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 Nevada Council for the United Struggle from Within (USW) is putting
the call out for prisoners at High Desert State Prison (HDSP) to end all
the hostilities, and to join together in the ongoing grievance campaign
and ultimately the mass 1983 civil complaint campaign, that is now
underway at HDSP.
The conditions of confinement at HDSP must be challenged. Over the
years, our constant infighting has distracted us while our conditions of
confinement have gotten progressively worse. We are now faced with a
situation where we remain confined to our cells up to 22-24 hours a day,
are not given proper cleaning supplies, are denied the use of our
toilets, are housed with those who should be being treated for their
mental illnesses rather than being overly medicated, etc.
This campaign has already begun, with many individuals having filed
grievances, while the final stage of filing a civil complaint is already
under way. Our main focus is and must be the lack of programs,
education, and work abilities which deny prisoners housed at HDSP the
credits which shorten their sentences.
We are in the position that we are in because our national groups have
failed to be properly mobilized around an internationalist class
consciousness. We have focused on individualistic issues. We as
prisoners have allowed this to happen to ourselves. With each new
restriction imposed, no action or protest was organized. We are as much
to blame as anyone else. Without organized opposition, the
administrators have reached new heights of repression and disregard of
our needs.
But the United Struggle from Within Nevada Council has taken steps to
organize this grievance campaign. We are calling on all nations within
the walls of HDSP; PC, GP or otherwise, put aside your differences and
conflicts. We are not enemies. We are allies, and share a common
interest in fighting back against what we are faced with every day.
So, we are putting out the call. Let’s stop all hostilities and join
together in raising our voices as one and demanding that we be treated
as humans.
Comrades within the USW in Nevada have already united with a few nations
in this struggle. There are already over 30 grievances filed! Change
will occur, but only if each of us do our part to fight back.
To aid you in this struggle, we have compiled examples of the grievances
that have been filed. The examples cover all three grievance levels. We
are also writing up an example civil complaint, which can be utilized to
challenge the NDOC in court.
If you want change, fight for it. Join our campaign. Stop all
hostilities, and pick up the pen!
MIM(Prisons) adds: Nevada was where the first September 9 Day of
Peace and Solidarity originated in 2012. It’s good to see comrades in
Nevada keeping it moving. Any prisoners of the state of Nevada can write
us for a copy of the example grievances.
I arrived here end of October. Surprisingly I was given most of my
materials most likely due to the fact there were 31 captives transfered
in that day. The pigs were tired of going through our property. They did
take Mao’s Selected Works Vol II (which has since been replaced by
MIMP).
Approx a month later a suspected BGF member got into it with a pig who
had destroyed some of his property. Pigs later took down all of his
known comrades and myself. Out of nowhere my cell was shaken down and
about 20lbs (the best way I can describe it) of materials was taken with
no explanation given besides a pig whispering to me “what did you do”
and that the shakedown was “STG related.” They held my items for two and
a half months after interviewing me. I’d never been profiled or
STG’d. The pigz main inquiry was to why in some of my writings did I
refer to George Jackson as comrade, and why did I choose to spell
“guerilla” this way. I simply told them I’d learned to spell it that way
and that G.J was referred to as Comrade George in what I’d read about
him. I believe that they were trying to find a connection between myself
and the BGF. Because they couldn’t they eventually gave all my stuff
back stating they “could STG me,” and they would if they heard my name
in anything.
Every issue of ULK is censored. Upon appealing each individual
issue to the publication screening committee I have received every one
except for one issue 60 days later. The May/June issue is out for a
decision currently.
They have censored every newspaper and most publicaitons besides what’s
sent in by MIMP - to my amazement.
I’m back on track with a study group going and campaigns under way, one
to expel two pigs who constantly harass us.
My funds are limited to $16 a month for all my necessities. So I can’t
contribute besides work for trade. I am however doing my part to
organize, agitate and education, and working with others to do what we
can under extreme repression.
