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 am writing to you from High Desert State Prison here in Indian Springs
Nevada. I am hoping that you will send me my own issue of ULK to
read, as well as copies of your grievance and food petitions for the
state of Nevada. I have a list of about 35 people that are willing to
fill out and mail out the above petitions.
The state of affairs here at HDSP is criminal!
The grievance system is only in place as a way to slow prisoners access
to the courts, and attempt to dissuade us from redressing our issues.
The medical department at this prison is inadequate and failing to
provide treatment for prisoners, some even have very serious conditions
such as cancer, hepatitis C, etc. It is not unheard of for a prisoner to
wait 6-8 months to be seen after they make known their conditions.
The food is served in the same space used to cut hair, play cards, work
out, shower, etc. The portions are inadequate and far from balanced by
any stretch of the word.
Prisoners are denied the proper time out of their cells (Administrative
Regulation 801.05(2) state that “closed custody will receive a minimum
of five hours a day of out-of-cell time, contingent on positive
conduct”). On average the prisoners in my unit receive 13 hours per week
of out of cell time. 22 hours short of the mandated time!
Mail is often mishandled, lost or given to the wrong prisoner, because
lazy pigs refuse to do their jobs and check IDs and match information
before handing over pieces of mail.
The pigs often just slide mail under cell doors at 2am, causing
prisoners’ family addresses, pictures and vital information to be
disseminated.
The issues far outweigh anything positive that HDSP may attempt to
provide us. I have teamed with my current cellmate to file as many
colorable claims against the NDOC/HDSP as we’re able to, but two against
hundreds is a hard fight.
The support of MIM(Prisons) in our fight through providing us with tools
such as ULK and sample petitions, books, etc. is invaluable!
I want to start to organize comrades here at HDSP and welcome your help
in doing so properly. Please send me any resources you have that my
help.
We received some criticism for our
response
to a discussion of George Jackson printed in ULK 65. In this
article we described how some of Jackson’s writings are anti-wimmin and
anti-gay. While we stand by that line, we take a lesson from our
critics. Printing this in isolation, without commenting on all the
positive contributions Jackson made to the revolutionary movement, was a
mistake. George Jackson overall played an important positive role as a
revolutionary. While we need to analyze our historical revolutionary
movements and leaders and learn from their mistakes, we should not
dismiss great leaders who made mistakes or had some political line
wrong. George Jackson’s mistakes did not outweigh eir positive
contributions.
On 7 January 2019 the Supreme Court refused to take up a First Amendment
case challenging the statewide ban of Prison Legal News (PLN) in
the Florida Department of Corrections. The ban has been in place since
2009. This appeal was the final attempt to challenge the 11th U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals which sided with the Florida DOC.(1) Each year
thousands of cert petitions are filed with the Supreme Court and most
are not heard. As is typical, no reasons were given for the PLN
case denial.
The Florida DOC maintains that they are censoring PLN for safety
and security reasons. The appellate court found this censorship
justified related to certain advertisements in PLN including ads
for pen pal services, businesses that purchase postage stamps, and
third-party phone services.
We know there is no real safety and security justification for censoring
PLN. It’s an educational publication that helps many prisoners
gain legal knowledge and fight back against injustices. PLN is,
however, a threat to the institution of prisons in the United $tates.
Prison Legal News fights for prisoners’ rights and exposes injustices
around the country. This is counter to the interests of a system that is
focused on social control.
A number of groups stepped up to file or sign briefs in support of
PLN. Of particular interest is one from a group of former
Correctional Officers, including some from Florida. They argue, very
rationally, that the complete censorship of PLN is an exaggerated
response to security concerns and a constitutional violation.(2) Of
course these former C.O.s, and many others who support allowing
PLN into the Florida DOC, made very narrow arguments that still
protected the DOC’s “right” to censor anything they deem dangerous.
These supporters are just opposing censorship for something so obviously
not dangerous as it exposes the falsehood that prisons are censoring
mail in the interests of safety and security.
This PLN lawsuit sets a very bad precedent for others fighting
censorship as the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals decision stands.
Fortunately it should not directly impact ULK as we don’t run
these third-party ads. Though Florida did censor ULK 62 for
“stamp program advertisement.” While we do accept stamps as donations,
we run no stamp programs. This goes to show that when there is no
justification for censorship, the prisons will just make up things not
even in the publication.
Any ruling upholding censorship in prisons is a bad one. This ruling
further exposes the reality that there are no rights, only power
struggles. The First Amendment only protects speech for those privileged
enough to buy that protection.
I am a prisoner at Crossroads Correctional Center in Cameron, Missouri.
