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.
by a California prisoner April 2016 permalink18 April 2016 Revolutionary Greetings to you all,
Today we had a tournament of handball here in Folsom Prison C-Yard. It
was a tournament where my homies from the south and the fellas from the
north played with each other. We opened our courts for them to come and
just have some fun and express solidarity and unity not only to our
people but to the other factions of people and tribes. It was a
beautiful thing to see, for we had all the Raza from Aztlán and other
comrades in the courts of handball. Two months ago we had a few baseball
games where north and south Raza had a go and for a minute we thought
that would probably be it. But no. Efforts are being made from both ends
and others as well, to keep the peace amongst the lumpen organizations
(LOs). We understand it’s a small token here, but a big step for
emancipation for sure. It’s been a good year so far. We are constantly
working to unify the lumpen, I myself struggle to spread the view of one
united Aztlán. It’s a slow but steady process.
I received the book, Chican@ Power and the Struggle for Aztlán.
It helps me out, not only to understand more, but also to teach others.
And now I can provide more info when we teach each other.
Update 18 May 2016: The next step we have taken is to mix the
teams – no more north against south – We just play. So we’ll see what’s
next. It’s as if we’ve been waiting for this to happen but wouldn’t say
it. Now that it has it is embraced by the majority here. Of course,
there is still those that have an Amerikanized divide and conquer
mentality. But they will adapt and learn.
Hark now all you merry souls and listen as the drumbeat rolls oh
what sounds, and sights abound come one and all, let’s gather
round no worries friends, no danger here no cause for panic,
fright or fear we’re all friends, make no mistake don’t mind
these guards, guns, dogs and gates just follow me yes, right this
way cause in this tent you’re here to stay
Now step to the right folks, here you’ll see stacks and rows of new
TVs! such a thrill to sit and watch these flashing pictures as
you rot now pay attention, here comes the end as you smile and
nod at the message they send, as they tell you what to want and
wear, on what to spend and when to care, on whom to hate, and
emulate and who should run this police state it’s all for your
own good you see cause freedom of thought saps your energy yes,
that’s it, makes perfect sense now sit and stare and lets
commence
Now once you’re done with program phazing we’ve something else
that’s just as amazing a feast for the mind now, if you will
euphoria! in just one little pill yes prozac, yes oxies, yes sweet
ridalin! and xannies, and valium and yes vicodin! we’ve got
benzos and dexos and zicobilafral we’ve got shit you can’t pronounce
at all! we’ve got your poison, whatever your vice opiate
derivitives and pharmaceutical ice we’ll fix your brain, your
chondriatic disease your moods, your stress, even your shakey
knees with only the sagest in new medications designed by
private health care corporations profiteers in big business
competition for capital gain and political position so pay no
mind to that small print warning pay for your pills and take two
every morning
And now that you’re passive on new medication let’s move right along
to the next demonstration onward we go into the main tent just
purchase your seating arrangement for rent oh yeah, almost forgot to
tell you we also reserve the full right to sell you and to buy
you, and steal you and to enslave you, even to kill you but
never you mind all of that just yet I’ll explain it all later (once
you forget)
Now come one and all, to the main demonstration! it’s about to
begin, oh what a sensation! oh what brilliance, oh what drama!
the procession is even being led by Obama! it’s the greatest of
shows, the biggest one ever! the world’s never seen such a grand
endeavor you see, the producers and directors who hid in the
shade have learned from mistakes that through history’ve been
made from Rome to Germany, and even from Stalin we’ve studied
the pitfalls in which they have fallen plus with post-industrialist
balloons, toys and clowns, and gadgets and gewgaws, distractions
abound in this consumerist culture, it’s a glorious ride! but if
you resist - force will be applied. now sit in your row, your
correct social class station with your face to the front for the big
presentation pay no attention to the stage hands behind who are
locking the exits and changing the signs
Now the music fades, the lights have gone low and the ringmaster
enters to start off the show oh what will he do? what will he
say? for what grand gala did we come all this way? such
anticipation and so much suspense but his smile drops, and now he
comments, “we’re sorry folks, but there’s been a mistake truth
is, you get jack for the tolls we do take you’ve read the signs
wrong, yet now they are gone but since you’re all here, the show
must go on so you there” he points to the bottom rung seating,
cracking his whip at those few retreating “Black folks, Chican@s and
freaks with mohawks! into the freakshow cages with locks! now
don’t waste your time and try to resist cause our bullies are on
roid and you DON’T want them pist! as for the third world ladies and
gents you’ll be the labor to prop up our tents you best not
complain, get your asses in gear as we control you with tactics of
fear don’t worry kind Amerikans, no cause for alarm, just
cooperate, I promise, we’ll bring you no harm have a laptop, a
smartphone, a”binky” of sorts a gesture of thanks for being such
good sports we’ll keep you medicated and very well fed we’ll
play your favorite cop shows and then send you to bed but don’t get
empathetic with those in our cages or we’ll send in the drones to
drop pies in your faces can’t you see the benevolence of our
militarization? it’s all just for you, such insane exploitation
such death to our slaves in third world countries such death to our
ecosystem and our cute little monkeys and death to you dissenters
who don’t like our shows and death to nature, care of money-hungry
CEOs and death to our search for meaningful progression and
human progress itself, by way of oppression and death to all those
that we can’t squeeze for money and death to all those who even look
at us funny as we pump millions in tons of poisonous fumes into
the atmosphere in visible plumes all so your luxurious leisure can
grow thank you for voting, now on with the show for the biggest
one ever, too big to be stopped come one, and come all to Uncle
Sam’s Big Top!