Revolutionary greetings to all kaptives inside the gulags of the United
$nakes of A-murderer. As kaptives with lots of time on our hands,
knowing firsthand the oppressive state apparatus, we must work to
politicize ourselves, then our contacts on the streets. As there are
many orgs in existence pushing for exposure of prison conditions, we
must do our part; persistently sending them reports on incidents of
violence, food and health care neglect, mail tampering, and the overall
divisive and mentally debilitating tactics used by the state (and its
pig lackeys).
We must teach one another how to analyze these conditions from an
anti-imperialist perspective. We then must help to raise the
consciousness of those outside the gulag (individuals, orgs, support
networks, etc.). We must help them to see the direct cause of our
treatment as imperialism; then we can tie in some of their personal
struggles as belonging to the lumpen class/oppressed nation as well,
hence imperialism as well.
It appears that our path forward is constantly blocked or taken over by
enemy, backwards, or conservative elements without our nationalist
movements. Hence our nationalist consciousness remains a strong aspect
to unify around. And we should study projects such as the Jackson Rising
platform, to both amplify our call to national unity as well as develop
the tactics and strategies used by them. By showing the link between
imperialism and national oppression, we can direct the path forward.
MIM(Prisons) adds: Jackson Rising was a conference in 2014, which
launched the Cooperation Jackson project based out of Jackson,
Mississippi. Cooperation Jackson is building
dual
power for colonized New Afrika, and is an outgrowth of the
Provisional Government of the Republic of New Afrika, and the
Jackson-Kush plan.
Cooperation Jackson’s aim for self-determination for New Afrika is
certainly righteous. Yet we want to raise one line question in the
project which we believe is extremely important. The economic analysis
of Cooperation Jackson seems to deny the petty bourgeois nature of
non-lumpen New Afrikans. According to a document titled
The
Jackson-Kush Plan: The Struggle for Black Self-Determination and
Economic Democracy,
“Operation Black Belt is a campaign to organize the oppressed peoples
and exploited classes in the South, particularly concentrating on
organizing Black workers in the region who form the core of the
oppressed Black or New Afrikan nation that has been super-exploited for
centuries, into militant, class-conscious and social movement-based
worker associations and unions.”(p. 13)
While it was reasonable to refer to New Afrikans in the 1960s and
earlier as proletarian, or exploited, we believe there is no way that
any U.$. citizens could be considered super-exploited today. The
struggle for unionization and benefits for citizen-workers today comes
largely on the backs of the actually super-exploited people working
across the Third World.
While we acknowledge that Cooperation Jackson is one of the only
projects we know of which is putting self-determination into action
against the United $tates government, we believe that a misstep on the
question of the labor aristocracy within the imperialist countries
places the struggles of internal semi-colonies in opposition to the
proletarian masses in the Third World. How Cooperation Jackson might put
this analysis into action in its work is up to New Afrikans working
within that project. But we want to push them on clarifying/updating
their economic analysis.
Our comrade in Ohio suggests above that our subscribers need to raise
their own consciousness, and then reach out to people outside prisons to
help raise their consciousness. MIM(Prisons) struggles with other
organizations through ULK regularly. Our subscribers struggling
with other orgs through the mail, or ULK, is certainly another
medium to advance the anti-imperialist movement. You can write in to
MIM(Prison) for reading material about the labor aristocracy.
Cooperation Jackson can be reached at PO Box 1932, Jackson MS 39215.
When it comes to unification in prisons, there is one topic that needs
to be addressed: discrimination. For some reason, prisoners have a
tendency to discriminate against other prisoners for a plethora of
reasons. Race, color, creed, ethnicity, and sexual orientation are just
a few. The one I would like to discuss here is sexual orientation.
I use the word “orientation” instead of “preference” because this is a
unique situation in prison. So many times people become homosexual in
this environment out of necessity, or force, rather than by choice.
Unfortunately, the prison systems in this country are disproportionately
black, and this largely contributes to the large number of whites who
fall prey to and are trapped in the prison sex slave industry. Some do
it for protection and security, and some are just bullied and coerced
into it. For many it’s just a means of survival.
