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.
The Washington State Department of Ecology recently required the
Washington State Dept of Corrections to conduct an investigation at
Washington State Penitentiary to determine the type and location of
contaminants present, and evaluate cleanup options.
They found hazardous waste (lead, gasoline) in the soil and well water
system here at the prison. This water is used for drinking, showering,
cooking, etc.
On 9 December 2012, local news ran the story regarding toxic waste in
the water here at the prison. Two days later, coincidentally, prison
staff were handing out printouts regarding the “toxics cleanup program.”
Are they trying to lead us to believe that they had no prior knowledge
of this potentially dangerous problem prior to a couple days ago?
Chemicals (TCE and PCE) were identified in ground water outside the
exterior prison fences. Some of these chemicals were used in furniture
refinishing and repair, license plate manufacturing, dry cleaning, motor
pool maintenance, metal working and welding, photo processing, sign
manufacturing, and medical and dental labs.
The report given to prisoners claims that the levels of PCE and TCE in
certain groundwater monitoring wells no longer pose a health concern to
humans or the environment. However, they do admit that “gasoline and
lead in soil exceed state standards at certain locations.”
This is something that needs to be looked at by an independent
scientist/law firm, so we prisoners know that we have chances of living
a healthy life, in and out of prison.
MIM(Prisons) adds: As a prisoner discussed in the article
“Environment
and Prisons” in Under Lock & Key 7: “The main thing
that I learned from this MT 12 was of the overwhelming toxic
dump sites in and around oppressed nations areas. . .Yet we hardly hear
a murmur from the media when toxic dumps spring up in areas where the
oppressed nations swell. Third World countries have become the
imperialist dump site. I watched a news program around a month ago about
how petty bourgeois here in the U.S. were setting up these scam
‘recycle’ centers for computers and ‘e-trash.’ These ‘recycle’ centers
would turn around and ship off this toxic junk to Third World nations
and turn a profit, even though there’s supposed laws prohibiting this
toxic dumping (for Petty Bourgeois and small time entrepreneurs) it is
still continued with a nod and a wink. The bourgeois, big business,
transnational corporations etc. are a whole different story. They
continue to dump toxins on the Third World nations with only
encouragement from imperialist economists.”
We should not be surprised when toxic waste is found in or around
prisons as well. In fact, we have published reports of similar incidents
in
Connally
Unit in Texas and
Kern
Valley State Prison in California. Those suffering under similar
conditions must continue to expose these incidents, and campaign for
basic safety for the imprisoned. We then need to take this one step
further, as the contributor quoted above does, and put it in the context
of imperialist environmental destruction and national oppression so that
contaminants aren’t just pushed into someone else’s backyard.
“The Anti-Exploits of Men Against Sexism” Ed Mead Revolutionary
Rumors PRESS RevolutionaryRumors@gmail.com
This pamphlet is an historical account of the organization Men Against
Sexism (MAS). It is written in an informal, story-telling style, from
the perspective of Ed Mead, one of MAS’s primary organizers.
“Anti-Exploits” spans the development of MAS, from Mead’s first
encounter with the near-rape of a fellow prisoner on his tier in the
mid-1970s, to the successful height of the organization and the
eradication of prisoner rape in Washington State Prison. This success
impacted facilities all across the state.
Men Against Sexism was created to bring prisoners together to fight
against their common oppression. Mead recognized that homophobia,
sexism, rape, and pimping were causing unnecessary divisions within the
prisoner population. “Only by rooting out internalized sexism would men
treat one another with respect.”(p. 5) He brought together
politically-minded prisoners, queers, and even some former sexual
predators, to change the culture of what was acceptable and not on the
tier.
We should take the example of MAS as inspiration to identify our own
collective divisive behaviors on our unit, and attempt to build bridges
to overcome these barriers. Mead’s reputation of being a revolutionary,
stand-up guy in defense of prisoners’ rights preceded him across the
facility, and helped him win allies in unlikely places.
In the mid-1970s, prison conditions were much different than they are
today, and organizing MAS seems to have been relatively easy according
to the account given. Of course there were challenges amongst the
prisoner population itself (for example, MAS defending a convicted
pedophile from being gang raped and sold as a sex slave put many people
off) but the administration didn’t play a significant role in thwarting
the mission of MAS. The primary organizers were allowed to cell
together, and several different prisoner organizations were mentioned
which had their own meeting spaces.
Today it seems we are lucky if more than two prisoners can get together
to do anything besides watch TV. This is a testament to the dialectical
relationship between the prisoner movement and the forces of the state.
During the time of MAS, the prisoner movement was relatively strong
compared to where it’s at today. After the booming prisoner rights
movement of the 1970s, the state figured out that to undermine those
movements they needed to develop methods to keep prisoners isolated from
each other. Not the least significant of which is the proliferation of
the control unit, where prisoners are housed for 23 or more hours per
day with very little contact with the world outside their cell, let
alone their facility.