I was close to seeing parole for my third time. Even if I would make
parole, I have no place to go. The half-way houses in Texas want money
before you parole there. How am I supposed to pay them if I’ve been
incarcerated for the past 4 years in a state that doesn’t pay their
inmates to work? I’ve seen numerous people make parole, not have a place
to go, and remain here for 15 month after they were granted parole! What
kind of sense does that make? But Texas is good with it because it looks
like they are using their parole and they are still collecting money
from the government for said prisoner. My time for release is coming
soon and I have no place to go or any type of plan. I’m more than
capable of working, but I need some help getting started.
Wisconsin prisoners at Waupun Correctional Institution are planning a
hunger strike to begin on 10 June 2016 to demand an end to the torture
of long-term confinement in control units in Wisconsin.
In 2015, the Wisconsin Department of Corrections (WI DOC) made some
policy changes to their use of long-term solitary confinement. According
to the DOC, the number of prisoners in “restrictive status housing” was
reduced by about 200 by reducing the maximum time prisoners can be put
in control units (which varies depending on the justification given for
this isolation). The WI DOC refused to release any information about
these changes until compelled by records requests, and the total number
of prisoners in control units reported by the DOC is highly suspicious
as it is far lower than information gathered from surveys.(1) In
addition, Waupun prisoners were not notified of the change to this
policy, and months later were still being held for longer than the new
regulations allowed.(2) It’s unclear if the new policy is being applied
uniformly across Wisconsin prisons at this point, but small reductions
in the length of solitary confinement sentences will not solve the
fundamental problem of this system of torture.
The actual policies are available on the Wisconsin DOC website and
include a table listing maximum time in “disciplinary separation” for
various offenses. This includes 180 days for “lying” and 360 days for
“lying about an employee,” 180 days for “disrespect” and 180 days for
“misuse of state or federal property.” These are all easily abused
accusations that prisoners are powerless to dispute. Furthermore, a
Wisconsin prisoner can be put in a control unit for up to 180 days for
“punctuality and attendance” issues and “loitering,” and up to 90 days
for “poor personal hygiene,” “dirty assigned living area,” and “improper
storage.”(3) The policy also states “More than one minor or major
disposition may be imposed for a single offense and both a major and
minor disposition may be imposed for a major offense” which sounds like
they can just pile on lots of offenses and sum up the total max days in
isolation so that prisoners are held there for years.
The demands of this protest include the release of prisoners who have
been in solitary confinement for over a year, a length of isolation far
exceeding what is commonly considered torture by international human
rights organizations.
As one prisoner
reported
to Under Lock & Key a few years ago:
“I have reasons to believe that these people have no plans of removing
me off A.C. … They have me in the worst conditions in the Wisconsin DOC.
… It is fly infested. I have black worms coming out of the sink. We
can’t have publications.
“I have been in seg for over 13 years. and I haven’t given these people
any trouble in a long time, and what I’m in seg for is solely political.
I am being punished for organizing for Black Unity and against
institutional racism. I simply created organizations that advocated the
advancement of Black people and that fought against Black on Black
crime, poverty, ignorance, etc. It wasn’t created to terrorize white
people, as the totalitarian state would have you believe.
“As a result of being in seg I have developed a long range of
psychological issues, issues that have left me scarred permanently.
