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.
On 3/16/17 I received from the Michael Unit mailroom a “Publication
Review/Denial Notification” refusing to deliver to me the
above-referenced publication based upon a finding that “it contains
material that a reasonable person would construe as written solely for
the purpose of communicating information designed to achieve the
breakdown of prisons through offender disruption such as strikes, riots,
or security threat group activity.” At the place for Remarks, “Pg. 13
contains info that could cause a prison strike and prison disruption.”
Instead of seeking the least restrictive measures of censorship, like,
for example, marking out the offensive language, they refused to deliver
the publication summarily citing to TDCJ-ID policy and procedure
BP-03.91, the same rule used to reject delivery of biblically-based
religious materials sent to me by my sister.
I appealed the denial to the Director’s Review Committee (DRC) whose
address is PO Box 99, Huntsville, TX 77342-0099. On 3/29/17 I received
the “DRC Approved/Upheld Denial on 3-28-17.” However, that denial was
not signed so I have no idea who is personally responsible and
accountable or if this is - as commonplace - a summary, arbitrary, and
capricious disposition of my appeal, similar to the practices generally
experienced when using the TDCJ-ID administrative grievance process
required by the Prison Litigation Reform Act.
Nevertheless, I will not be receiving the publication, and,
notwithstanding my notice of anticipated litigation to prison
authorities, am notified that “the publication will be destroyed within
60 days of the initial denial.” And, again, I am not notified of the
identity of the person(s) who will engage in this illegally destructive
and criminally culpable conduct designed to deny and impede my rights
both to the publication and access to the courts. Thus far, my efforts
to report the criminal acts and conduct to civilian law enforcement
authorities and the State and Federal prosecutors’ office under Texas
Penal Code, Section 39.04 and Title 18 U.S. Code Section 242, have
proven to be futile.
Accordingly, I am asking you to engage your expertise and resources in
the litigation of this unlawful censorship to which you have standing to
complain and request that you name me as a complaining party litigant.
The proper venue is in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District
of Texas sitting at Tyler, Texas.
I will at all times make myself available to you and to any legal
representative whom you choose. I retain all evidence of my claims but,
as I’m sure you know, is subject to confiscation, loss and destruction
by prison officials and their employees.
In closing, I am reminded of a passage I read somewhere. “Acts without
words are open to all kinds of interpretation and words without acts are
hollow promises [or just lies],” The ball is now in your park. I need
your help. Anxiously awaiting your response.
On 10 February 2017, I was accused of by unit administrator (UA) John L.
Grevious and internal affairs captain Michael Williams of stabbing
another inmate, which I never did at all. The disciplinary report that
UA Grievous wrote up said “on February 8th, 2017 at approximately
5:15p.m. inmate [me] attacked inmate [X] around the Dorm 12, DAL and
yard area out of camera view. After a interview conducted by
Capt. Michael Williams, inmate [me] claimed sole responsibility.” I
never attacked [X] and I never admitted to nothing.
Another thing is I have been letting the medical staff and other medical
personnel know about my right knee and leg hurting, locking up and
giving out when I lay in bed and get up to walk to the bathroom or just
walk around. They never did nothing about it until December 2016, when
they put me in physical therapy and then stopped it in February 2017
because my knee and leg ain’t getting better. Then on March 16, 2017 at
12:00am my knee and leg gave out in the shower and I fell and busted my
head, and CO Bick Ford Badge #397, never did anything when he was the
walk officer. It took other walk officers to get me medical attention.
Medical only put ointment on it and sent me back to my cell with an open
gash.
Right now all my complaints is been ignored and my letters is been
unanswered by warden Aaron Smith, deputy warden Anna Valatine, deputy
warden James Coyne and the unit administrators and caseworker. Grievance
coordinator Casey Dowden is refusing to answer my letter and refusing to
fulfill my legal request forms for civil rights complaint forms, acts,
standards, motions, forms, addressed, etc. I turned in on February 20,
2017; February 27, 2017; March 6, 2017; and March 13, 2017. Then fire
and safety super Brian Hilabrandt have the ACA standards on religion for
me, but on March 1, 2017, he told me they said I couldn’t have them and
he couldn’t get them to me until I’m out of segregation.