The drug trade is also thriving in the prison environment, which is
another trap for those who struggle with addiction issues. They are able
to support their habits by exchanging sexual favors for a “fix.” In
addition, the drug dealers are able to get their hands on female
hormones such as estrogen, which they dose their sex slaves up with.
These drugs can have long-term, even life-long effects which increases a
lot of the guys’ sense of worthlessness.
Many times, the reason that white prisoners are abused this way is due
to black prisoners’ desire to retaliate against the predominantly
white-run system that has oppressed and persecuted them throughout their
life. While this desire is certainly understandable, their attacks are
misdirected. We shouldn’t discriminate against anyone for any reason
because, as prisoners, we are all ultimately in the same situation. We
should struggle together toward the same goal.
There are definitely people in prison who elect to practice
homosexuality out of their own free will. We shouldn’t exclude them as
comrades either. We must all unite and fight the system that has taken
everything away from us.
Let’s put our differences aside, regardless of what they are, and let’s
stand united as equal partners and bring this tyranny to an end. We’re
all human beings and none of us are better than the rest. It’s time that
we realize that and stop judging and classifying each other. Let’s focus
our energy on the proper target: Imperialism and the Prison Industrial
Complex. United we stand, divided we fall!
MIM(Prisons) responds: This is an excellent reminder of the
importance of fighting against gender oppression within prisons. This
comrade is right on that we need unity, and we must fight the use of sex
to coerce, punish, or just overpower others. We don’t care if people are
straight or gay or any other form of queer, as long as they are on the
side of anti-imperialism and building unity rather than division.
While the U.S. Department of Justice affirms this writer’s assertion
that many victims of sexual assault are white (and numbers are even
higher for people who are “two or more races”), we don’t have access to
data on the national background of perpetrators.(1) Even if it is true
most perpetrators are New Afrikan, we also can’t conclude whether this
would be because of a psychological desire for retribution, or simply a
statistical likelihood because so many prisoners are New Afrikan in the
first place.
To push the fight against rape in prison forward, we have the example of
Men Against Sexism (MAS), a prisoner organization in the 1970s that
fought sexual assault, providing protection for vulnerable prisoners and
attacking the culture of sexism. Ultimately MAS had a significant
positive impact at Washington State Prison which in turn impacted
prisons across the state. MAS demonstrated the potential power of
conscious prisoners coming together for an important cause.(2)
Unless you are a person who has been incarcerated in a U.S. prison, you
don’t know about the violence that is being done to inmates at the hands
of correctional officers or prison guards across this country. There are
many TV programs about prison life but I’ve seen none show the abuse
that is inflicted on prisoners. Being in prison for 13 years or more,
I’ve witnessed these atrocious acts first hand. One would think if a
prison officer had to use force against a prisoner it was warranted, but
many times that isn’t the case.
Before I came to prison I was told by many convicted felons how
correctional officers would beat the living daylight out of a prisoner
over a minor offense. It was hard for me to believe until I saw it for
myself.
When I first arrived at the prison reception center, they made me and
all the new prisoners get butt-naked to be searched for drugs or
weapons. We had to bend over and spread our butt cheeks. The guy next to
me didn’t spread his open enough for the officer to see so he kicked him
right in his gluteus maximus. The officers had prisoners that looked
like professional bodybuilders working for them that they would use to
beat up other prisoners.
A week after that, about eight prison officers beat up a 60 year old man
just because he cursed out a female sgt. The female sgt hit him with her
radio first which knocked him to the ground. Then the other officers
started punching and kicking him. Two of those officers stopped just to
make us prisoners turn around and not watch what they were doing. The
old man could not have weighed more than 130 pounds. It could not have
been nothing short of a miracle if he survived that attack. There were
so many killings at that reception center that the feds had to go in to
investigate.
When I was transferred to my main prison camp, things were different.
They weren’t killing inmates there, but the brutality was just as bad.