These issues have caused some professionals to label me psychotic and
delusional among other things. I was diagnosed with Delusional Disorder
and am being treated for it.”(4)
It is well documented that long-term isolation causes mental health
problems including hallucinations and delusions. This technique is used
in prisons like Guantanamo Bay to torture military prisoners into making
confessions (or making up confessions for the many innocents who suffer
this torture). But in the Amerikan prison system this torture primarily
serves to slowly erode the health of prisoners who are either confined
to waste away for the rest of their life, or released back to the
streets unable to care for themselves.
The petition put together by prisoners at Waupun is printed in full
below:
Dying to Live
Human rights fight at Waupun Correctional Institution starting June 10,
2016. Prisoners in Waupun’s solitary confinement will start No Food
& Water humanitarian demand from Wisconsin Department of Corrections
officials.
The why: In the state of Wisconsin hundreds of prisoners are in the long
term solitary confinement units a.k.a. Administrative Confinement (AC).
Some been in this status from 18 to 20 years.
The Problem: The United Nations, several states, and even President
Obama have come out against this kind of confinement citing the
torturous effect it has on prisoners.
The Objective: Stop the torturous use long-term solitary confinement
(AC) by:
Placing a legislative cap on the use of long term solitary confinement
(AC)
DOC and Wisconsin legislators adoption/compliance of the UN Mandela
rules on the use of solitary confinement(5)
Oversight board/committee independent of DOC to stop abuse and
overclassification of prisoners to “short” and “long” term solitary
confinement.
Immediate transition and release to a less restrictive housing of
prisoners who been on the long term solitary confinement units for more
than a year in the Wisconsin DOC
Proper mental health facilities and treatment of “short” and “long” term
solitary confinement prisoners
An immediate FBI investigation to the secret Asklepieion* program the
DOC is currently operating at Columbia Correctional Institution (CCI) to
break any prisoner who the DOC considers a threat to their regimen
How you can help
Call Governor Scott Walker’s office and tell him to reform the long-term
solitary confinement units in the Wisconsin DOC and to stop the secret
Asklepieion program at once. The number to call is 608-266-1212.
Call the DOC central office and demand that all 6 humanitarian demands
for this hunger strike be met and demand an explanation as to why they
are operating a torture program. The number to call is 608-240-5000.
Call the media and demand that they do an independent investigation on
the secret Asklepieion program operating at Columbia Correctional
Institution, and cover this hunger strike.
Call the FBI building in Milwaukee, Wisconsin and demand that they
investigate the secret Asklepieion torture program being run at CCI. The
phone number to call is 414-276-4684.
Call Columbia Correctional Institution and tell them you are aware of
their secret torture program. Harass them! 608-742-9100.
Join in on the hunger strike and post it on the net. Convince others to
join as well.
* Asklepieion is a secret DOC torture program based upon Dr. Edgar
H. Schein’s brainwashing methodology that in the 1960s was disguised and
turned into a Behavior Therapy Treatment program that deals with the
literal brainwashing and enslavement of an individual’s mind. It
retrogresses the individual to the character role of a child and
reinforces the need for paternal authority. To achieve such effect the
prison authorities, with the help of collaborating inmates, must first
break the individual’s mind through sleep deprivation and character
invalidation techniques, and then, recondition it with Stockholm
Syndrom. To see more go to
https://iwoc.noblogs.org/post/2016/02/16/personal-experience-with-behavior-control-in-a-wisconsin-prison/
Mohamedou Ould Slahi has been held in secret detention centers by order
of the Amerikan government since 2001, first in Mauritania (the country
where ey was born), then in Jordan, and finally in 2002 in Guantánamo
Bay where ey is still imprisoned. Slahi voluntarily turned emself in to
the Mauritanian police on 29 September 2001; sure that ey would quickly
be cleared since ey was innocent of any crimes. Instead ey faced years
of torture, through which ey initially maintained eir innocence, until
it became clear that ey would never be released and ey could no longer
stand the suffering. After that point Slahi began to confess to anything
eir captors wanted em to say. Slahi still occasionally told them the
truth when they asked directly, but for the most part their stories were
not possibly consistent or confirmable since the “confessions” were
entirely fabricated. But after ey began to make false confessions and
falsely implicate others Slahi was allowed to sleep and eat, and the
extreme physical abuse stopped. The details of eir torture will make
readers wonder how Slahi held out for so long.
Slahi started writing down eir experiences in 2005 (after ey was finally
given paper and pen) and after many years of legal battles eir heavily
censored manuscript was finally released by the Amerikan government.