This is a little on what’s going on with me and what I’m having trouble
with. They are talking about transferring me, so I want to be able to
file all paperwork I need to challenge these injustices. I’ve been
denied my full medical-physical therapy-psychiatric files, adjustment
committee & grievance files and my full institutional files so I can
properly prepare my cases and file on them. This is why I am needing
legal, political, religious, material, financial, etc. help &
support and support groups/networks through letters, Jpay email &
videograms and Jpay money transfer to buy books, stationary, hygiene,
fund my Jpay media fund, pay court fees and to be financial stable.
I don’t rely on lawsuits alone but on connecting my struggle with the
outside struggle. I am trying to build bridges instead of burn bridges.
I am organizing from the inside out, at least trying to. If I got 10 or
20 people or so helping me and organizing with me I’m happy.
I will appreciate your and others’ help, support and response soon and
future organizing soon. Please forward this letter to others who can
help & willing to support me and organize with me.
I believe that having alliances with lines that are military minded is
somewhat dangerous to the united front. First and foremost, I do believe
in armed struggle, but building public opinion on imperialism and moving
toward communism as the ultimate goal to end all oppression is key. Some
lumpen orgs or nationalists might criticize MIM(Prisons) on their line.
But truth be told we must study the history of the Cultural Revolution
in China, which gives us the best way to move toward socialism, ending
in communism. It also allows us to learn from the mistakes of the past.
Amerikkka targets lumpen orgs, and nationalist groups. So alliance with
a militia group might jeopardize the united front. And once the
imperialist policies place everyone in one basket who they feel are a
threat, they will place them in prisons or worse eliminate them as what
happened to many BPP members in the late 1960s. So, I must say comrades,
that MIM(Prisons)’s approach with study groups and challenging all
comrades to study history and dialectical materialism prepares us to use
public opinion to change the minds of the lumpens and all those who are
oppressed.
What good is guns if you don’t know who the enemy truly is? By enemy I
mean, just going up against amerikkka’s army is not enough. The enemy is
the system which must be changed. Guns with no vision or discipline is
suicide to the united front. The best weapon in the struggle is unity,
and armed struggle is also important. But each one teach one is the
method to awakening the masses on how capitalism destroys lives.
Once the American people become self-reliant and help their fellow man
and stop supporting this economic monster (capitalism-imperialism) then
hopefully through public opinion and democratic centralism we can
achieve the goal we all want which is communism.
As for snitches, there are different levels of snitching. But I will not
allow a person in my circle who I know has the tendencies to crack under
pressure. I mean those individuals who work for the prison
administration, receiving goods in order to cause chaos. They would go
so far as telling prison officials that you are sharing revolutionary
material and having your books confiscated.
Even on the outside you have to be careful aligning with rats who will
jeopardize the united front in order to demoralize and cause
dissociation. But as long as those who represent the militant side of
fighting oppression can agree that we must use strategy and wait for the
right time to strike the imperialist monsters, I’m all for it. But if
militants feel as though focoism is their aim, I’m all out. Educate the
poor and oppressed first, to show them the real enemy. And there needs
to be a change in habits and consciousness so that we will not allow
materialistic ideology to control us.
MIM(Prisons) responds: This comrade raises a good point about the
risks of allying with those who are engaging in military actions now. We
agree with em that focoism is not the right strategy. But the value of a
united front is that we can disagree on this point of strategy in terms
of the right time for armed struggle, but still unite in our fight
against imperialism. We can work with these organizations while
struggling with them over these points if such struggle seems fruitful.
We do not need to have complete agreement on points of strategy in order
to work together in a united front. We would also want to keep these
groups at arms’ length for the simple fact that advocating armed
struggle now is a known tactic cops use to wreck a movement from within.
But beyond the question of uniting without complete theoretical
agreement, this writer is arguing that it is too risky to unite with
focoists because their premature military action could bring down the
whole united front. This is certainly a risk we need to consider. Groups
within the UF have the autonomy to act independently of the group, and
so some may engage in actions that others disagree with. While we
wouldn’t automatically exclude focoists from a UF based on their
political line, this comrade is correct to warn that we need to stay
vigilant about actions that present a risk to our work and to our
organization.