That camp was run by racist officers and it was not secret how blacks
were being ridiculed, beaten, and discriminated against there. Blacks
had to deal with physical and emotional abuse. It was nothing for an
officer to call a black prisoner a nigger or say some thing about his
mother. These were the tactics they used to set the prisoner off. Then
they felt they could be justified for using force. Prisoners like me
wouldn’t take the bait, but many did. White prisoners and prisoners of
other races got abused also.
At other prison camps I’ve been to, the need for the officers to beat on
a prisoner wasn’t racially motivated. The violent abuse was equally
passed around. I saw a Hispanic guy get kicked in his rectum just
because he forgot to take off his hat when he was going through a gated
area. I saw a white guy get his head busted open by an officer because
he was high on synthetic marijuana. And in another incident an officer
was beating a guy so bad that another officer had to pull him off the
guy, then they started fighting each other afterwards. I overheard the
captain telling them that they should never fight each other because it
was “them against us.”
The worst of the brutality comes to the prisoners that are in
confinement. When a prisoner is being too rowdy in confinement the
captain will spray a very strong chemically enhanced mace into his
locked room. Prisoners have died because of this. They will also drop a
handcuffed inmate down stairs and say he slipped or that the inmate
pulled away from them. The beatings come when the officer has a prisoner
out of the sight of cameras. Many prisoners are missing teeth and it’s
not because of tooth decay.
The sad part of this all is that it’s been going on forever and there’s
no end in sight of it stopping. When we grieve these issues our
grievances taste the bottom of a trashcan or a shredder. Other times
they simply are denied. Since we are convicted felons our words don’t
mean anything. Some prison guards commit more crimes than us convicts.
It hurts me because it’s nothing I can do to stop it. All I can do is
hope that one day god answers my prayers. Prison brutality is real, and
more people in society should be aware of this problem.
The USW-NV study group spent much time discussing the topic of gender,
sexuality, and what our position on it must be. This discussion came
about because a comrade heard SCO Franco and another officer discussing
two trans women that live in another pod. SCO Franco, with a number of
racial and homophobic slurs, stated that he was looking for a reason to
write them up because “no fag would be on my tier prostituting
themselves unless I am getting something.” These pigs were making a big
joke out of it. This comrade spoke up, and as a consequence his cell was
searched, and he lost some items.
We have determined, through our discussions, that gender is more than
simply genetic. It is not a matter of choice, nor can one be “cured” of
homosexuality. We are born who we are, and any person or institution
that challenges this must be struggled against.
Based upon this and many other discussions, we have reached out to the
LGBTQ community both within the Nevada DOC, and the greater community,
in an attempt to build solidarity, and show them that they are not
alone.
The LGBTQ community, especially within prison, is a very preyed-upon
community. Inmates avoid them, assault them, or simply exploit them,
while the pigs ignore them. Within prisons, members of the LGBTQ
community have lost any identity, and instead have become “them,”
“fags,” or “MOs.” This is unacceptable. As such, we have taken an active
role in promoting a call for the organization of the LGBTQ community
into statewide groups. This call was put out by a great LGBTQ group
called Black and Pink.
We have aided in the formation of a NV LGBTQ group, have and will
continue to associate with them openly to show our solidarity, and will,
if the need arises, defend this group or its members, in whatever ways
needed. Be it from the pigs, or other inmates.
We call on all to follow, stand up against all forms of oppression,
exploitation and hatred. Contact Black and Pink and show your support,
and reach out to the LGBTQ community at your prison. Stand with them,
help them organize, and join our United Struggle from Within.
Black and Pink is an LGBTQ organization that publishes a monthly
newsletter, and helps those members of the LGBTQ community who are
incarcerated. The NV-USW has reached out to them in hopes of starting an
open chain of communication. We have not heard back as of yet, but
please contact them and call on them to join the United Struggle from
Within. You can contact them at Black and Pink National Office, 614
Columbia Rd, Dorchester, MA 02125
La primera vez que vine a la prisión toda mi percepción de organización
en las calles cambio. Un cambio debido a la educación de historia:
historia de otros movimientos y su organización en las calles desde la
prisión. Yo soy creyente de que los prisioneros pueden tener una gran
influencia con los activistas debido a nuestras luchas aquí. Pero como
el dicho dice; “La lucha del prisionero hoy sera la lucha de la calle
mañana.” El trabajo que se debe realizar desde estas paredes es para
ayudar a influenciar otras organizaciones en educación, estrategia,
democracia central y unidad sobre todos los trabajadores y personas
oprimidas. Pero lo que encuentro en las calles es que todo el mundo
quiere escoger que batalla es mas importante para su causa en vez de
buscar una solución para todos los retos de las organizaciones.
