I’m back in the SHU as I explained on the other kite and again
the pigs did their games of divide and conquer, smut campaigns, and
became the suppliers to the influencers on the yard, in order to be able
to execute hits via inmate lap dogs… some of yall know what I’m talking
about. How many times does a pig swing off the “Big dawgs” nuts? And
simply because of what that pig can do for those whack ass “Big Dawgs”
they make those lames set up the real guerrilleros and call a hit on
em?? All the fucking time homie… and all of you that talk about stacking
your millions while fighting the oppressor behind bars, don’t tell me
that you rather have this bitch on fire! Because the only way to stack
your millions in prison is by pleasing the cops, do as they say so you
can move “freely” and don’t get your “house” hit, and tell rebels to
stop bringing heat to the block, stop disrespecting pigs!! So you can
continue pushing your dough.
C’mon homie, you talking to a mofo that’s been in prison grounds
since he was born!! My entire childhood has been spent in and out of the
system and all my adulthood all I’ve known is prison so don’t mess me
with that shit… I’m all for moving unseen and that hustle but
not at the expense of the People’s fire, nor telling
rebels to chill– Fuck that! Get your priorities straight and it’s time
we start smashing those “Big Dawgs” on the yards if they on that $ $ign
over the homies… Cuz if that’s eir get down then ey ain’t no different
than the mofo’s keeping us in these cages.
Next time someone tells you filling 602 Grievances is snitching, or
tells you to stop bringing heat to the pad or respect cops– Smash Em! He
one of em! It might place you in another box with nothing but yourself
and a mattress… But what are you willing to sacrifice? Live by example
and turn it up then, cuz it all sounds very pretty on paper and word
play but we have to start somewhere sometime… there’s a roll for
everyone… are you fulfilling yours and actually building for the end of
capitalism?
I’m listening to an N.P.R. news report. An “African-Amerikkkan” woman is ruefully recounting the January 6th, 2021 right wing attack on “our” democracy. I wanted to laugh and cry that this sister was so lost that it was pitiful. So many confused and deluded people, even at this late hour, don’t know that Amerikkka has never been a true democracy, in the way that most people have been led to believe. Amerikkka has assassinated more legitimately elected leaders, around the world, than all other world’s states combined. They have installed dictators who starve the childred, and propped up those colonial/neo-colonial police states so that the First World can live like royalty on the stolen labor and natural resources of those Shanghai-ed and enslaved societies. Throughout the past century, these overthrown dictators always seek refuge in the U.$. or Britain. The rats always run back to the nest. (From Baby Doc, to Jair Bolsonaro, the Shah of Iran, and many more.) That is not what truly civilized, freedom and justice-loving democracies do. That is what Nazi police states do.
Even if Amerikkka could be a democracy – which it never can – it would not be “our” democracy. Judge Roger B. Taney declared as much in 1857 or so. Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist reiterated this, in 1987 or so. It is now 2023. It’s time to wake up. Marcus Garvey clearly stated, in 1923 or so, what most people still have not heard: The first piece of toilet paper was invented in 1786 or so. It was called “The United States Constitution.”
In 1940 or so, a lot of Amerikkkan leaders, at the highest levels of U.S. government and industry, supported Adolf Hitler. The antics of ex-President Donald J. Trump and many U.$. leaders of government and industry (and many millions of oppressor nation Amerika alongside their oppressed nation allies) proved that, in 2021 – and for the foreseeable future, I’m sure, – the status quo shall remain!
Truly, the most productive years of my life were the 9 years that I lived on various “Indian” reservations and on “hippie” communes, which modeled much of our lifestyle on First Nations’ (Lakota, Diné, etc.) beliefs, and some African and Gaelic beliefs. There was the occasional Taoist or Buddhist, but we all realized we are all guests in our First Nation sisters’ and brothers’ home.
I gave up on Amerikkka in the early ‘90s. I wanted my kids’ mom to come away with me to Indonesia or somewhere in the South Pacific (Fiji, the Solomon Isles), but she would have none of it. She still believed that the U.$. was a good country; like so many naive “dreamers” today. I honestly believe that many migrants who come to the U.$. are not seeking freedom; they’re seeking money, and are probably loaded down with contraband they’ve stolen from someone else, or are on the run from justice. The rats always run back to the nest.