At the same time, resistors of all stripes, even those who aren’t
focoist, bring down repression from the state. Even anti-imperialist
academics and people working in electoral politics are harassed, and
murdered, by the state when their words are too effective. One could
also argue that the frivolous security practices of other groups will
jeopardize the UF. We have to find a balance between putting ourselves
out there, and getting the work done.
We can’t make up easy rules to answer to this contradiction. Instead
everyone has to evaluate alliances based on the circumstances and
current situation.
There were two recent riots here. One on the 3A yard here at
Corcoran, the other at SATF Corcoran, on 3C yard. No one severly hurt,
but it’s hard to organize with situations like that.
Estelle Unit operates a “cite only” method of providing prisoners access
to courts, requiring prisoners to submit “cite specific requests” to
Access to Courts (ATC) officials in order to receive legal research
materials. Courts have repeatedly ruled cite-only access fails to
satisfy constitutional de minimis, explaining it is unreasonable to
expect a doctor of jurispridence to request cites by note, let alone a
pro se laypersyn prisoner.
Recently I was told by law library staff a case I cite-specifically
requested didn’t exist. I called bullshit stating the Texas Criminal
Practice Guide, John Boston’s and Dan Manville’s Prisoners’
Self-Help Litigation Manual, and Manville’s Prisoners’
Disciplinary Self-Help Litigation Manual don’t lie. I was then
threatened with disciplinary action. I invited such, desiring the denial
of access to courts be documented. The next day when admitted to the
so-called law library I was confronted by the ATC Supervisor in
possession of the case at issue, and all kinds of papers for me to sign,
validating I had in fact received the cite in question.
The very same day the above phantom caselaw was produced, I requested
another case by cite, and again told the case didn’t exist. I then set a
trap. I have repeatedly trapped and caught ATC pigs claiming
specifically-requested case citations did not exist which do indeed
exist. Case in point: I requested a denial of access to courts case per
the Estelle “cite only” method. I was told the case did not exist. I
waited a short period, then requested the supposed nonexistent case be
Shephardized, a method of cross-reference. At the next day’s so-called
law library session the Shephardized lexis.com download was presented to
me showing the case in question had been published in 1997. Priceless.
Absolutely priceless. Dumb blank faces blinking back at me.
MIM(Prisons) responds: The oppressors will never give the
oppressed the tools to overcome their oppression. This anecdote is an
example of exactly why we believe we need to build a revolutionary
movement to force the state to give up its power, so we can put an end
to Amerikkka’s prison system!
This is an open letter to all you advocates and activists who are at war
with the prison system. The American Corrections Association (ACA) has
done their two-stage, once in a decade, onsite prison review beginning
in January 2017 ending in March 2017. They’ve posted memos to the effect
of talking to prisoners and performing audits to better use monies
towards treatment and rehabilitational programs. Well at California
Correctional Institution (CCI) this is a joke, especially of the level 3
yard where there is no accountability on safety issues.
There are no cameras on yard nor in buildings that would hold
Correctional Staff to a higher level of accountability on the lines of
brutality waged against prisoners. This brutality is covered up too
often by collusion between Correctional Officers in reporting of
incidents which comes down to their words against prisoners’ with no
physical evidence to support because there are no surveillance cameras.
This is a black site operation, period. There exists no accountability
when it comes to enforcement practices. Correctional employees are given
full discretion and are supported fully by a Gestapo Culture with no
checks and balances from outside authorities. This is including the ACA,
who only talked to 2% of the prison population, and those were selected
by this administration, i.e. Correctional Staff.
There is no accountability on the running of programs, which means
anything from dayroom, yard, school, vacations, or even jobs. At the
same time there is no program and no movement, prisoners walk to medical
lines, walk to chow, go to self help groups, etc. No matter what the
weather is they are required to walk to and from just to lock themselves
back into their living quarters, i.e. cells. The ACA didn’t assist
prisoners to get assignment cards for going to college classes onsite
nor through mail even though they know these participants miss at least
9 hours a week from yard and dayroom, at the same time providing
assignment cards to prisoners in GED courses. Though the institution is
making money from these new college onsite classes of which I myself am
in, earning 6 credits for 2 classes this semester and enrolled in both
summer and winter courses. Yet, I am not able to go outside on the
weekend to get fresh air so I now get outside rec and fresh air less
than my brothers and sisters in the SHU. The American Correctional
Association is there for a waste of tax payers’ money.