Aquí en prisión a veces nos quedamos atrapados arrogantemente en pelear
un asunto, que sólo satisface los deseos de egoístas de una persona, en
vez de retar los asuntos que cambian el sistema de forma completa.
Nosotros tenemos que aprender a unirnos bajo un paraguas para atacar los
asuntos que enfrentamos.
Mi audiencia objetivo serian los trabajadores porque creo que tienen
poder pero no lo saben todavía. La diferencia que contradice el trabajo
con los trabajadores es que algunos están tan atrapados por el
consumismo que no se organizan, o no quieren perder sus estatus así que
no luchan enteramente por un mejor sueldo. También pude ser difícil
trabajar con el lumpen por la falta de recursos.
Nosotros tendríamos que construir una opinión publica a través de medios
de comunicación, cultura del hip hop, deportistas y revistas. La
contradicción del capitalismo tiene que ser expuesta para que la
audiencia asignada tenga algo porque luchar. Pero para concluir, los
prisioneros también pueden ayudar a los LOs construyendo unidad y sobre
entendiendo los asuntos de cada uno, combinando teorías y usando la
ciencia para desafiar al sistema imperialista.
MIM(Prisons) responds: Este escritor ha traído un punto
importante sobre la necesidad del poder mirar mas allá de nuestros
asuntos y deseos personales hacia los problemas más grandes de los
oprimidos. Esto es especialmente importante si esperamos unirnos más
allá de nuestra distinción local. Y de seguro podemos usar salidas
culturales para construir una opinión pública y unidad.
En la pregunta de organizar trabajadores, nosotros hemos escrito mucho
sobre “la compra natural” de la mayoría de los trabajadores dentro de
las fronteras de los U.$. y vemos esto como una explicación material
para lo que este escritor anota: Ellos están atrapados en el consumo y
no quieren pender su status. Estos trabajadores ganan más que el valor
de su labor debido a todas las ganancias de la explotación del Tercer
Mundo, que se trae de vuelta a este país imperialista. De forma que los
trabajadores aquí sí entienden que su estatus es valioso y genera
ganancias. Ellos tienen el dinero para gastar lo que les permite quedar
atrapados en el consumo. Como resultado nosotros hemos visto a través de
la historia de Amerika que estas personas no son una fuerza para el
cambio progresivo, y organizarlos para que exijan salarios más elevados
no es organizarse contra el imperialismo. Esta es una de las razones por
qué nosotros nos enfocamos en la organización de los lumpen como un
grupo que probablemente tenga un interés en la revolución.
This is the third movie in a new trilogy based off the original 5-film
series. Like Rise of the Planet of the Apes (2010), War for
the Planet of the Apes (2017) makes many references to the original
series. It does a lot to set up for the scenario in the original second
film, Beneath the Planet of the Apes (1970). However, the ending
seems to crush that possibility. There is a fourth film being planned
for the new series, and it is not clear what the scenario will be.
This new series lacks some of the scifi complexities of the original
that dealt with space and time travel and mutations and evolution. So
far the
new
series has covered a modest 15 years, in one world, and is a pretty
straight forward story of struggle and war between humyns and apes whose
brains evolved due to a brain-enhancing virus developed to cure
Alzheimer’s disease in humyns.
In Beneath (1970), the humyn civilization is built around a
worship of nuclear weapons and the film is a righteous critique of
nukes. In War (2017), the humyns are led by a messianic colonel
who blames the man-made viruses for their plight. This leads to an
anti-science position that puts these humyns at war with another faction
who want to find a medical cure to the plague striking humyns. In the
case of nuclear weapons we can say that humyns are taking technological
advances into a dangerous direction that threatens all life on Earth.