I used to think that if Africans made significant cultural and economic ties to First Nation sovereign communities, that, by now we could have established our own sovereign communities; but very, very few Blacks that I broached the subject to would even consider living around a “bunch of poor ass Indians,” and struggling to build a community from scratch, when there’s a McDonald’s right around the corner. Besides, the Alaska and Wyoming wilderness is not Stacey Adams and Cadillac-friendly. I guess it was just too big of a sacrifice to make for the honor and love of our children. We don’t want to empower the police state, but who can live without Tangueray and Louis Vuitton?!
If the U.$. would switch the military/police/prison budget over to health and education, and give the paltry health and education budget to the pigs and politicians, Amerikkka could quite possibly be a good country. Maybe even a great country! But after 500 years of this shit, I’m not gonna hold my breath. Like I said, Amerikkka has destroyed every nascent, true democracy that opposes white supremacy.
In previous writings we’ve utilized the principle of self-criticism
to critique the communications operations that We, Team One, previously
had. Therefore, we’re enthused to announce not only new tactical methods
of communication, but a new address as well.
Tx Team One
PO Box 720597
Houston, TX 77272
Also, in conjunction with the JFI campaign and in partnership with
outside supporters, We’re presently soliciting contributors for a book
project. This project will be a collection of personal experiences of
prisoners who are working or have previously worked an industrial job in
Texas prisons (TDCJ).
This work contributes to the portion of the Juneteenth Freedom
Initiative that deals with prisoner workers’ lack of payment and the
practice of state coercion. Any and all prisoners who would like to
contribute their personal experience via written word should write tot
he above address. Those considered for publication will receive a
reply.
Those committees and individuals who’ve written us in the past, but
did not receive a reply, should write to our new address with your
contact info.
It is with immense frustration that I write to you on the behalf of
ALL offenders that are in the Indiana Department of Corrections (IDOC)
prisons that are run and operated by The Geo Group Inc. (a private
prison corporation). Prisoners here are receiving “State Pay,” which
consists of the following:
The level of unequal wages from The Geo Group Inc. regarding this
effort is appalling. Indiana Government Officials have unfortunately
failed to address the problem and have allowed the “State Pay” wage
disorder to continue.
In the State of Washington, on 27 October 2021, a Federal Jury
ordered The Geo Group Inc. at the ICE Processing Center (formerly the
Northwest Detention Center) liable under the State Minimum Wage Act
(MWA). In Washington, Attorney General Bob Ferguson filed a lawsuit
alleging that The Geo Group Inc. was violating the state minimum wage
law. The U.S. District Judge Robert Bryan ordered The Geo Group in
Tacoma, Washington to pay their detainees $13.69 hour. These are
immigrant detainees. These immigrant detainees were represented by four
(4) law firms. Names of the law firms are as follows;
Schroeter Goldmark & Bender – Seattle, WA
Open Sky Law PLLC – Kent, WA
Menter Immigration Law PLLC – Seattle, WA
Law Offices of Robert A. Free – Nashville, TN(1)
We believe that our pay here, less than 2% of the pay received in
Washington, is discrimination by The Geo Group Inc. here at the Indiana
Geo Facilities.
On 26 January 2021, President Joseph R. Biden, Jr (D) signed an order
and stated… “to stop corporations from profiting off of incarceration
that is less humane and less safe”. We believe that The Geo Group
Inc. is violating Title VII of the Civil Rights Act, which prohibits
racial discrimination in the workplace. State prisoners may not be
entitled to State Minimum Wage, but there is NO exception for private
for-profit detainees, prisoners, or offenders here. The Geo Group
prioritizes profits over rehabilitation, making us ALL less safe.
Indiana Government Officials and The Geo Group Inc. have to remember
that we are in an inflationary economy. Us prisoners here at The Geo
Group Inc. facilities here in Indiana are getting overwhelmed,
over-worked, and frustrated simply because we do not have the same
income or access to resources as others. We have material needs such as
hygiene, property, food, etc. that cannot be met due to the “State Pay”
wages that have NOT kept up with the exorbitant price of living.
At the Indiana Department of Corrections commissary from the Indiana
Correctional Industries Plainfield, IN Distribution Center, the prices
of our needs are increasing dramatically due to the inflationary factor.
NO prisoner in The Geo Group Inc. private run prison(s) who gets State
Pay should ever cower in fear of his/her employer‘s power to silence
legitimate points of view of their wages.
The State of Indiana and/or The Geo Group Inc. needs to raise the
starting pay wage significantly to a reasonable wage. It is time for the
State of Indiana and/or The Geo Group Inc. to make the financial
adjustments and changes.