Blame is put on the prisoners for most that continues to occur here to
be absolutely honest, because most of them fail to study the rules, are
rule breakers and have terrible conduct creating negative attention.
Once more I must state in complete truth, that all levels of staff have
treated me with respect, I haven’t gotten any write up, never assaulted
on any level by any level of Correctional Staff. Quite the opposite has
happened to me. I’ve initiated my own services, I’ve signed up and am
currently going to college, I had constructive conversations with all
levels of Correctional Staff. At the same time I’ve read the Title 15
and re-read it several times complying with every law and rule. I’ve
communicated with complete respect at all times with prisoners and
prison staff of all levels and walks of life.
This is written for the purpose of exciting advocates to get involved
with pro-social programs in person, to let them know that the ACA and
many other organizations are rip-offs and monies would effect more
positive change if and when it goes directly to the prison and prisoners
who are willing to take advantage of all pro-social programming. That
those who are doing the work to create better futures by learning in
college or vocational skill learning should receive beneficial treatment
and be allowed to go to yard on weekends and holidays even days that
they are off. We need advocates to sound the bell for us ensuring that
we are treated with favorable treatment, so that we are not being
punished for attempting to get ahead.
A Socialist and Conscious Comrade
MIM(Prisons) responds: We’ve been watching the great progress of
organizers at CCI with interest and excitement over the last year. But
playing by the rules does not generally pan out so well for prisoners
across the United $tates engaged in postive organizing along the lines
of the United Front for Peace in Prisons (UFPP). In one recent example,
the United Kage Brothers have been denied the ability to form an
official organization by the CDCR at Pelican Bay State Prison. And this
is why the UFPP stresses INDEPENDENCE as one of the 5 principles. If
local staff are supportive of your efforts that is great. And there is
plenty reason for them to be supportive of a safer work environment. But
we also must not build or organizing in a way that is dependent on the
whims of the state, which has a general principle of opposing the
organizing of the oppressed.
Issue 55 of Under Lock & Key is taking a deeper look at
building the United Front for Peace in Prisons at the margins. We’ve
already spent a lot of space debating the role people on Special Needs
Yards (SNY), especially in California. While that is an issue we will
need to continue to address, here we focus first on white nationalist
lumpen organizations, that are more likely to be on the mainline, and
how anti-imperialists might relate to them. We also have a few pieces
looking at the question of sex offenders who are generally seen as
pariahs. That topic is a subset of the SNY discussion. In this article
we will focus on the white nationalist question, and the question of
oppressed nations allying with whites in general. In many cases handling
this question properly will have a big impact on our success, because
there are a lot of white people in prisons and many of them team up with
white nationalist orgs.
One commonality across these examples is the need to consider how people
end up where they are. We print an example of
someone
taking sex offender charges out of expediency, and ey points out
that many such charges are flimsy. In some cases
sex
charges are politically motivated bad-jacketing. We will also see
many examples of people taking up white nationalism, to protect oneself
and also just out of a youthful ignorance, something many in prison can
identify with.
So there are a few principles of dialectical materialism that we should
apply in our analysis of groups which are often considered pariahs of
the revolutionary movement: 1) dialectics differs from metaphysics in
that metaphysics believes a thing has an essence; 2) dialectics in
contrast sees everything as always being in a constant state of change;
3) and we can best understand that change by looking at the
contradictions within that thing, while also considering the external
contradictions that may influence it (them). To put it another way, no
one is born a white supremacist or rapist, and just because someone’s
actions were that way in the past doesn’t mean they have to be in the
future.
What is White Nationalism?
Elsewhere in this issue we talk about
white
nationalism as an ideology that is a product of imperialism. Another
point we must stress when talking about white nationalism is it is the
majority ideology among the oppressor nation under imperialism. Most of
this issue will be dealing with extreme examples found in imprisoned
lumpen organizations. But there is a whole range of white nationalist
ideologies, and the lumpen organizations are not necessarily the most
extreme. Because the imprisoned lumpen are in the trenches, they must be
more scientific than the more privileged wings of the white nationalist
movement, and their motivations are often quite different.