This book is an edited version of Slahi’s story, complete with the
original redactions. The editor, Larry Seims, includes some speculation
about what is behind the redactions and documents other declassified
information that corroborates what Slahi wrote. In spite of heavy
censorship, the released manuscript includes surprising detail about
Slahi’s experience including years of torture, the clear evidence that
ey is innocent, and the Amerikan government’s desire for a false
confession.
The book is written in English, Slahi’s fourth language, one that ey
learned in prison in order to better communicate with eir captors and
understand what was going on around em. For six and a half years Slahi’s
was allowed no contact with the outside world and was even hidden from
the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) which has a mandate
under the Geneva Convention to visit prisoners of war and others
detained in situations like Slahi’s to ensure humane treatment. For the
first year of incarceration Slahi’s family didn’t even know where ey
was, they found out when one of eir brothers saw an article in a German
newspaper. In 2008 Slahi was finally granted the “privilege” of
twice-yearly calls with family. In 2010 Slahi’s petition of habeas
corpus was granted by the DC Circuit Court of Appeals, ordering eir
release. But the Obama administration filed an appeal and Slahi remains
in custody.
Amerikan Imperialist Global Domination
The many people who were arrested and kidnapped from their home
countries to be sent to Guantánamo Bay underscore the neo-colonial
status of those countries. As Slahi explains “November 28th is
Mauritanian Independence Day; it marks the event when the Islamic
Republic of Mauritania supposedly received its independence from the
French colonists in 1960. The irony is that on this very same day in
2001, the independent and sovereign Republic of Mauritania turned over
one of its own citizens on a premise. To its everlasting shame, the
Mauritanian government not only broke the constitution, which forbids
the extradition of Mauritanian criminals to other countries, but also
extradited an innocent citizen and exposed him to the random American
Justice.”(p. 132)
When the ICRC finally got in to see Slahi, the last detainee they were
allowed to visit, they tried to get em to talk about abuse ey
experienced. “But I always hid the ill-treatment when the ICRC asked me
about it because I was afraid of retaliation. That and the fact that the
ICRC has no real pressure on the U.S. government: the ICRC tried, but
the U.S. government didn’t change its path, even an inch. If they let
the Red Cross see a detainee, it meant that the operation against that
detainee was over.”(p. 348)
This book underscores the power of Amerikan imperialism to do whatever
it likes in the world. There is no government or organization able to
stand up to this power. This is something that many Amerikans take pride
in, but this is the power of a people who seek to dominate the world for
economic gain. When the oppressed fight back, that power is deployed to
squash the resistance by any means necessary. Of course there is a
contradiction inherent in this power: Amerikan imperialist domination
breeds resistance from the oppressed around the world. So-called
terrorist attacks on Amerikan targets are responses to Amerikan
terrorism across the globe.
As Slahi noted when ey was watching the movie Black Hawk Down
with a few of eir guards: “The guards went crazy emotionally because
they saw many Americans getting shot to death. But they missed that the
number of U.S. casualties is negligible compared to the Somalis who were
attacked in their own homes. I was just wondering at how narrow-minded
human beings can be. When people look at one thing from one perspective,
they certainly fail to get the whole picture, and that is the main
reason for the majority of misunderstandings that sometimes lead to
bloody confrontations.”(p. 320)
We would not agree that it is just misunderstandings that lead to these
bloody confrontations. Rather it is the blood thirst of imperialist
aggression constantly seeking new sources of exploited and stolen wealth
that inevitably leads to bloody confrontations.
While Slahi is far from politically radical, eir experience educated em
in the reality of injustice and the definition of crime by those in
power. Writing about eir arrest and initial imprisonment in Mauritania:
“So why was I so scared? Because crime is something relative; it’s
something the government defines and re-defines whenever it
pleases.”(p. 92)
War on Islam
The target of Amerikan aggression changes depending on where there is
the most resistance to imperialism. Back in the mid 1900s it was focused
on the communist countries, this shifted to the “War on Drugs” and
attacks on Latin America in the late 1900s, and then to the Arab world
in the early 2000s. Slahi is acutely aware of this latest wave of
aggression by the Amerikan imperialists targeting Islam and the
hypocrisy of this attack:
“…Americans tend to widen the circle of involvement to catch the largest
possible number of Muslims. They always speak about the Big Conspiracy
against the U.S. I personally had been interrogated about people who
just practiced the basics of the religion and sympathized with Islamic
movements; I was asked to provide every detail about Islamic movements,
no matter how moderate. That’s amazing in a country like the U.S., where
Christian terrorist organizations such as Nazis and White Supremacists
have the freedom to express themselves and recruit people openly and
nobody can bother them. But as a Muslim, if you sympathize with the
political views of an Islamic organization you’re in big trouble. Even
attending the same mosque as a suspect is big trouble. I mean this fact
is clear for everybody who understands the ABCs of American policy
toward so-called Islamic Terrorism.”(p. 260-61)
Slahi also documents the denial of religious practice in detention
camps:
“But in the secret camps, the war against the Islamic religion was more
than obvious. Not only was there no sign to Mecca, but the ritual
prayers were also forbidden. Reciting the Koran was forbidden.