MAS recognized that there is power in numbers. They collected donations
from allies outside prison to purchase access to cells from other
prisoners and designated them as “safe cells.” MAS would identify
newcomers to the facility who looked vulnerable and offer them
protection in these group safe cells. This is in stark contrast to how
the state offers so-called protection to victims of prisoner rape, which
is generally to isolate them in control units.(1) Bonnie Kerness of the
American Friends Service Committee writes of this practice being used
with transgender prisoners, and the concept applies to all prisoners who
are gender oppressed in prison no matter their gender identity,
“In some cases this can be a safe place to avoid the violence of other
prisoners. More often this isolation of transgender prisoners places
them at greater risk of violence at the hands of correctional officers…
“Regardless of whether or not it provides some level of protection or
safety, isolation is a poor alternative to general population. The
physical, emotional, spiritual, and psychological impacts of solitary
confinement are tantamount to torture for many.”(2)
As late as 2009, data was compiled by the Bureau of Justice Statistics
(BJS) stating “Approximately 2.1% of prison inmates and 1.5% of jail
inmates reported inmate-on-inmate sexual victimization, whereas
approximately 2.8% of prison inmates and 2.0% of jail inmates reported
staff sexual misconduct.”(3) Certainly much of this staff-on-prisoner
sexual assault occurs in general population, but isolating victims makes
them that much more accessible.
Isolation as the best option for protection is the most obvious example
of individualizing struggles of prisoners. What is more individualized
than one persyn in a room alone all day? Individualizing prisoners’
struggles is also carried out by the rejection of group grievances in
many states. All across the country our comrades meet difficulty when
attempting to file grievances on behalf of a group of prisoners. In
California, a comrade attempted to simply cite a Director’s Level Appeal
Decision stating MIM is not a banned distributor in the state on h
censorship appeal, but it was rejected because that Director’s Level
Decision “belongs to another inmate.”(4) We must identify the state’s
attempts to divide us from our potential comrades in all forms, and
actively work against it.
MAS worked to abolish prisoner-on-prisoner sexual slavery and rape,
where the pigs were consenting to this gender oppression by
noninterference. But the state paid for this hands-off approach when the
autonomy of the movement actually united prisoners against oppression.
What about gender oppression in prisons today?
In 2003, under strong pressure from a broad range of activists and
lobbyists, Congress passed the Prison Rape Elimination Act (PREA), and
in May 2012 the final rules were completed. With the initiation of the
PREA, statistics on prison rape are becoming more available. But
comprehensive, sweeping data on the frequency of prison rape does not
exist and so we can not detect trends from 1975 to the present, or even
from 2003 to present. Despite high hopes for the PREA from anti-rape
activists, we can’t yet determine if there has been any benefit, and in
some cases the rates of prison rape seem to be increasing.
When MAS was picking out newcomers to recruit into their safe cells,
they were identifying people who they saw as obviously queer, or in some
way likely to be a target. MAS was using their intuition and persynal
experience to identify people who are more likely to be victimized.
According to the BJS, in their 2009 study, prisoners who are “white or
multi-racial, have a college education, have a sexual orientation other
than heterosexual, and experienced sexual victimization prior to coming
to the facility” … had “significantly higher” rates of inmate-on-inmate
victimization.(1) Human Rights Watch similarly reported in 2001,
“Specifically, prisoners fitting any part of the following description
are more likely to be targeted: young, small in size, physically weak,
white, gay, first offender, possessing ‘feminine’ characteristics such
as long hair or a high voice; being unassertive, unaggressive, shy,
intellectual, not street-smart, or ‘passive’; or having been convicted
of a sexual offense against a minor. Prisoners with any one of these
characteristics typically face an increased risk of sexual abuse, while
prisoners with several overlapping characteristics are much more likely
than other prisoners to be targeted for abuse.”(5)
The descriptions above of who’s more subject to prison rape are
bourgeois definitions of what MIM called gender. Bullying, rape, sexual
identity, and sexual orientation are phenomena that exist in the realm
of leisure-time activity. Oppression that exists in leisure-time can
generally be categorized as gender oppression. Gender oppression also
rests clearly on health status and physical ability, which, in work-time
also affects class status.(6) Since prisoners on the whole spend very
little time engaged in productive labor, their time behind bars can be
categorized as a twisted form of leisure-time. Prisons are primarily a
form of national oppression, and gender is used as a means to this end.
Consider this statistic from BJS, “Significantly, most perpetrators of
staff sexual misconduct were female and most victims were male: among
male victims of staff sexual misconduct, 69% of prisoners and 64% of
jail inmates reported sexual activity with female staff.”(3) An
oversimplified analysis of this one statistic says the
biologically-female staff are gendered men, and the prisoners are
gendered wimmin, no matter their biology. But in the United $tates,
where all citizens enjoy gender privilege over the Third World, this
oversimplification ignores the international scope of imperialism and
the benefits reaped by Amerikans and the internal semi-colonies alike.
While there is an argument to be made that the United $tates tortures
more people in its prisons than any other country, this is balanced out
with a nice juicy carrot (video games, tv, drugs, porn) for many
prisoners. This carrot limits the need to use the more obvious forms of
repression that are more widespread in the Third World. Some of our most
prominent USW leaders determine that conditions where they’re at are too
comfortable and prevent people from devoting their lives to revolution,
even though these people are actually on the receiving end of much
oppression.
On a similar level, MIM(Prisons) advocates for the end of oppression
based on sexual orientation and gender identity. But we are not jumping
on the bandwagon to legalize gay marriage.(7) We also don’t campaign for
sex reassignment surgery and hormones for prisoners.(8) This is because
we see these as examples of gender privilege, and any privileges
obtained by people in the United $tates inherently come on the backs of
the Third World. Whereas in the time Men Against Sexism was formed the
gay rights movement was militant and engaging in street wars against
police, they are now overall placated by the class privilege they
receive as members of the petty-bourgeoisie.
We encourage everyone facing oppression to recognize its true roots –
capitalism and imperialism – and use their privileges to undermine the
United $tates’ world domination. Without an internationalist
perspective, we will inevitably end up on the wrong side of history.