In our current political climate in the United $tates, “white
nationalism” is a hot topic. It is being used to criticize President
Trump and those around em. But most of this criticism is coming from the
perspective that former President Obama was not a white nationalist. The
split between the left wing and right wing of white nationalism is about
how to best manage the oppressed, even when that is not how they think
about it. If we recognize that the current imperialist order is one that
puts whites in a position of supremacy, then we must conclude that any
position that works to preserve that system is white nationalist. Or we
may say Amerikan nationalist to avoid confusion when its proponents do
not appear white. But even though some internal semi-colony people are
sitting at the table, globally, white supremacy in the form of Amerikan
hegemony is alive and well.
Initially, the question of how and when to strategically ally with white
nationalists is a broad one, as it refers to how we might ally with the
majority of people in North America. But within that majority there are
different classes and political tendencies. And white nationalist
prisoners may be at the top of the list of likely allies from that
group.
Another argument for the importance of working with the white lumpen is
the Marxist analysis of the lumpen as a particularly dangerous, wavering
class. If this country is heading in a more fascist direction, white
nationalist lumpen youth and former military will be the first bases of
recruitment for the fascists. This concern applies to the lumpen in
general, but the national split makes it a harder sell for the internal
semi-colonies to take up fascism. As always, our strategy is to win over
all who can be won over, not to set false limitations based on identity
politics or preconceived assumptions.
More so than former military, the white lumpen have connections to the
struggles of the oppressed. And it is the massive prison system in this
country that we can largely thank for that. The modern prison system is
an inherent part of the modern ghetto, which has been lumpenized. While
segregation is stronger today in many cases in the ghettos, it is weaker
outside of the ghetto. This translates into a stronger class divide
within the oppressed nations. The extent of this divide in the white
nation is something that requires more research. But from the
information we have, white prisoners are much, much more likely to
integrate into petty-bourgeois society rather than be caught in a
ghetto-like situation upon release. But as long as they remain in
prison, whites do experience that ghetto life and the most brutal
repression that we have in this country.
Young Patriots, White Lumpen Revolutionaries
One of the best examples we have of white lumpen youth forming an
anti-imperialist organization was the Young Patriots Organization, which
started in Chicago in the late 1960s. Soon the offshoot Young Patriots
Party spread the movement to other parts of the United $tates. Their
example demonstrated both the potential and limitations of such an
organization. As long as there are pockets of whites that face similar
conditions to the oppressed nations, as they do in prison, a
revolutionary organization that can speak to and organize white lumpen
will strengthen the cause of anti-imperialism. However, the Black
Panthers, in particular Bob Lee and the leadership of Fred Hampton,
played a very hands-on role in the development of the Young Patriots. In
general history does not lead us to expect revolutionary white
organizations with correct political lines to take hold in North America
without good examples from the internal semi-colonies.
Even after becoming established, the Young Patriots were very limited by
the reactionary nature of their own nation. The Patriot base was
displaced southern whites who ended up in urban ghettos; a much smaller
group, but parallel to the New Afrikans who made the Great Migration.
When the Patriots returned to the south they were not received well. Two
of the members were killed shortly after returning to the south, because
of their organizing.(1) In other words, we are looking at exceptions to
the rule where there are pockets of whites who are both separate from
the oppressed nations but still living very similar lives and in
proximity to them. When Peggy Terry of the Young Patriot-associated
organization Jobs or Income Now (JOIN) ran for vice president, with
Black Panther Eldridge Cleaver as the presidential candidate in 1968,
they received a mere 28,000 votes in California. In contrast, the openly
racist George Wallace campaign got 500,000 (almost exclusively white)
votes.(2) And finally, for most of their existence the Patriots had more
spies watching their organization than they had members.(3) This
security issue is something others have pointed out with white
nationalist lumpen organizations in prison that can be
swimming
with federal agents.
Often the Panther rhetoric spoke of the Young Patriots as representing
“white power” in a way that was parallel to the Panthers’ “Black Power”
and Young Lords’ “Brown Power”. While we generally disagree with that
line, the Panthers later called out all other white groups as “fascists”
with the exception of the Patriots. The Patriot culture flew in the face
of the rest of the white anti-war and student movements, including their
confederate flag logo. We might draw a parallel to the Lucasville prison
uprising in Ohio in 1993, where it is reported that swastikas, lightning
bolts and words like “Supreme White Power” appeared alongside graffiti
throughout the prison saying “Black and White Together” and “Convict
unity.”(4) These white identities, historically associated with power
over New Afrikans were transformed in these unique circumstances.