I’m currently being held in solitary confinement for our May 12 uprising
against the oppression and abuse inflicted on us by the administration
and guards.
For months, the administration had been keeping us locked in our cells
for 23 hours a day, in population! Using excuses of “short on staff,” we
are only allowed to either shower or call our loved ones for one
30-minute session per day. Our one-hour recs are cut to 45 and 30
minutes consistently. The inmate barber shop is closed. Visits are
canceled. Guards are verbally and physically abusive.
Until, on May 12th at dinner chow (2 hours late) at 7:30 pm, 288
prisoners participated in a mass sit-in, in peaceful protest to all of
the injustices. Instead of answering requests for talks with
white-shirts, all officers fled both chow halls and kitchen, leaving us
locked in, and grouped outside the windows and taunted us. The sit-in
quickly escalated into the largest “riot” in Missouri history,
consisting of a reported $4 million in damages, with the complex being
taken over and held for over 7 hours. Inside, only 2 people were
attacked before leadership and unity were established.
Countless abuses and injustices followed our return to custody,
including: remaining zip-tied for 7-9.5 hours, forced to urinate
ourselves, beatings, double-celling prisoners in single-man cells for a
week with no mattress or bedding, less than 1000-calorie daily diet
instituted for the entire camp for over 70 days, etc.
Through all this, the administration kept up its tricks of sowing hate
and dissension amongst prisoners in population by blaming the 3-month
lockdown on us by actually naming us to other prisoners in hopes of
retaliation). Visits were canceled, no canteen, etc.
However, those of us in confinement know the truth: in 2017, we had a
mass race-riot of Browns & Whites vs Blacks, and less than 12 months
later those same races, true those same prisoners, come together to
fight in unity against oppression! Me and about 20 other comrades came
together again in September 2018.
It is coming up on 6 months since our placement in seg and we are likely
to receive another 90 days just for good measure, but we are still
standing. There are 78 of us from the uprising in seg, and many of us
belong to one organization or another. When we are released we will
continue to spread and build on this unity that was formed under great
oppression. We will carry this momentum to bring all prisoners together
to face the true enemy!
We have seen and heard praise for our battle and victory in the struggle
throughout other max securities in Missouri. There have been other
uprisings that have followed ours at a couple mediums, (one was a
race-riot, but with guidance and support those aggressions can be
properly re-directed), and the administration is taking notice. The
five
principles of the United Front are taking hold in Missouri. We will
do our part to learn, share, teach and uphold them as we struggle
together in our war against oppression. I will do my part in not only
spreading the message to mi raza, but others as well. Unity is the key!
Viva la gente!
MIM(Prisons) responds: We printed
some
good discussion about these Missouri protests in ULK 65. This
writer highlights what is most important about these sorts of actions:
the learning by participants and observers about what prisoners can
accomplish with unity. By building the United Front for Peace in
Prisons, comrades in Missouri are building strength and unity, setting
up the conditions for stronger actions in the future.
On 13 January 2019, MIM(Prisons) sent 230 signatures on the petition to
shut down Africom to the Black Alliance for Peace (BAP) who will be
presenting them to the Black Congressional Congress after the Martin
Luther King Jr. holiday. This petition calls for the disbanding of
Africom (a U.$. imperialist tool to control African militaries), the
removal of all U.$. military bases on African soil and the end to U.$.
invasions, bombings and other military operations on the continent.
So far we have received petitions from United Struggle from Within (USW)
comrades in California, Texas, Louisiana and Georgia. BAP is accepting
signatures until April 4 – the anniversary of the assassination of
Martin Luther King, Jr. We encourage people to write to us for petitions
ASAP and get your signatures in to us by April 1. And we encourage
comrades to continue to spread information on this topic to build public
opinion against U.$. imperialism in Africa.
USW comrades faced resistance in carrying out this campaign from staff
and some prisoners. One USW cell lost 2 sheets of signatures in an
altercation with a racist prisoner who opposed its work. Elsewhere in
California, prison staff were ordered to target anti-Africom fliers for
removal, and USW comrades were targeted for their leadership which
forced signature gathering to end early. We have seen increased mail
tampering and censorship with California comrades since this campaign
began. If it weren’t for repression, we would have had twice the number
of signatures to submit before the deadline.
While our numbers weren’t as high as the goal set by USW, comrades did a
good job of turning this around on relatively short notice. Our slow
lines of communication limit our ability to organize swiftly. So this
was good experience for us in improving in that realm. One thing we need
to do better next time is to have a larger list of USW members to
forward campaign materials to. If you are a member of USW and did not
get the Africom campaign packet, let us know and keep us updated on your
organizing work so that you stay on our list of active USW members.