Possessing the Koran was forbidden. Fasting was forbidden. Practically
any Islamic-related ritual was strictly forbidden. I am not talking here
about hearsay; I am talking about something I experienced myself. I
don’t believe that the average American is paying taxes to wage war
against Islam, but I do believe that there are people in government who
have a big problem with the Islamic religion.”(p. 265)
Slahi misses that this chauvinism is not at root a problem Amerikans
have with the Islamic religion. Rather it is a problem they have with
oppressed people who rise up to oppose Amerikan imperialism. Islam is
just one of many targets because it is a religion of the oppressed. The
Amerikan government (and its people) had no problem with Islam when
al-Qaeda was an ally in the fight against communism. In fact Slahi
himself trained with al-Qaeda for six months in Afghanistan, but this
was during the time when that group was supported by the Amerikan
government and fighting against the Soviet-backed government in that
country. This action was legal for Mauritanian citizens, and in fact
encouraged by the Amerikan government. Nonetheless this fact became one
of the cornerstones of the Amerikan insistence that Slahi was behind the
World Trade Center attacks, among other things.
Will Amerikans Oppose Torture?
After years of torture and unjust imprisonment at the hands of the
Amerikan government Slahi remains relatively moderate in eir views about
the country and its people. Ey sees fundamental good in all people, a
view that communists share, but one that has blinded Slahi to the
economic interests of the vast majority of Amerikans which leads them to
support the torture in Guantanamo even after reports like this one are
released.
“What would the dead average American think if he or she could see what
his or her government is doing to someone who has done no crimes against
anybody? As much as I was ashamed for the Arabic fellows, I knew they
definitely didn’t represent the average Arab. Arabic people are among
the greatest on the planet, sensitive, emotional, loving, generous,
sacrificial, religious, charitable, and light-hearted…. If people in the
Arab world knew what was happening in this place, the hatred against the
U.S. would be heavily watered, and the accusation that the U.S. is
helping and working together with dictators in our countries would be
cemented.”(p. 257)
The reality is that most people in the Arab world do know about Amerikan
injustice. In fact, in Mauritania the police told Slahi “America is a
country that is based on and living with injustice”(p. 134) when Slahi
asked why they were extraditing em when they believed ey had already
proven eir innocence. And it is this knowledge that leads to many taking
up the fight against Amerikan imperialism. At the same time most
Amerikans now know about the torture of detainees at Guantánamo Bay and
still public sentiment is far from outraged at these actions. Large
portions of the population rally around political figures like Donald
Trump when ey calls for more torture.
From all of this we see further evidence for the potential of
Islam
as a liberation theology for those fighting against Amerikan
imperialism. Just as the masses in Latin America were drawn to Catholic
liberation theology as a reaction to oppression and injustice in that
region, segments of any religion are likely to adapt to popular
sentiments. Liberation theology was a valuable ally for the
revolutionaries in Latin America.
Regardless of the format this liberation struggle takes, we know that
the oppressed people of the world can not wait around for Amerikans to
wake up and stop the torture themselves. Now more than a year after
Slahi’s book was released (which even spent some time on the best
seller’s list), still nothing has been done about eir situation. The
masses must liberate themselves; their captors will never willingly give
up power. And the Amerikan people are enjoying the spoils of the
captors, so most Amerikans are happily going along with imperialist
torture worldwide.
September 9, 2016 will be the fifth annual Day of Peace and Solidarity
demonstration in prisons across the United $tates. This is an
opportunity for prisoners to commemorate the anniversary of the Attica
uprising and draw attention to abuse of prisoners across the country
through a 24-hour day of education and building peace, where some units
will exercise a work stoppage and fast. The annual demonstration was
initiated in 2012 by an organization in the United Front for Peace in
Prisons (UFPP), and has been taken up as an annual UFPP event, with
people participating all across the country.