But this new Planet of the Apes series leaves us with the message that
we should fear medical advancements. Under capitalism, such fear has a
material basis because profits over people can lead to technological
disasters in all fields. But in this post-apocalyptic world, there does
not seem to be a functioning capitalist economy. So the message amounts
to a religious movement calling for a cleansing, and opposing attempts
at solutions in medical science. This feeds into the fear-mongering of
fascist-leaning religious cults, unlike the original series that
critiqued genocidal militarism.
In this movie, Koba haunts Caesar, both in dream-like visions and in the
ongoing war that he started with the humyns. The mantra of “Ape shall
not kill ape” is brought back by Koba in one vision, after Caesar kills
a traitor who gave up Caesar’s location in an attempt to save himself,
leading to the murder of Caesar’s wife and older son. Revenge for this
event serves as Caesar’s motivation through most of this film. When they
encounter the traitor at an enemy camp he attempts to notify the humyns
of their presence, endangering Caesar’s life a second time. While Caesar
is very merciful, he cannot abide to absolutes like “Ape shall not kill
ape” and still serve the masses of apes at the same time. We later learn
that the seemingly ruthless humyn Colonel has also made sacrifices for
the greater good of humyns. The Colonel even offers Caesar lessons in
not letting his emotions and drive for revenge guide him. This is one
positive message of the film, which ends with Caesar returning to the
struggle for all apes that he was so dedicated to in the last two films.
One of the new characters introduced in this third film is a goofy
source of slap-stick humor. While this may be seen as a desperate
attempt to liven up the series, perhaps it is a throwback to the third
film in the original series, Escape from the Planet of the Apes
(1971), which has a whimsical feel to it that is inconsistent with the
two films before and after it. The comic relief character does play an
important role in letting us know that more supersmart apes exist in the
world. While he got audience laughs, the only funny part about this
character in this reviewer’s opinion was how the producers introduced
the name of the young humyn who joins the ape leadership on their
revenge mission. This young humyn is an interesting look at what we
could call national or species suicide. She gives the “Apes United Are
Strong” salute before playing a crucial role in breaking them free. At
one point she asks the orangutan Maurice, “Me? Ape?”. Maurice answers by
saying her name. A sort of non-answer that seems to say no, but you are
one of us. The examples of apes working for the humyns, and this humyn
being part of the apes is a blow against identity politics. An
individual’s politics and the role they play in the world is not defined
by what group they were born into, even though we can analyze about
groups and their roles and positions in society.
On the other side, there are many traitors working for the humyns who
were called “donkeys” and treated as servants, while being forced to
commit much of the brutality against captive apes to prove their
loyalty. This type of mentality is so well-established today that no
force is needed to get Black and Brown pigs to be more brutal than their
white counterparts. One of the traitors who beats and abuses Caesar when
he enters the work camp comes to his aid at the very end. This comes
after we see Caesar act in a firm and principled way in front of the
traitor throughout the film. This is not just a nice, fictional story.
In his autobiography, set mostly in the first wave of the U.$. prison
movement,
Black
Panther Eddie Conway demonstrates that being politically consistent
and being a leader does impact people in ways you may not realize for
some time. And that people will come through for the movement when you
don’t expect it if you set a good example as a leader.
There is something unbelievable in the way the modern Planet of the Apes
films combines the lumbering ape-suited actors, with the scenes of
tracking humyns and searching in close combat situations. The idealized
images of military and SWAT operations we’re so used to in movies today
just don’t accommodate the clumsy movements of the apes. The more
primitive scenes of war in the original series are actually more
congruent and believable.
Overall, there was some good character development in War (2017)
that demonstrated some useful lessons for political struggle. Like the
other films in this new series there is more of a focus on fast-paced
battle scenes than in the original series. And like the others in this
new series, it loses some of the more radically progressive aspects of
the earlier version. Despite that, the
focus
on prison struggles, like in Rise (2010), will probably
preclude this movie from being screened in U.$. prisons. We are still
holding out to see whether the makers of the new series will delve into
the subject of the dictatorship of the proletariat, as did the last two
films of the original series.