Below are some reports we received back with the completed petitions.
A USW cell in California: Here are 54 signatures we gathered. I
hoped there’d be more but all our volunteers backed out on us at the
last minute. At least one volunteer was reluctant to participate due to
fear of repression. Besides that however it was a good campaign overall.
The fliers with the timeline really came in handy. They helped us
explain to people what the petition was about. In many instances me and
another volunteer spoke at length to people about the nature of the
campaign making it clear that our focus here was the oppressed &
exploited people of Africa. In some situations, however, we found
ourselves agitating for this campaign by talking about the fact that
even Amerikan troops’ lives were being needlessly sacrificed so that the
U.$. government could secure the free flow of natural resources out of
Africa. We did this keeping in mind how the Vietnamese National
Liberation Front established relations with just about every and any
Amerikan organization that was critical of U.$. involvement in Vietnam.
The Vietnamese were smart in the respect that they were able to
masterfully exploit every crack and division in the domestic U.$.
anti-war movement.
A great many signatories were Mexican nationals and nationals from
different Central American countries who didn’t have to listen to more
than the basics of our line before they signed. When agitating amongst
this Spanish-speaking population we also found ourselves linking the
plight of the Central American caravan to that of African refugees
stranded at sea being denied entry into Europe.
Only three people refused to give us their signatures. Two of these
people were skeptical from the gate and requested more information on
Africom, which we happily handed over, whereas one refused to believe us
and called us liars. All three were “brown proud patriots.”
In closing, we’d like to thank the Black Alliance for Peace for letting
us be a part of this campaign. While gathering signatures we found that
prisoners were empathetic to the plight of Africans at the hands of U.$.
imperialism in this new scramble for Africa. Surely the great African
masses will successfully resist U.$. oppression, exploitation and
domination, eject the colonizers and have a principal role in defeating
U.$. imperialism once and for all. We hope we’ve made a difference. In
Struggle!
Earlier these comrades had reported: We made copies of existing
fliers and put them up in different buildings beforehand in an effort to
build public opinion for the campaign. Unfortunately, we just received
word a couple days ago that all the fliers we put up were taken down by
officers on the orders of their superiors. When officers were asked why
the fliers were removed they said they didn’t know, they just received a
call explaining to them what to look for and to remove them. This is
highly suspect since our fliers were up along with a variety of other
fliers on an informational board with over 30 fliers including religious
propaganda. Yet the Africom campaign fliers were singled out and
removed. All this follows an odd run-in with security squad about a
month ago. We’ve since put the fliers back up.
A report from another USW cell in California: I have enclosed 1
sheet [30 signatures] for the petition to dissolve the Africom military
command. There are two pages of missing signatures that we worked very
hard to acquire here. The problems last week started over a rude racist
comment about “nigger politics,” which was dealt with promptly on the
spot. [Two comrades from this USW cell ended up in the hole as a result
of this conflict.]
MIM(Prisons) adds: One comrade who did not participate in the
petition drive challenged the campaign to shut down Africom, and in
particular questioned Ajamu Baraka as a former Vice Presidential
candidate with the Green Party. While MIM(Prisons) did not endorse
Baraka’s electoral campaign, we whole-heartedly support this campaign to
get U.$. imperialism out of Africa, and stand with Baraka on
revolutionary nationalist positions such as the one ey took in a recent
article responding to the Prosper Africa plan:
“Africans in the U.S. must make a choice. Malcolm said you cannot sit at
the table and not have any food in front of you and call yourself a
diner. Africans in the U.S. have been sitting at the table of U.S.
citizenship and calling themselves ‘Americans’ while our people are
murdered, confined to cages in prisons, die giving birth to our
children, die disproportionately before the age of five, live in
poverty, are disrespected and dehumanized. A choice must be made, do you
throw in with this dying system or do you align with the working class
and oppressed peoples of the world.”(1)
In prison, it is considered to be a privilege to be a part of the
general population (G.P.). And it is considered a punishment to be
placed in a segregated housing unit (SHU). In order to compel prisoners
to abide by the rules of the prison, this system of reward and
punishment is put into place.
Here are a few key differences between G.P. and a SHU: In G.P., you
may get to come out of your cell for two to three hours a day. You live
with a cellmate. You may have access to the gym and library. You may
spend any funds you have on canteen items. You may walk to the chow
hall, and you may walk to medical and any other program you attend.