We believe that there are laws, ordinances, policies, rules, acts,
statutes, procedures, or even regulations that have been violated or
criminalized by our Constitution in the Fair Labor Standards Act
(F.L.S.A), Administrator of Wages & Hour Division, U.S. Deptartment
of Labor, Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, Labor Management
Relations Act, etc. We know Indiana Government officials Governor Eric J
Holecomb, Commissioner Robert E Carter Jr, Deputy Commissioner/Chief
Financial Officer Dan Brassard, are the individuals who control our
scale wage that makes the financial adjustments and changes in our
“State Pay” for the The Geo Group Inc. to pay our wages.
A raise in starting pay will be a positive thing allowing more
offenders to find satisfaction in their careers and it can allow more
workers to make a living wage and contribute to the broader economy. Our
facility jobs are not a free pass to wipe our slates clean, they are an
acknowledgment that we have to change our lives to be more accountable
and the State of Indiana and/or The Geo Group Inc. is what will allow us
to do that. A productive offender in the Geo Group facility with a fair
wage will perform better work ethics, do things properly, and have
better responsibility.
We as prisoners are entitled to be paid minimum wage or a fair wage
for our labor keeping The Geo Group Inc. facilities up and running, like
preparing and serving food, running laundry, maintenance, landscaping,
mowing, sanitation, administration clerks, etc. We are not asking to be
put on an indefinite leave of absence means or that ALL Geo Group
contracts be terminated. We are exercising our rights, which are workers
rights, and show that we have a right to stand up for each other and for
justice for Geo Group Inc. prisoners who work at their facility and
receive state pay wages.
Please take into consideration, when we do get our “State Pay” the
I.D.O.C takes 15% right off the top. This money goes into our re-entry
account which we receive back upon our release back into the community.
This gives us a little financial assistance. Now here is this Geo Group
Inc. offender who has a C-Pay job, which is $0.15 an hour, works 6.5
hours a day, 5-days a week, comes out to be $19.50 per month. Now the
State takes 15% for re-entry which comes out to $2.89. This leaves you
only $16.32 a week to buy hygiene, property, food, paper, pens, etc. And
if you went to go to medical or dental, that’s a $5.00 charge and the
medication is $5.00.
Please also investigate the Geo Group Inc. in Tacoma, Washington
where they are paying immigrant detainees $13.69 an hour. This is
discriminating against us offenders and manipulating us due to what they
pay us as “State Pay” here in Indiana.
State of Washington Attorney General – Bob Ferguson filed lawsuit
against The Geo Group Inc. in 2017 [Washington v. Geo Group, USDC,
W. Dist. WA. Case No. 3:17-cv-05806RJB]
Detainees filed lawsuit in 2017 with assistance of Schroeter
Goldmark & Bender and Robert Andrew Free [Nwauzor v. Geo Group,
USDC, W. Dist. WA, Case No. C17-5769RJB]
Thank you for your time and patience.
MIM(Prisons) responds: First, we want to remind our
readers that a very small percentage of prisoners in this country are in
private prisons, and most of them are immigrant detention centers like
the one in Washington discussed. As the author above argues, there are
potential legal differences in how labor is considered in private
prisons compared to most prisons. And economically it is very different
because corporations like Geo Group are making money running prisons for
the state, but using basically free labor to do much of that work. This
is a very dangerous combination that economically incentivizes mass
incarceration.
In our 2018
survey of prison labor across the United $tates we found that wages
for maintenance work typically ranged between $0.14 and $0.63 per hour.
Though of course in some states prisoners do not get paid at all for
working to maintain the prisons. This puts Indiana at the low end of
states that do pay. But as this comrade and others have recently pointed
out, inflation is hitting hard in the form of commissary prices.
Therefore to have wages at the low end from 5 years ago is far from
adequate when most prisoners need to buy supplemental hygiene and food,
not to mention minor comforts.
Based on the information we can find online, the Geo Group stopped
having prisoners work right after the court decision, so no prisoners
are getting paid minimum wage. In addition they appealed to delay
back-paying those who had already worked in the past.(2)
Notes: 1. Prison Legal News, December 2021 Vol. 32
No. 12 pg. 26 and April 2022 Vol. 33 No. 4 pg. 30. published by the
Human Rights Defense Center 2. Alanna Madden, 6 October 2022, Ninth
Circuit takes up Geo Group appeal over underpaid detainees,
Courthouse News Service.
Lately there has been a rash of woke mail room staff and prison
officials who seem to be able to find “racism” everywhere they look.
Under Lock & Key has been censored by a number of these
activist employees of the state in Arizona, Indiana and Florida. This is
very odd, as most of our readers know we rarely even mention the concept
of race as we maintain that it is not a biologically valid concept, so
clearly we do not believe or promote ideas of racism or racial
superiority. But these snowflakes are just looking for reasons to be
offended and use the state to crush free speech and association of the
oppressed.