In 1492, the European colonization of Turtle Island, which they’d call
the Americas, began with the voyage of Christopher Columbus, in command
of the Niña, Pinta, and the Santa Maria. This recon expedition arrived
in the Caribbean and landed on the island of present-day Haiti and the
Dominican Republic, which they named Hispaniola. In 1492, Columbus
returned with a second, larger force, comprised of 17 ships and 1,200
soldiers, sailors, and colonists.
By 1535, Spanish conquistadors had launched military operations into
Mexico, Central America, and Peru. Using guns, armor, and metal-edged
weapons as well as horses, siege catapults, war dogs, and biological
warfare, the Spanish left a trail of destruction, massacres, torture and
rape. Tens of millions of indigenous peoples were killed within the
first century. The Mexica (or Aztec) alone were reduced from 25-million
to just 3-million. Everywhere the death rate was between 90-95% of the
population.
For all native Americans, the coming of Europeans to the New World
marked the beginning of a long, drawn-out disaster. Their cannons and
rifles gave them the ultimate power to inflict their will on the
indigenous people. Even as they learned from the indigenous people how
to survive in their new environment, Europeans saw their own way of life
as the only “true” civilization. Indeed, so powerful did the notion of
European superiority become that today they celebrate the “Discovery” of
the New World by European explorers. Too often, we forget that what
happened in 1492 was not the discovery of a New World but the
establishment of contact between two worlds, both already old.
Was the European, or “Western” way of life really superior? This
question remains a subject of stormy controversy throughout the world.
Much of the resentment against Europeans and North Amerikans expressed
by people in the Muslim world, for example, is based on the history of
invasion, conquest, and domination by Western powers, a subject to which
our RAZA and ALL indigenous people in the Western Hemisphere are
familiar. European invasion and settlement spelled the doom of
indigenous societies.
Amerikkka has always been a hegemony, a term which refers to dominance
or undue power or influence. A hegemonic culture is one that dominates
other cultures, just as a hegemonic society is one that exerts undue
power over another society.(Gramsci, 1992/1965, 1995)
Ideologies
A classic study of the emergence of an ideology was Max Weber’s analysis
of the link between Protestantism and Capitalism, The Protestant
Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism (1974/1904). Weber noticed that
the rise of Protestantism in Europe coincided with the rise of private
enterprise, banking, and other aspects of capitalism. Weber hypothesized
that their religious values taught them that salvation depended
not on good deeds or piety but on how they lived their entire
lives and particularly on how well they adhered to the norms of their
“callings” (occupations).
The most important norms in Western civilizations are taught as
absolutes. The Ten Commandments for example, are absolutes: “Thou shalt
not kill,” “Thou shalt not steal,” and so on. UNFORTUNATELY, people do
not always extend those norms to members of another culture. For
example, the same “explorers” who swore to bring the values of Western
civilization (including the Ten Commandments) to the New World thought
nothing of taking Indians’ land by force. Queen Elizabeth I of England
could authorize agents like Sir Walter Raleigh to seize remote “heathen
and barbarous” lands without viewing this act as a violation of the
strongest norms of her own society.(Jennings, 1975; Snipp, 1991) Protest
by the indigenous people often resulted in violent death. But the murder
of indigenous people and the theft of their land were rationalized by
the notion that the indigenous people were inferior people who would
ultimately benefit from European influence (the same ideology that
justifies in their minds the wholesale murder of our Raza throughout the
barrios of Aztlán by the police). In the ideology of the conquest and
colonial rule, the Ten Commandments DID NOT APPLY (then or now).
So when you hear Trump making statements like, “Make Amerikkka Great
Again!”, make no mistake about it, what he is in fact saying is, “Make
Amerikkka White Again!”