In a segregated housing unit, you are in your cell for twenty-three to
twenty-four hours a day. You may or may not have a cellmate. You have no
access to the gym and the only books you have access to are the ones the
librarian sends to segregation. You may only spend funds on legal
material, stationary, and hygiene products. You have your food brought
to your door as well as your medication, and your opportunity to
participate in programs is limited.
Now, I shall elaborate upon this contradiction and give you the views of
a politically conscious prisoner. Most prisoners are so uneducated and
illiterate that if a topic doesn’t show up on television, they know
nothing about it. To be placed in segregation away from their “idiot
box” would bring them unbearable anguish. They also cannot do without
being able to get on the telephone, shake their loved ones down for
money, and then spending it all on extremely over-priced canteen items.
The young hip-hop generation cannot imagine having to exist without the
support of their fellow gang members to boost their courage to oppress
another, or trade hedonistic rap songs with one another.
Therefore, being placed in a segregated housing unit is terrifying to
most prisoners. So much so, that they will tap-dance, bend over
backwards and shine the warden’s boots. Quietly suffering verbal abuse
and humiliation from corrupt psychotic pigs. And when their frustration
builds up, they will direct their anger at another prisoner, never
abasing the iron hand oppressor.
Then there are those of us who do not care for rewards and punishments.
We simply choose not to participate in the perpetuation of our own
dehumanization. We choose not to assimilate into the machinations of the
koncentration kamp. We don’t care about snack cakes, sodas, and chips;
we’d rather not be brainwashed by the Nazi programs; and we can do
without the zombifying tel-a-vision. We find peace in the seclusion of
solitary confinement where there are fewer distractions. Without having
to be herded like cattle to and from to the chow hall and medical, we
have more time to reflect, study and work toward our goal of state-less
society.
MIM(Prisons) responds: Yes, we should try to take advantage of
any opportunity do the best possible political work we can. For those
locked in solitary, this means plenty of time to study and write and
think. But we know this isolation has some very negative consequences
for humyn physical and mental health.
Organizing is necessarily about interacting with other people. So while
it’s true that we run into lots of folks who are content to just sit in
front of the T.V. and do their time, our challenge is finding ways to
reach them. Isolating ourselves from the masses inherently makes us
disconnected from them, and also isolates us from potential recruits who
are mixed in G.P. and ready to jump on board. For those in seg, this
comrade’s advice about making it a good use of your time is well placed.
But for those with contact with others, let’s strive to make the best of
it in G.P. too by building and growing the movement.
I am a inmate in the state of Pennsylvania. I am in a state prison in
Marionville, PA called Forest. I’ve been reading Under Lock and Key for
some time now.
I would like to know how honest are they really being to you. When you
see the state jails reduce their population. Then the county increased
the population. How many of them prisoners are waiting to be sentenced
for state prison, or even waiting to go to one? Within the past few
years, I’ve seen the state of Pennsylvania close down 3 to 4 jails yet
open up two big jails. How is that saving any money? When it will cost
more to run them than it did for the 3 to 4 they closed down. I am very
confused.
Now they got all our mail going to the state of Florida, blaming it all
on drugs, yet you got several guards coming down with food poisoning.
That is the same food us prisoners eat. So tell me how many prisoners
have food poison, but yet not saying nothing about it?
So let’s really be honest with one another. I am just getting sick of
reading all of the stories about state prisoners, but yet never really
seeing anything really happen. This is all one big money scam. You know
it as well as I do so who are we trying to B.S. Like I said, let’s be
honest with each other. All of us prisoners are in jail for breaking the
law at some point.
Yet they do it each and every day, and get away with it.
Yet everyone is always talking about the population of prisoners. Give
them something to work for. It will stop a lot of violence in the jails.
I do realize I am making a lot of sense. Yet they do not want to do so.
Only because that will be taken money from them.
Yet it’s okay for them to start an prisoner late in a program. When
their time is up, parole will give them a hit only because they are not
done with their program. Yet most of the programs can be done on the
outside.
Statement of Unity: I, “Big Real,” founder and president of F.A.T.,
willfully submit this statement of unity because the united front
principles relate to our drive for education and our motto (Knowledge Is
Power). Also, we use education to destroy negative outputs and increase
positive aspects relating to peace and enlightenment.
Recruiting tactics
When it comes to recruiting, the tactics involved to build an
organization are not as difficult as one thinks. As we all know,
relations based on the same agenda and goals are fundamental in showing
a common interest in the struggle. Yet, the key to building an
organization takes something more complex but simple.
Light travels at the speed of 186,000 mps. This speed is way faster than
the speed of sound. Instead of expressing your feelings on how people
should follow, simply lead. Instead of being “heard,” be “seen.”