The Arizona Department of Corrections, Rehabilitation & Reentry -
Office of Publication Review gave as one of their reasons for censoring
Under Lock & Key
78 as:
“7.2.8 Content that is oriented toward and/or promotes racism and/or
religious oppression and the superiority of one race/religion/political
group over another, and/or the degradation of one
race/religion/political group by another.”
“…The pages identified containing such content are throughout,
including, but not limited to, pages 1, 2, 4, 9, 16.”
Page 2 is the same in every issue of Under Lock & Key
and is an explanation of what MIM(Prisons) is and how our programs work.
We do not promote racism or even discuss race on that page. Page 1, 4
and 9 contain reports on the struggle of Texas prisoners against
oppression, and page 16 lists ongoing campaigns, including the one in
Texas. It is confusing why Arizona is so worried about this campaign in
Texas, and why they would call it “racist.” However, it did advocate
boycotting the Juneteenth holiday, which triggered prison staff in Texas
to get very repressive.
On 21 November 2022, staff member Chambers of the Indiana Department
of Corrections censored Under Lock & Key
79 at Pendleton Correctional Facility. Pendleton has been censoring
all mail from MIM Distributors for the last year for spurious reasons.
Snowflake Chambers was offended by the spelling of Amerikkka with 3 K’s
and decided to label it Security Threat Group material.
Security Threat Group (STG) can be used to prevent materials from
entering the prison that facilitate illegal activities by a criminal
group (STG). STG cannot be used as an excuse to censor people for their
political beliefs. It is our belief that Amerikkka is a white
supremacist nation and therefore we spell it with 3 K’s to criticize it
as such. This is political speech, and it is legal in the U.S.A.
Florida State Prison (FSP) also deemed Under Lock & Key
79 to be “racist” among other things, on 2 December 2022. We really
must go through their reasoning point-by-point for censoring this
newspaper as it is quite revealing.
They objected to “Obtaining
Copy of Lawsuit on TX Mail Policy BP-03.91” because “our inmates
might try this”! The article is literally just telling people where to
write and how much to pay to get a copy of a pending lawsuit around
Texas mail policies. At this point it seems they’re just rubbing it in
our faces to use the most illegal reasons they can to censor us.
FSP employee J.M. Clillen (sp?) goes on to cite “Alabama
Prisoners Demand Freedom” because “talking about living conditions”.
So that’s illegal now? If we talk about conditions in prisons all of a
sudden we’re “racists”?
The one article Clillen cites that does not have a reason with it is
“Free
Palestine - Join the BDS Movement.” This couldn’t possibly be a
threat to security at FSP, and is clearly just demonstrating their
support for the Zionist (racist?) state of I$rael.
Finally we get to the “racist” claim, which was made against the
article “Conquering
My Demons” on page 13. This article is a self-criticism by a USW
comrade regarding eir past substance use and misogyny, and a call for
all of us to become new, better people. It discusses the resistance of
oppressed nations against the imperialists – which is our best guess as
to why they labelled it “racist.” Oh, and it also spells Amerikkka with
3 K’s. That’s not racism idiot, that’s a critique of racism.
There are no rights, only power struggles. And it is the oppressed
and powerless who are denied rights by the powerful in this racist woke
imperialist country.
Recent political frame ups with our fraternal org Communist Party of
Aztlán (CPA) has demanded that we raise awareness on political
repression and contemporary work of the Cointelhoes. We will be starting
a series on modern tactics unleashed on the oppressed nations.
We are also reaching out to the concentration kamps and to imprisoned
Aztlán to develop Republic of Aztlán (ROA) cells in concentration camps
across these occupied territories. Developing imprisoned Aztlán with
communist ideology is the first step toward liberation.
Some of our founders were trained via MIM(Prisons) study groups and
we want to revive this tradition once again. ROA chapters are autonomous
and are required to go through MIM(Prisons) study group level one before
being recognized and activated in a concentration kamp. Write in for
more info on joining the study program.
State repression is real in the United $tates of Amerikkka. The
Chicano Nation has undergone colonization and occupation since 1848. In
recent times our nation has developed in a way that calls for a higher
level of organization. This demand launched the founding of the
Communist Party of Aztlán, CPA (Marxist-Leninist-Maoist).