So in
commemorating
the Plan de San Diego, when asked the question, “What’s this gotta
do with me?” “Everything you’re talking about happened a long time ago.”
RAZA, it has everything to do with YOU! It’s time for the sleeping Giant
to WAKE-UP! And say YA-BASTA! We have a rendezvous with destiny!
In this New Katun! This is OUR SIXTH SUN! As Chican@s growing up in
occupied Aztlán. This is why Chican@s and Raza are discriminated
against, marginalized and imprisoned at higher rates than Amerikkkans.
We must build for the Reunification and Liberation of Aztlán!!!
We have been plagued with this Amerikkkan disease LONG ENOUGH!!!
VIVA LA CAUSA VIVA LA RECONQUISTA!!!
VIVA MIM!!!
MIM(Prisons) adds: By the time this issue of Under Lock &
Key hits the cell blocks across the United $tates, August will be
upon us. In addition to the 38th annual Black August, commemorating the
New Afrikan prison struggle, this August we mark the beginning of a
campaign to commemorate the Plan de San Diego. This Plan called for a
united front of oppressed nations living on occupied Turtle Island to
take up arms against the settlers and reclaim land for the oppressed. If
you haven’t already, write to MIM(Prisons) to get Plan de San Diego
fliers to distribute. The flier calls on Chican@ comrades to study,
build with others, write articles, make art and develop Chican@
consciousness inside prison.
The building of consciousness and unity this August should lead up to
the 9th of September when all prisoners are encouraged to mark the
United Front for Peace in Prisons Day of Peace and Solidarity. Last
year, September 9 was marked with many actions across U.$. prisons to
commemorate the Attica uprising. Let’s build on that momentum! Keep us
updated by sending in your reports on what you achieved during Black
August, Commemoration the Plan de San Diego and on the September 9 Day
of Peace and Solidarity.
I’m responding in regards to
ScHoolboy
Q of the Hoover Crips in Los Angeles mentioned in Under Lock
& Key 56. I’m a real 74 St Hoover Crip from the 70-99, with the
real 83 St Hoover Crips, 92 St Hoover Crips and what is now known as 52
St Hoover Crips. This ScHoolboy Q is living off the fame of something he
knows nothing about. He can not tell you about the struggle or how the
Hoover Groover became the Hoover Crips or why the Crip culture of the 2
years are so disrespected by the neighborhoods they claim to be from.
Let’s not put rap and money into the struggle. The quote is
Crips don’t die, they multiply. That is the correct wording of the Crip
saying. The stuff these rappers are saying take away from the true
street life of Crips and the struggle to free the hoods they
live in or the cop culture they had to fight with each day. Please let’s
stay with facts when referencing the struggle. He ain’t kill no one, has
not been shot, or has he shot anyone? He knows nothing about Hoover and
that a fact.
MIM(Prisons) responds: We always welcome our readers assistance
in staying with the facts. The mention of the Crips in that review was
meant to highlight the connection to a positive New Afrikan struggle. In
doing so we reinforced ScHoolboy Q’s self-identity as a Crip, something
we cannot speak to. We can observe that today he’s making news for
calling out United Airlines for putting his little dog on the wrong
connecting flight, while real Crips are doing long bids in cages.
Being a “real Crip” in itself is full of contradictions. A lot of
senseless loss of life has occurred in neighborhoods like the one this
comrade came from. But we do respect the voices of the OGs that lived
that struggle and are allies to the anti-imperialist struggle. It’s no
coincidence that we see many who come from that life pledging their
lives to the people. The worst criminals kill thousands around the globe
and never express any remorse.
In the past we spent a good amount of time trying to work with some
comrades to document that history for a book on the lumpen that was
never completed. But we still welcome the stories from comrades like the
one above, that will allow others to learn from the history and
evolution of lumpen organizations in this country. The Crips are an
interesting phenomenon as they are known internationally, and the name
is repped by many who read our newsletter who do not know the history
and struggle this comrade speaks to. It is a true cultural heritage of
the New Afrikan lumpen in Los Angeles, the good and the bad. We hope
that comrades from that culture can use it for good.