Moreover, a key factor is observation and analysis. Knowing when to act,
how to act, and who to act around creates the best action. When the
destination is desired, the express lane is always open and willing. I
use the heat of the moment to build my team. Then observation and
analysis will cultivate the positioning.
I am currently housed in the Bexar County Adult Detention Center. We
have had enough of the senselessness & oppression that we have been
subjected to, & remain under.
I have somehow been dubbed by my peers to be the leader of this movement
that is being birthed here which is known as the “Dungeon” or the
“Ghetto.” I have been helping people with lawsuits & educating them
on legal terminology. Mind you, we are being punished for being ex-gang
members. They do not allow us to go to church, they do not allow us to
go to the law library or to speak with a certified paralegal, or to go
to anger management, parenting classes, educational courses, absolutely
nothing. Not only that, but they have somehow successfully monopolized
the food industry in here. This has been going on for years. The same
company who provides us with our 3 meals a day also runs the commissary,
so it’s no wonder that our meals are dramatically under the 2,000
calorie mark. They feed us scanty rations making commissary a MUST if
you don’t want to pass out from hunger or develop hunger pains. They
sell a single pack of Ramen Noodles for 1,250% over market value. $1.00
each, when at stores you get 1 soup for 8 cents. That’s too much. They
even sell individual items with no bar-code for over 1,000% market
value. We are starving.
The medical treatment is a bust. My cellmate almost developed sepsis
when he got a staph infection & they gave him stool softener &
laxatives as treatment. They charge people for chronic care, & they
charge us financial restitution for things without the due process of
law. Say you move into a cell & something is damaged, there’s
nothing you can do about it. If they catch you, you get written up &
classification comes to see you where you will be found guilty &
charged for the damaged item; hundreds of dollars! Notice there’s no
mention of being fingerprinted, or read any rights, or any of that. Not
just that but the local law enforcement agencies have been paying
criminals (as they always do) to create this cycle of insanity. Out on
the grimy streets of San Antonio, people are getting “gangstalked,”
murdered, set up, driven to the brink of insanity…Etc. Etc. It’s all
this federal gangstalking. Notice that I come from San Antonio. a
military city, so you know the oppression is hard over here.
I’m sitting here on a murder charge–they set me up because I refused to
become a fed. They made 5 different propositions to me out here & I
refused. Twice I was met nearby after refusing those propositions, by
hit men. My face was plastered all over every major news station in San
Antonio at the busiest time of media watching where they dubbed me as
guilty & showed a video of some guy who doesn’t even look or move
like me. All my friends and family know I didn’t do it. I need help. And
a lot of it.
Thank you so much for what you guys do. I really appreciate it.
The first step(s) to move as a Revolutionary, all must know what to
stand up to and fight for. Such comrades such as Che Guevara, Martin
Delany, and H. Rap Brown (just to name a few) all stood for solidarity
to instruct the masses on “Black Sovereignty”. Nowadays, the Black
movement must be reconstructed from the “inside.” What I mean from the
“inside”, I’m referring to the mind because so many of those on the
outside are still mentally incarcerated by the wicked oppressor. In the
words of Steve Biko, “The most potent weapon in the hands of the
oppressor is the mind of the oppressed”.
As those that’s with in the “United Separation” movement–we believe in
“salutation and friendship and stand firm with all our comrades that’s
locked and chain on these plantations across the United Snakes of
Amerikkka. On these plantations (on the East Coast) such plantations are
guarded by the Black Gloves. The black gloves are a group of slave
masters transformed into CO’s with tattoos of a black baby with a”noose”
around his neck. These devils formed this group in Clinton Correctional
Facility but has spread over New York State (Attica, Elmira)
corrections.
Not so long ago in Clinton there was a finding of “human remains” under
the floor in the gym where the teachers once stood. This was only
discovered because the gym was being reconstructed. Also, those devils
in Attica keep a ziplock bag filled with teeth that they show off to
prisoners to instill fear, because they’re known for kicking out teeth.
What’s more crazy is the “surf board”–that’s when they hog tie a
prisoner and sit on his back and “ride him” down a flight of stairs!
The United Separation has merged its presence alongside with the New
York Bloods, who stand together as one in the fight with racism,
imperialism, and capitalism in this enslave-system in the United $tates.
On behalf of all of us, we like to thank ULK, USW and the helping
and teachings of MIM(Prisons). Also we would like to request any
Revolutionary books and/or literature that can be an asset to the United
Separation.
“The first lesson a revolutionary must learn is that he is a doomed man
unless he understands this, he does not grasp the essential meaning of
his life”–Huey P. Newton