This demonstration aligns with the UFPP principle to build unity among
prisoners who have a common interest in fighting the oppression of the
criminal injustice system. Prisoners are taking the 24 hours to engage
in solidarity building and education, ceasing all prisoner-on-prisoner
hostilities. This is a small, but meaningful step in building a United
Front among prisoner organizations and individuals committed to the
anti-imperialist movement. It is an opportunity to come together,
publicize the UFPP and assess our progress. To stand in a united front,
we do not need to agree on every political issue, but we must come
together united around core principles to build and stand as one. The
unity building starts well before September 9 for those who are engaging
others to participate in the action. It is a long slow process of
education and organizing to build the anti-imperialist movement.
We recently learned about another call to action for 9 September 2016, a
“Call
to Action Against Slavery in America”.(1) The people who issued this
call wrote: “On September 9th of 2016, we will begin an action to shut
down prisons all across this country. We will not only demand the end to
prison slavery, we will end it ourselves by ceasing to be slaves.” This
call for a country-wide work stoppage in prisons coincides with the UFPP
solidarity demonstration and so we take this opportunity to comment on
the similarities and differences.
First we want to say that we are always happy to see people taking up
organizing and trying to build unity behind bars. There are some very
good points taken in this call to action, particularly in the
recognition of the growing protests in prisons across the country and
the importance of this resistance. With our focus on building a United
Front among prisoners we would hope to work with these folks to broaden
our movement. We are not sure if the organizers were unaware of the work
the UFPP has been doing on a September 9 protest for five years, or if
they purposely decided to initiate a separate action due to
disagreements with the UFPP. Our attempts to reach out to organizers
have so far been unanswered.
Tactically, we are both promoting a commemoration of the Attica
uprising, and a work strike might be included in some prisoners’ plans
for the Day of Peace and Solidarity. While a one-day strike is more
symbolic than anything, we do see power in the ability of prisoners to
“shut down” facilities by not doing the work to keep them running for a
potentially longer period. However, the organizers behind this more
recent call are taking the work strike to the level of a line question,
which we have strong disagreements with. They focus on a work strike
because they are focused on abolishing what they see as “slavery” in
U.$. prisons. However, for Marxists, slavery is a specific economic
system that involves the ownership of people in order to exploit their
labor. Slaves have exchange value, just like other objects that are
bought and sold. This exchange value for people is the basis of a
horrible system that involves the capture and purchase of humyns. People
confuse prison labor with slavery because there are some significant
similarities: prison labor does involve workers receiving very little or
no pay, and like slaves prisoners are given housing, food and other
basic necessities while held in captivity. But we can see clearly that
there is no exchange value to prisoners because states must pay other
states to take their prisoners. This is the opposite of slavery where
people pay to buy slaves.
Further, in order to call prisoner labor slavery there must be
exploitation. We can see that this exploitation (prisons actually
profiting from prisoner labor) only exists for
a
tiny portion of U.$. prisoners.(2) States like Texas and Louisiana
do have significant productive industries reminiscent of the slave days.
But for most, this is not the reality. Prisons require huge infusions of
federal and state funds in order to operate. If they were making a
profit off of prisoners’ labor this drain on public funds would not be
required. Instead prisoner labor is only offsetting a small portion of
the operating cost.
Some people tell us this is just semantics, arguing about the definition
of a term rather than talking about the very real problem of prisons
torturing humyn beings while allowing the real criminals to run the
government and capitalist corporations. But this recent call for protest
against prison slavery underscores why these definitions are so
important. The organizers of the September 9 protest against slavery
wrote: “When we abolish slavery, they’ll lose much of their incentive to
lock up our children, they’ll stop building traps to pull back those who
they’ve released. When we remove the economic motive and grease of our
forced labor from the US prison system, the entire structure of courts
and police, of control and slave-catching must shift to accommodate us
as humans, rather than slaves.” This statement is not true, and it
ignores the economic reality of prisons which receive over $60 billion a
year in state and federal funds to cover operating costs. Why would the
government run a money losing business? Certainly not for economic gain!
The economic motive of slavery is not the driving force behind prisons.
And even if we don’t call it slavery, economics are not the reason we
have prisons. While it is true that lots of people get very high
salaries, and many companies make buckets of money by serving the prison
system, this is just a redistribution of profits taken from exploitation
of Third World workers. That’s why it has to come from the government
allocated to the prisons. And that $60 billion could be funneled into
any other project that provides jobs for the Amerikan labor aristocracy
just as easily and all those guards and other prison workers would be
just as happy. Prisons are a convenient way to redistribute imperialist
superprofits to the labor aristocracy within U.$. borders, but they are
definitely not the best option if economics were the sole consideration.