Three days after the announcement of the founding of the CPA(MLM) our
Chairman JV was arrested on trumped up charges. It is no coincidence
that the arrest of our Chairman occurred after this groundbreaking
announcement. We believe that the agents of the state have studied the
contradictions on these occupied territories and their threat assessment
highlights the threat a communist party for the Chicano nation would
pose.
Our Party has created a think tank to analyze the immediate attacks
on the Party and on Aztlán. We realize that the revisionist Trotskyite
and crypto-Trots like the CP-USA and RCP-USA are allowed to exist intact
because they pose no real threat to colonization. The CPA on the other
hand is a different story. For this reason our Party is forced to go
semi-underground.
We will not publish the names of our membership, but we will stand by
and struggle to free our Chairman of these false charges and illegal
kidnapping. It is well understood that had our Chairman been a wanna-be
capitalist or engaged in crimes against the people he would have been
left alone. The minute he stands up for the raza, repression is rained
down. This sacrifice was discussed and the necessity of the decision to
announce the founding of the Party was decided.
Our Chairman is not only completely innocent, but was targeted by the
state. This was COINTELPRO through and through. Our temporary loss of
our Chairman out in minimum security is imprisoned Aztlán’s gain. The
prisons are and always have been hotbeds of resistance, fertile grounds
where revolutionary shoots thrive. The CPA will establish its presence
and raise public opinion on both sides of the concentration kamp
walls.
On 26 December 2022, the Unified Maoist International Conference
(UMIC) announced the founding of the International Communist League
(ICL). The organizations involved see the need to build a new communist
international, building on the legacy of the Comintern and the
Revolutionary Internationalist Movement (RIM). As we’ve explained
elsewhere we disagree with the creation of a new communist international
at this time.(1)
This new ICL is truer to the Comintern than the RIM was, but remains
in the same outdated and revisionist global class analysis as RIM. The
ICL statement clearly upholds MIM’s first 2 dividing line questions,
while failing to address the third directly. MIM’s third point reads in
part:
” imperialism extracts super-profits from the Third World and in part
uses this wealth to buy off whole populations of oppressor nation
so-called workers. These so-called workers bought off by imperialism
form a new petty-bourgeoisie called the labor aristocracy. These classes
are not the principal vehicles to advance Maoism within those countries
because their standards of living depend on imperialism.”(2)
Arguably, this line was somewhat controversial in the mid-1980s, when
MIM struggled against the RIM’s Revolutionary Communist Party(U$A) on
this question. The ICL statement addresses the question in most depth
with the following:
“The economic crisis in 2008 that began as a finance crisis in the
USA was unloaded on the masses in the oppressed countries and even in
the imperialist countries themselves. Thus it has stricken the
proletariat of the imperialist countries, which instigated sharp
struggles for the defense of the achievements they conquered throughout
the 20th Century. The consequences of this crisis were not overcame,
this is why the recovering of employment is at the expense of worse
quality, lower wages and larger working day. The recovering is at the
expense of increasing the over-exploitation of the class.”(3)
We have never heard of “over-exploitation” in the context of humyn
labor before, so defining that term seems important here. The text is
correct to recognize that the crisis of 2008 was mostly pushed off onto
the oppressed countries. The rest is sufficiently vague, while touching
on some common cries of the social fascists. There is no summation
elsewhere in this wordy statement of the class (or nation or gender)
alliances of the populations of the imperialist countries. We are left
with the impression that they are allies, even if they suffer less than
most. To uphold this revisionist class analysis in 2022 is to ignore
some crucial lessons from the experience of the RIM itself.
While upholding the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution (GPCR),
this statement upholds the very ideas that the GPCR stood to combat –
those of the Theory of the Productive Forces. It is inconsistent to deny
the Theory of the Productive Forces and maintain that people in the top
10% global income bracket are the proletariat. Elsewhere we observe,
“Another lesson that MIM seemed to take from the great reversal in
Peru, was the importance of having a correct global class analysis for
Maoists everywhere. If a revolution based in the non-Spanish speaking
indigenous peoples of the highlands of the Andes mountains and the
Amazon rainforest is infiltrated by agents trained in the United $tates
and divided by a magazine out of London, then we see the real material
impacts of Third World communists seeing the people of the United $tates
and Great Britain as 90% proletarian allies. Not to mention, to not
understand the basic political economy of imperialism today is to lack a
Marxist framework from which to change the world.”(4)
Our disagreement with the formation of an ICL itself is largely
connected to our line on the labor aristocracy. But it also stands as
its own point on strategy in our current conditions.
The RIM criticized Mao for not building a communist international. It
seems the UMIC may agree with this critique based on their actions.