Racism as a Tool of the Oppressor
MIM(Prisons) is cautious about presenting racism as merely a tool of the
imperialists to divide “the people” as that is the line of the
revisionists who claim that the majority of people in the imperialist
countries are proletarians that must be united in their common class
interest. As the practice of the Young Patriots demonstrated, this is
not the case. However, in prisons is where we see the greatest potential
for a class unity with whites that is progressive in the United $tates.
And in prison, it is certainly true that racism is a tool that is
actively used by the administration, even if often times white
nationalists are too willing to play the role of keeping other prisoners
in line for the state.
Of course, not all white prisoners are part of overtly racist lumpen
organizations. Former-Black-Panther-turned-anarchist Lorenzo Komboa
Ervin documented the history of the federal penitentiary at Terre Haute,
Indiana, which was transformed from a completely Ku Klux Klan-dominated
facility to one where New Afrikans built power in alliance with white
prisoners. Ey argues that the anti-racist whites, often imprisoned for
anti-war activities, were able to re-educate other white prisoners where
non-white prisoners would not be able to.(5) This is an example of the
importance of white-specific organizing, though not on the basis of an
outward white nationalism.
We must reach people where they are at in a segregated society. We saw
this with the Panthers in Chicago who were viewed with great skepticism
by the white residents of Uptown, but were welcomed by the Young Patriot
leadership. We saw this in Lucasville, where the New Afrikan leaders
picked Aryan Brotherhood member George Skatze to stand with them as a
representative of white prisoners because of eir history of settling
disputes between whites and New Afrikans.
“At some point on this first day George saw a black inmate (Cecil Allen)
talking through a bull horn to a small crowd of other prisoners. George
went up to listen. To his surprise the man on the bull horn pointed to
George and said, ‘There’s nobody going to be talking to you guys but me
or this man right here,’ meaning George Skatze.”
Accepting
their request for help, Skatze later “approached the whites, who were
sitting in the bleachers. Putting his arm around a black inmate George
said, ‘If the guards come in here they’re going to shoot us all, no
matter what color we are.’ We asked George who that black man was. He
said, I don’t know; I had never met him before.”(6)
Veteran of the first wave of the California prison movement, Kumasi
describes one scene in the late 1960s where hundreds of prisoners
circled around the yard chanting, “Power to the people! Death to the
pigs!” Approaching the group of white gangsters on the sidelines ey
framed the situation as “are you going to be with us or with the pigs?”
And since the reality reflected eir statement, they sure didn’t want to
be seen as siding with the pigs. As the whites started to join the ranks
of the protestors, Kumasi grabbed one of their hands and raised it in
the air as they faced the warden. In a segregated society this sort of
representation of different nationalities can have powerful effects.
Kumasi has a number of stories about organizing across nationality.
Similar to today, the California system was very segregated back then.
Various white power and nazi gangs existed, as they do today. The united
fronts Kumasi forged with these groups were not long-term and could be
quite impulsive. It was really the strength of eir own organization that
pushed others to come along. A justification of the line that building
up one’s own national unity helps build up the united front. Because the
movement for change had reached such popularity and support among New
Afrikans, it was easier to get the Chican@s to join up (who had not yet
been divided between north and south).
A USW comrade has this to say about organizing in California today:
“There has been times when we’ve done alliances with white nationalist
groups in prison. Any time we had a common goal, say shutting down SHUs,
or removing informants off yard, assistance with legal work and what
not.
“The only way for this to function is by creating a different set of
politiks/policies than those used amongst the other LOs. As long as it
does not interfere with the LOs’ goals to end oppression. It is my
opinion that even when dealing with oppressor nation LOs we must keep a
move ready to be made once achieving certain goals due to the history
the oppressor nation LOs have and because of their values as humans. We
wouldn’t like to see the LOs of the oppressed be set back a step or two
after gaining ground. I think that even unity of some form can be
achieved with pariahs – taking into account what they’ve done and what
they are willing to do to not only redeem themselves but to benefit the
struggle even at the cost of sacrifice. There is a place, space, form
and energy for everyone in a struggle. It is our responsibility to
organize, learn, and organize again.”