It is critical that activists and revolutionaries understand that
Amerika has built an enormous criminal injustice system as a tool of
social control. Prisons are used to lock up oppressed nations and
activists. The history of prisons in this country clearly demonstrates
this. We saw a huge rise in incarceration starting in 1974 after the
revolutionary movements of that time were targeted by the government.
Until that time there was a relatively low and stable rate of
imprisonment in this country. Then the lockup rate of First Nations, New
Afrikans and Chican@s rose to vastly disproportionate numbers relative
to whites starting in the 1970s. These historical events and economic
facts make it clear that Amerikkkan prisons are used for social control,
not for profits.
The organizers of the anti-slavery protest are misleading people into
believing that shutting down prison work will shut down prisons. It will
cause difficulties, and is a very valid tactic for exerting power as a
group. But prisoner labor itself is not the principal contradiction in
prison. We guarantee that if we were to reach the unity to wage an
extended work strike across U.$. prisons, that Amerika would figure out
how to keep the oppressed locked up.
We call this a failure to recognize the principal contradiction. In this
case we are talking about the thing that will best push forward the
prisoners’ fight against oppression. Fighting against something that
doesn’t exist (slavery) is certainly not the best way forward. But even
if we don’t call it slavery, fighting against prisoner labor as if the
end to prisoner work will put an end to prisons is also incorrect, and
will lead to a dead end. We see the need for unity among prisoner groups
and individuals as critical to building a solid anti-imperialist prison
movement. We think this addresses the real principal contradiction that
the prison movement faces between the collective interests of the
imprisoned lumpen and the individualist tendencies currently dominant
among that class. This is why we organize on September 9 to build a Day
of Peace and Solidarity. Get involved! Write to us for the September 9
Organizing Pack and get started building in your prison.
As of now, several other prisoners and I are having major problems with
our grievances not being processed. The reason given for not processing
the grievances is “issue not grievable.” One of my grievances was
against a Corrections Officer (CO) who refused to issue confiscation
papers after taking something from a prisoner. The other one was against
another CO who forced me to stay in the day room with my commissary
(when it’s strictly against policy). In that grievance I cited such
policy and it was immediately (the very next day) sent back to me with
the excuse “issue not grievable”. So, I’ve send a letter to the
Administrative Review & Risk Management (ARRM) Division
Administrator. I still haven’t heard back from them. Still waiting. But
I won’t at all be surprised if I don’t get an answer. I know very well
how these people work. Please send me some grievance petitions.
In your March/April 2016, No.49 news letter you published an article by
a South Carolina prisoner,
“One More
Doctor Replaced”. Very interesting article. Because here at the
McConnell Unit we have a P.A. Erie Echavarry that would do anything in
his power to deny prisoners as much medical care as possible. I’ve filed
grievances and complaints with the Texas Board of Examiner’s in Austin,
Texas. But to no avail. Things have gotten worse, especially for those
of us who file complaints against him. You will never see the end of
medical negligence. And the worst thing of all is that you will stay
stuck seeing the evil P.A. Echavarry. I was told that I don’t have a say
in who I get to see.
The Texas Board of Examiners responded that there was insufficient
evidence to substantiate my allegations against P.A. Echavarry. I’m not
the only one who’s filed complaint’s with T.B.E in Austin, TX against
this P.A., and nothing is being done about it. Is there anybody that you
can refer me to that can help me in regards to this matter?
I was at the Connally Unit. I know how bad the food is over there. Here
at McConnell is no different. The food is 100% inadequate. While we are
served casserole about 98% of the time, which is mainly noodles more
than anything else, the officers are fed ribs, fried pork chops,
chicken, or chicken fried steak. Some days they eat Mexican food such as
chalupas. This is even though the law is that they are to eat what we
prisoners eat. With the exception that the chicken be baked or fried,
the same with fish, and chicken patty, or burrito etc.
But it’s very rare that these officers eat what we prisoners eat. It is
a known fact. On my next letter I will try to have documentation to send
you to this matter.
I try my best to fight these injustices, even filing “Citizen
Complaints” with the Ombudsman. But lately, either the Ombudsman is not
taking into consideration the complaints that have been filed with his
agency, or here at the McConnell unit they are disregarding them. I
helped a friend file one through one of my nieces, Which he hasn’t heard
anything of yet. It’s been already 2 weeks now. Well, i think this will
be all for now. Until next time.