A difference in class/national interests between parties in the UMIC
is one reason we believe it is a faulty strategy. At best, the oppressor
nation parties will slow down the oppressed, at worse they will sabotage
them. Another problem is the mixing of parties engaged in armed struggle
with those that are not. This difference in strategic stage calls for
different approaches based on different interests. Yet the statement
announces that these parties are being held to democratic centralism
with each other through the ICL.
Step Forward on Stalin
One point where we see the UMIC statement disagree with RIM, and in a
good way, is in their assessment of Stalin during World War II and the
overall theory and practice of the united front. Not only does the
statement uphold the line of the Comintern during this period, it puts
the blame squarely on the parties where revisionism took over. This is
better than the RIM line (still upheld by many in the International
Communist Movement (ICM) to this day), which criticizes the Comintern
for rightism in its call for a united front against fascism. But MIM
went even further than the UMIC in disagreeing with this critique of the
Comintern to say that in countries like the United $tates there was no
revolutionary path to take at the time. Even if the CP-U$A had a correct
revolutionary line, there’s nothing they could have done that would have
supported the USSR more than what they did, given their conditions.
Those conditions being a base in the labor aristocracy.
The proliferation of statements and organizations upholding various
tenants of Maoism offers some signs of Maoism being a living science
that would-be revolutionaries are grappling with. Of course, the
practice of People’s War does this a million times more.
Of all the controversies that have been taken up in the ICM in recent
years, we have seen no public debate over the global class analysis. If
you are operating in a Third World country and isolating yourself from
the oppressor nations, then you could get very far without saying much
on the topic of the labor aristocracy in the imperialist countries. But
if you wish to engage in international conferences and you fail to
recognize the class reality on the ground, you mislead and endanger the
revolutionary movement.
A Note on Struggle Sessions
In our previous essay on this topic we
criticized author Joshua Moufawad-Paul and the blog Struggle Sessions
for advocating for a new International. On 2 January 2023, Struggle
Sessions editor deleted all their articles and posted a declaration of
the death of the project. This comes after a series of announcements and
critiques coming from the former Committee for the Reconstitution of the
Communist Party U$A (CRCPUSA), of which Struggle Sessions was
an unofficial theoretical mouthpiece. We hope to further investigate
lessons from the collapse of the CRCPUSA.
It is worth noting to our readers that the outlet publishing the
statement of the UCIM discussed here is a political ally of the CRCPUSA
and continues to support it as a project. They call themselves
Communist International: Marxist-Leninist-Maoist Online
Newspaper and are found at ci-ic.org.
This report is to inform other comrades of the new law that was
passed called the Keep Families Connected Act in California and to
expose the sneaky tactics the state is using to bastardize it. The Keep
Families Connected Act states that as of 1 January 2023 all calls
between Us (the prisoner class) and our families and friends will be
provided at no cost to Us or our people outside.
Here in the South Bay there was no fanfare for the Act’s passing, no
bulletin from jail administration stating this, or message on our
tablets, which have the phone app most use to call home. After further
research, i was informed by a Lieutenant pig that Keep Families
Connected Act only gives free calls in CDCr facilities, and county jails
like Main Jail North are not included. Seems California doesn’t actually
give two shits about keeping families connected.
The tablets we have in California are already used to record your
voiceprint (individually distinctive pattern of certain voice
characteristics, spectographically produced) and facial biometrics
(measurement and analysis of unique facial features, especially for
verifying personal identity) which to even use the tablets you must
agree to as part of the Terms of Use.
As is so common the case, anytime the oppressive elite pigs give us
something, it’s usually poisoned, warped, and deformed to suit their
means. To utilize these free calls your people must download an app
first (for iPhone it’s GTLConnect, for Android it’s GTL Phone App). As a
former hacktivist in the early days of the Anonymous Collective, i
believe these apps could be infected with many different types of
viruses, keyloggers and spyware included. This is true for the iPhone,
despite many peoples’ false notions that Apple products cannot be hacked
into.
It also should come as no secret that the Amerikan government does in
fact spy on its people, as was exemplified by the NSA leaks by Edward
Snowden, and the revelations of the FBI’s COINTELPRO of the 1960s and
1970s.
But downloading an app is not all your family and friends must do.
Once downloaded they must make an account, which if they use their real
information, now puts a name, date of birth (and with this DMV records
can be looked up, background checks administered) and thus every
recorded conversation now has a face they can put it to. This is my
speculation and by no means proven fact, yet we should always be wary
and skeptical of anything handed to Us from the bloody paws of the
capitalist-imperialist fucks whom oppress us.