What these histories demonstrate is that in cases where the white
nationalists aren’t completely in bed with the pigs, they tend to see
themselves as prisoners and the pigs as their foes, like everyone else.
And it is the unity around demands for all prisoners, ones that are
nationality-neutral, that we will see opportunities for united front. So
while national unity may need to come first, class unity will always be
important in the prison movement.
White nationalism in general, whether of the left-wing or right-wing
variety, is based in an alliance with imperialism. But there are
examples in history of portions of the white population in the United
$tates who may have overt racist overtones without the attachment to
imperialism. Or at least with a mixed relationship to imperialism. And
in many cases this racism is more motivated by fear of the other, or
just self-protection than it is any deep investment in racist ideology
itself. The AB comrade who wrote
“The
Enemy of my Enemy” seems to be an example of this white nationalism
based in youthful ignorance. And the experience of the prison system has
given em the opportunity to learn about the lives of the oppressed, and
to live that life emself. George Skatze from Lucasville was also an
example of this, someone who stood with New Afrikan prisoners and
literally put eir life on the line in the struggle for prisoner rights
and then later at the hands of the state when ey was one of the comrades
who did not make a deal with the state to avoid death row as some of the
charged prisoners did.
While others suggest we fight racism as a way to end oppression, we say
to fight oppression to overcome racism. And in some cases oppression
itself will overcome racism, by uniting those once divided by ideas of
race. Our ideas are a product of our material conditions, and in
participating in the transformation of our conditions our ideas change.
This dungeon that is the Tier II program here at Hayes State Prison is
horrible to say the least. I am one of three caucasians in this dorm
that i am in and this makes my life doubly miserable. As most of the
pigs are white and prejudice which means all of the other inmates take
it all out on me though I am not prejudiced in any way. They all want to
complain and cuss me out but say nothing to the pigs here who are their
oppressors. No because doing so will get their phone privileges,
tablets, visitation or store privileges taken. No one here has any back
bone. They are complacent and are willing to accept cold trays, being
talked to any kind of way, being denied yard cells for weeks at a time
and shower cells as well.
It has gotten a little better now that I have shown people what I am
about but only a bit. I have been sharing my socialistic political views
and my revolutionary views with my fellow inmates here. It’s been hard
and my copies of ULK have been received. I am working towards
tarting a study group currently. This place is ripe for a revolution and
I would love to help lead it. Viva Revolution.
There was an entry in ULK 53 I am compelled to address under the
heading
“Deadly
Heat Victory in Louisiana.” It was erroneously reported the 5th
Circuit ruling in Bell v. LeBlanc, 792 F. 3d 584, mandated the
temperature be maintained “at or below 88 degrees in Angola’s death row
buildings.”
Not so. The 5th Circuit held the U.S. District Court Middle District of
Louisiana ruling encompassing all of Louisiana’s death row overly broad,
and therefore an abuse of the District Court’s discreation, violation of
the Prison Litigation Reform Act (PLRA). The 5th Circuit pared down the
District Court’s ruling to affect only the three named plaintiffs: Elzie
Ball, Nathaniel Code, and James Magee. The only reason the 5th Circuit
upheld the District Court’s ruling as pertaining to these three
plaintiffs is because all three are afflicted with pre-existing medical
conditions that are susceptible to heat-induced complications.
“Based on its findings of fact, we affirm the district court’s
conclusion that housing these prisoners in very hot cells without
sufficient access to heat-relief measures, while knowing that each
suffers from conditions that render him extremely vulnerable to serious
heat-related injury, violates the Eighth Amendment. … The district court
also erred because it awarded relief facility-wide, instead of limiting
such relief to Ball, Code, and Magee. … Because the district court’s
injunction provides an unnecessary type of relief and applies beyond
these three Plaintiffs, it violates the PLRA. Accordingly, the district
court abused its discretion. … We emphasize, however, that the finding
of substantial risk regarding a heat-related injury is tied to the
individual health conditions of these inmates.” Ball v. LeBlanc,
792 F.3d 584, 596-600, FNG.
The 5th Circuit opined Ball, Code, and Magee could be housed in cells
closer to the death row guards’ station, which is air conditioned,
thereby cooler than the remainder of death row cells. Or, at most, a
single death row tier could be air conditioned as a heat-relief measure
for prisoners similarly situated to Ball, Code, and Magee. But as for
requiring the Louisiana Department of Corrections to maintain
temperatures below 88 degrees at Angola’s death row altogether, the 5th
Circuit judged that was not necessary to comport with the Federal
Constitution.