First of all, thank you for your work on the behalf of prisoners here in
Texas, as well as everywhere.
I wanted to inform you of a trend I’ve noticed here in my unit of
ignoring our rights when going through disciplinary procedures. When we
are being charged with a violation, we are ordered to sign on the place
to waive our rights to a 24-hour notice of our hearing. We are also not
given an opportunity to circle an option to attend our hearing. Both of
these are rights that are being ignored. The cases are then run with no
opportunity for us to speak in our own defense. (See documentation.)
Furthermore, when a grievance is written, at both Steps 1 and 2, they
are returned with no investigation done and a standard answer. (See
documentation.) Note the X’s where I am ordered to sign, the absence of
me circling that I did or did not want to attend my hearing, the almost
word for word similarity of the Step 1 and 2 answers. Also, on the
second report they circled no to show that I declined attending, but I
did not circle “no.”
Just thought your readers might want to be aware of what they face. I
would still like to receive a Texas Activist Pack as I am using a
cellmate’s and he is leaving. Thank you.
I write to deliver an update as promised concerning the
recent
hunger strike which took place the 23 March 2016.
Currently as of today the final two hunger strikers are relieved of
their duties with a victory in hand!! As I was told, “it was a rough
fight,” and “a long long 16 days!” Not all, but the majority claimed
victory along the fight. A lot fell off before the battle began. But a
victory for one is a victory for all! We will continue to stay unified
and fight each unjust act with every and all remedies we can muster up.
As far as my knowledge, Dr. Fiscal, who was working for the
administration and refusing to send anyone out to receive outside
medical treatment, was walked off and fired. A hunger striker demand!
Religious accommodations are now being reviewed. But the food is still
short. The discrimination has slowed down but I’m sure it will be back
once the heat dies down.
In the beginning I would conduct a phone call to each brother’s families
(the ones provided) and provide them with all the phone #s they would
need to call and apply pressure, including the Deputy Warden, Warden,
Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction (ODRC) Director, Ohio
State Patrol, and any news station willing to listen and investigate.
The prison would lie to the family and Ohio State Patrol until we
started recording all conversations. Then things changed! For the most
part everybody was persistent and in the end it all paid off.
Thank you for your support. I depart as I came.
MIM(Prisons) responds: We are not as optimistic as this comrade
that this struggle has ended in a victory. It’s unclear from this
report, but we hope that the strikers who were seeking medical attention
received more than just a firing of the facility’s doctor. Adequate
medical care would certainly be a victory. But the other loose demands
of religious accommodations, adequate food, and national oppression
(discrimination of “minority groups”) are far from resolved. The
oppressors have been showing us for centuries that expecting them to act
in good faith is a losing strategy. There are no rights, only power
struggles, and unless the oppressed are making clear demands and
enforcing their rights, we expect no improvements.
On the up side, this is a good exercise in how to conduct a campaign. It
was advantageous to designate a point-persyn to keep the public informed
of the progress of the strike. It sounds like the unity of the
participants in the strike remains intact, and they can draw on this
unity for future campaigns. So there were certainly victories in this
battle, but more related to prisoners organizing, and getting their
outside supporters involved, rather than getting the administration to
concede to the demands of the captives.
Originally, I wrote you being interested in the study. But I have looked
up the meaning of “Maoist” it says communism, and the things I have
heard about communism hasn’t been in good light. Can you explain to me
what a “Maoist” is? Cause you see, I know in fact that dictionaries can
be misleading. And further, from what I’m reading of your introduction
letter, you are fighting for the right things. Besides, I’m down with
fighting against any tyrannical system and political repression.
Texas is truely a state of political repression. They have started by
taking tobacco, then porn magz, then stationary, & now action
pictures that don’t show any sexual parts. The parole system is
monopolizing and slavery oriented. You will find that most parolees have
had many major disciplinary cases in the last 6 months to a year &
still was allowed to parole. But those prisoners who are working, doing
what they are suppose to be doing, and staying out of trouble and case
free are mostly being denied parole. Parole denials almost always use
the same excuse each time, but the most extraordinary is the ones where
prisoners are denied due to so called “manipulating” the system because
they’ve remained disciplinary case free for 2-4 years. They say it’s
impossible for a prisoner to do that because the system is made so that
you will get disciplinaries. What!?!
So, I find that I’m interested in being a part of your movement.
Especially concerning the “Indigent Supplies & Mailing limitation.”
They have gone from 5 letters and supplies per week to once a month.
Talk about repressions.