We should learn from our past experiences through study to better
identify such reforms for what they really are: Band-Aids for bullet
wounds.
MIM(Prisons) adds: This week President Biden signed an
Act to require the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to ensure
reasonable rates for any kind of voice or video calls made from jails
and prisons in the country. To date, families and friends of prisoners
have paid ridiculous prices for phone calls to their imprisoned loved
ones. This profiteering discourages the maintenance and development of
positive relationships in the community that are important for
re-integration upon release. As such, we welcome these reforms, though
they are a small drop in the bucket of the extreme forms of social
isolation and torture imposed on hundreds of thousands of people in U.$.
prisons.
We also share the concerns of our comrade above. Though
communications into and out of prisons have always been assumed to be
monitored, the technology to do so is at another level now. And instead
of extorting families for phone fees, they are now strong-arming their
persynal and biometric information out of them, extending the arms of
the surveillance state into not just those convicted of a crime, but all
who wish to relate to them. It is hard enough to get people to avoid
such surveillance technology on the streets where people have
choices.
In the early days of Corrlinks, we could use email to communicate
with some of our subscribers. While we recognized the potential downside
of surveillance, all mail is potentially surveilled as well. However,
now that the model has developed they seem to uniformly charge money for
electronic mail to prisoners and require the installation of spyware and
giving persynally identifying information to the company and the prison.
So if you’ve tried to email us through these services and we don’t
respond, that is why.
In prisons, there are venues for prisoners who have been abused or
treated unfairly or inhumanely. When things like this happen, a prisoner
has a right to sue, but only if he can get his case to court.
The problem is that because of PLRA, or Prison Litigation Reform Act,
it’s much more difficult for a prisoner, even if he is right, to get his
case to court. In essence, PLRA requires prisoners to first exhaust the
Administrative Remedy procedure… or a grievance procedure. In Federal
Prisons, it is known as a BP.
So quick scenario; a Black prisoner is being harassed by white
officers, who: constantly use racial slurs and trash his cell, taking
his family pictures and other valuables. The prisoner tries to file a BP
to get to court. Months pass, with no success, so he tries to take it
straight to court. The court shoots down his claim, because he did not
go through proper procedure of filing a grievance. So, even if the
prisoner is right, the courts won’t acknowledge his lawsuit because he
didn’t go by the rules.
But, is the prison going by them? Let’s talk about that, and how
prisons like USP Tucson are actually breaking the rules, making it very
difficult for prisoners to properly file a lawsuit, because the
Administrative Remedy procedure is horribly flawed.
To begin, let me pull up a statement from a case law, Woodford v.
Ngo 548 US 81, 126, S. Ct 2378, 165 L.Ed 2d 368 (2006). I want to
share with you an argument a prisoner had about the grievance procedure,
and what the argument against it was:
“Respondent contends that requiring proper exhaustion will lead
prison administrators to devise procedural requirements that are
designed to trap unwary prisoners and thus to defeat their claims.
Respondent does not contend, however, that anything like this occurred
in his case, and it is speculative that this will occur in the future.
Corrections officials concerned about maintaining order in their
institutions have a reason for creating and retaining grievance systems
that provide — and that are perceived by prisoners as providing - a
meaningful opportunity for prisoners to raise meritorious grievances.
And with respect to the possibility that prisons might create procedural
requirements for the purpose of tripping up all but the most skillful
prisoners, while Congress repealed the “plain, speedy, and effective”
standard, see 42 U. S. C. §1997e(a)(1) (1994 ed.) (repealed 1996), we
have no occasion here to decide how such situations might be addressed.”
- Justice Samuel Alito
In short, this argument claims that the prisoner was incorrect that
prisons could – and do – make it much harder for prisoners to file a
grievance. After all, if the prisoner can’t file the grievance, he can’t
get to court to sue the officers. In the above case, the Black prisoner
is trying to go through the procedure, meaning he has to exhaust the
grievance procedure, before he can go to the courts. This kinda makes
sense, because one intent of the PLRA is to prevent a lot of frivolous
lawsuits by prisoners.
But in doing this, there is a flaw, one prison has used a cheat in
the procedure. Let me explain:
To begin the BP, or grievance process, a prisoner must first have an
issue… ok, check. The prisoner claims discrimination against officers,
so he has a right to file a grievance. Well, step one, as I use USP
Tucson as an example, is to get what is called a BP-8. This is the
lowest form of the grievance, and it should be available upon
request.