Moral being, if it sounds too good to be true.. perhaps MIM(Prisons)
should submit to me these litigous tidbits for vetting and verification.
MIM(Prisons) responds: Thank you to this comrade for setting the
record straight, and helping to keep our subscribers from venturing down
a wrong path in seeking their own relief from extreme heat, especially
as summer is fast approaching. We rely on our subscribers to share their
knowledge with us, whether it be their legal expertise, organizing
experience, or theoretical understanding. Everyone should be making an
effort to increase our collective abilities, which our oppressors try so
hard to eliminate.
There are some good examples of united fronts between oppressed and
reactionary groups in the history of the United $tates. Some of which
ended up serving the interests of the oppressed and some which
ultimately hurt the oppressed. We find a few of these examples described
well in the book 500 Years of Indigenous Resistance available
from PM Press.(1)
First the case of the fight between the British and the emerging United
$tates of Amerika.
“In 1812, using the pretext of Native raids along its northern frontier
from British territories, U.S. forces attempted to invade British North
America. Here again, Britain’s colonial policies proved effective; an
alliance of Native nations (who had their own interests in full
implementation of the 1763 Proclamation [which prohibited settlement
west of the Appalachian mountains following the French and Indian War])
and European settlers succeeded in repulsing the U.S. expansion.”(p. 29)
As we have seen since 1812, the victory of the United $tates in the
Revolutionary War did not serve the interests of the First Nations. So
the First Nations definitely chose the right side in this battle, even
though the British surely had no real interest in supporting the rights
of the First Nations beyond what was necessary to gain their support.
This is an example of identifying the principal enemy and building
alliances against that enemy, even if those alliances are with groups
that would be enemies in other circumstances. This united front is
similar to the alliance between the Kuomindang and the Chinese
Communists in the war against Japanese imperialism. Ultimately the
Kuomindang betrayed the Communist Party, but at the time Japan was the
principal enemy and fighting together in a the united front was the
right choice to achieve the ultimate goal of establishing a socialist
state.
Another example is found in the U.$. Civil War, which was used by
Afrikan slaves to fight for their freedom. It was not a case of whites
going to war to help end slavery, but Afrikans were in a position to
force this issue to the forefront.
“The beginning of the U.S. Civil War in 1861 posed various problems for
the northern Union ruling class. Not only was the war for the
preservation of an expanding continental empire, but it also opened up a
second front: that of a liberation struggle by enslaved Afrikan peoples.
With a population of four million, the rising of these Afrikans in the
South proved crucial in the defeat of the Confederacy. By the tens of
thousands Afrikan slaves escaped from the slavers and enlisted in the
Union forces. This massive withdrawal of slave-labour hit the Southern
economy hard, and the Northern forces were bolstered by the
thousands.”(2)
In the aftermath of the Civil War, Afrikans in the South correctly
identified a shift in their principal enemy. It was no longer time to
ally with Union forces. With the ending of the war these slaves were
about to lose their bargaining position as fighters in the Union army.
“Towards the end of the War in 1865, those Afrikans who did not escape
began a large-scale strike following the defeat of the confederacy. They
claimed the lands that they had laboured on, and began arming themselves
– not only against the Southern planters but also against the Union
army. Widespread concerns about this ‘dangerous position’ of Afrikans in
the South led to ‘Black Reconstruction’; Afrikans were promised
democracy, human rights, self-government and popular ownership of the
land. In reality, it was a strategy for returning Euro-American
dominance….”(p. 40)
This shift resulted in a better deal for former slaves than they would
have got by just passively sticking with their unity with the North. But
it shows the need to complete the New Afrikan war for liberation from
the United $tates to achieve the basic goals of the Afrikan soliders who
freed themselves from slavery. Different conditions will require
reevaluation of who is our principal enemy and what are appropriate
united front strategies at the time.