Problem: Here at USP Tucson, it isn’t. The prison makes a policy that
ONLY the Counselor can hand out a BP-8. So, what if the Counselor isn’t
there? You have to wait to find the Counselor, because apparently no
other officer in the world can get that piece of paper. This is already
an obstacle of due process. In other states, you can get a grievance
form from any officer, especially the ones working in your dorm. It
makes sense, they are there all day, why not allow them to pass out the
grievances?
But, if you change the rules, you then regulate how often you pass
out the grievances. Now, you can’t get a BP unless there is a certain
officer there. And if he/she isn’t there, they don’t pass them out. So,
in theory, a Counselor can stiff-arm prisoners from getting a BP, by
making excuses of not being there, or “not having any”.
I say this from a LOT of experience… this happens a lot here at USP
Tucson. Many prisoners are frustrated with the Administrative Remedy
because for most, it simply does not work. The case law implies that all
prisons want to make the grievance procedure available for the
maintaining of order, this is not necessarily true at all.
Another technique for obstructing the grievance procedure is to
simply “lose” the grievance. If you manage to corner the Counselor and
get a BP-8 form, you then have to fill it out and hand it back to them.
Problem: The BP-8 is a single white piece of paper, and once you hand it
to the Counselor, you have NO copy. So how do you know they actually
processed it? In many cases, they don’t. They either “lose” it, or
simply trash it.
So, if you can get past the BP-8, there then is a formal BP-9, which
is on carbon paper. You have to fill out the form (if you’re lucky
enough to even get one), then turn it in to the Counselor (if you can
find “Waldo”), and wait for them to give you a carbon copy, if they
don’t lose it or trash it.
Additionally, the carbon paper on the BP-9 is so poor, you have to
have the strength of the Hulk to press down, to make the copy on the
second page, let alone the third or fourth. So, the BP-9 is almost
worthless after the first copy is torn off.
If you get no responses from the BP-9, then you have to go to the
BP-10, which goes over the heads of staff. But rinse and repeat on the
procedure. It is incredibly difficult to get the forms, when in
actuality, it should ALWAYS be available to any prisoner, at any time,
by most staff members. But staff plays keep away, from prisoners, to
prevent them from getting the BP’s, so they cannot timely file.
I say all this from experience. In February, I filed a BP-9 against
staff in my dorm because they refused to give us chemicals to clean the
showers during a lockdown. Over that period of time, an average of 30
prisoners used each shower cell, and not one drop of chemicals were used
to clean it. Think about that, how many of you would walk into a shower
after 30 other people had already used it? How about 10? Even 5? No one
here should have to do that, but staff knew about it, and did
nothing.
So, I wrote a BP-9 and the Case Manager took it and “turned it in” to
the Counselor, long story short, as of this date, 9 September 2022, I
have heard nothing, and they had only 30 days to respond. My guess, they
threw it away.
This is much like cheating at chess, where we have to match wits
against a facility that seems to be dead set on preventing prisoners
from properly (and legally) filing a grievance. Let us not lose the fact
that the grievance procedure is Constitutionally protected; no officer
or staff has the right to prevent prisoners from filing.
But, if you cannot complete the grievance, you cannot get to court,
because they will claim, as the case law showed, that the inmate didn’t
do the proper work, when in fact he did all he could do, but staff
aggressively prevented him from being able to file. The courts seem to
be blind, or naive, that prison officials would actually HONOR the
grievance system.
Think about that, why would they honor a system that holds their
staff accountable? Do you really think they are going to play fair if,
in the example I gave, a Black Prisoner is trying to sue racist
officers? Do you really think they are going to let the BP’s go through,
when they can block it at every turn?
It’s like cheating at chess, and it’s also why so many grievances
fail, because places like USP Tucson have figured out the loopholes and
are exploiting them to prevent prisoners from their constitutional
rights. It happens all the time, and nobody is doing anything about
it.
I mean, take out my queen, rooks and bishops, and yeah, it’s hard for
me to win too.
MIM(Prisons) adds: This is why comrades in United
Struggle from Within initiated the campaigns “We Demand Our Grievances
are Addressed.” Comrades developed petitions for many states as well as
the Feds to appeal these issues to higher and outside authorities to try
to bypass the problem described above. This campaign has included other
tactics like filing group grievances and even taking other group actions
when grievances are ignored. In many states comrades have called for an
outside review board to address these complaints. But ultimately, there
are no rights only power struggles, so leaving these issues in the hands
of the state will only do so much. The solution to the problem is coming
together as prisoners, as the oppressed and fighting for these rights
every step of the way. That is why we must build peace and unity among
prisoners to get grievances addressed.