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.
Lately, due to the continuing of the repressive injustice system, the
New Afrikan Maoist Brotherhood (NAMB) has restructured our organizing
and networking tactics. We continue our current study group raising New
Afrikan and internationalist consciousness. We are working on a peace
treaty/alliance between the Vice Lords, Latin Kings, MS-13, Bloods and
Black P. Stones. The Euro-Amerikan street organizations of the
Cincinnatti Caucasian Cartel and the Cincinnati White Boys have allied
against the Aryan Brothers and so, we are working to bring the Triple Cs
and the CWBs into the Ohio-wide treaty with the Vice Lords and Latin
Kings/MS-13 and Bloods. Our next focus will be to reach out to the
“heartless felons” of Northern Ohio (Cleveland based) to radicalize them
into revolutionary consciousness. These are uphill battles due to lack
of quality leadership, coupled with the terrain of lockdown blocks,
controlled movements, and confidential informants. But, the movement
must be pushed, no matter how fast/slow, hard/easy it may seem. History
is on our side! The NAMB is slowly but surely making headway in
spreading unity and revolutionary theory. We look forward to creating an
Ohio-wide, Ohio-produced treaty between all LOs inside of prison and
outside.
MIM(Prisons) adds: These comrades in Ohio are doing the essential
work of education and building peace and unity. Bringing lumpen
organizations together into a United Front (UF) is critical, but we must
always be clear what we are uniting around. The UF is a vehicle for the
oppressed to unite groups against a common and principal enemy. We learn
from history that this includes alliances between the proletariat and
the national bourgeoisie when the fight is against the imperialist
invading army. In Amerikan prisons today, this unity is among lumpen
organizations against the criminal injustice system which is used by
imperialist Amerika as a tool of social control.
In solidarity, I offer this suggestion: reduce your contribution to your
imprisonment; instead contribute to your child’s development.
Advantages: the prison system has less funding; the companies that lobby
for prisons lose money; you remain healthy to fight!
J. Paul Getty said, “If you owe the bank $100, that’s your problem. If
you own the bank $100 million, that’s the bank’s problem!”
The prison gets roughly $30,000/year for each general population
prisoner, but receives an average of $70,000 for us in solitary
confinement. Where does the money come from? Too much of it comes from
us! Federal prisoners spend $300 million a year in commissary. It is
estimated that prisoners contribute $3 billion annually toward their own
incarceration. We are allowing our money to be used as a weapon of war
against us. “Playing by your enemy’s rules is suicide.” Growth and
Development symbolizes growth of knowledge and development of new skills
and tactics to be successful!
If you want to bring the CDCR director to the negotiation, make Keefe
force him to the table. It is always about the money with capitalists.
You have to give them something to lose!
We never shop during September out of respect for the sacrifice of my
Attica brothers. Ask your family and friends to participate by not
purchasing products from Keefe, Bob Barker, Golden Valley and any other
company that profits from prisons. Eliminate the funding, and the
problem is solved. Stop contributing to your own suffering!
Request the public records, budget and audit for the California prison
system. It will show you how you are giving your money to your
suffering.
Grow your knowledge Develop new skills and
tactics Revolutionary strategy Intelligent sacrifice Stand
United Economic pressure to obtain your goal
MIM(Prisons) adds:Every September 9 the
United Front
for Peace in Prisons (UFPP) promotes a
solidarity
demonstration in honor of the Attica uprising. This peaceful protest
could easily expand to a month-long boycott of the parasitic industries
from which prisoners are forced to make purchases. We welcome input from
UFPP members and supporters leading up to this September’s
demonstration.
Expansion Cell Blocks (ECB) were designed to hold two prisoners in order
to increase unit capacity. But Texas officials have labeled ECB as high
security in an attempt to negate the facts and distort the actual
security level of the ECB.
In order to justify this use of ECB, in spite of staff shortages and
unlawful conditions, the authorities create a hostile environment which
conforms to their false reality. Prisoners are agitated to commit acts
of violence, create disturbances, or become aggressive, so that the ECB
takes on an air of a high security prisoner housing area where sanctions
and restrictions are necessary. Sanctions and restrictions enable the
ECB to be operated even without the staff they are short. Constant
lockdown cameras have been installed to document everything. This
expense must be justified. The staff creates incidents for the
technology to record. Restrictions begin. Policy becomes practice.
Lights are turned on every time count is taken, food is delivered, or
staff feel it is necessary. Prisoners are required to regularly produce
ID and are disturbed to the point they are deprived of REM sleep. Cell
searches are performed irregularly during the day and throughout the
night. A heightened state of anxiety and stress is created. People kept
under high levels of stress are known to snap or break.
In addition to this high stress level, prisoners at ECB are provoked by
staff. Most lack the capacity to respond to chaos in a rational manner
thereby perpetrating the myth of high security and enabling the
authorities to further control and empower themselves.
There is a systematic campaign of psychological warfare being waged
against prisoners in control units. The evidence proves sensory
deprivations experienced in isolation produces extreme states of mind,
impulsiveness and irrational behaviors. Statistics show a decline in
mental health in prisoners confined to solitary confinement for years.
Without stimulation our minds and bodies begin to break down and decay.
Prisoners are conditioned through a system of punishments and
indifference to view all forms of resistance as futile. Requests aren’t
answered. Responses are purposely vague or misleading. Policy is
interpreted to undermine prisoner autonomy. The authorities use every
tactic available to promote complete dependency of the prisoner and to
ensure despondency is total.
All the while the public is being told prisoners are being provided with
forms of rehabilitation and that support is given to those who desire to
make modifications to their mentality.
Facilities designed to house 1200 prisoners are used to house 600.
Prisoners in control units, Ad-Seg or high security do not receive good
time, parole or work time. Their sentences are only discharged at their
maximum release date. The result is requiring more money to provide for
more prisoners and more staff to control them. The goal of the prison
staff is achieved.
MIM(Prisons) adds: These long-term isolation cells are a common
tool of oppression in the Amerikan criminal injustice system. And we
have plenty of evidence of the detrimental effect of this isolation on
humyns. Get involved in the campaign to shut down control units to
resist this repression in Texas and across the country.
Since my arrival at Kern Valley State Prison (KVSP) in July 2013 I’ve
had to file numerous 602 appeals just to be able to utilize my two hour
a week constitutional right to use the prison law library. At KVSP they
like to run a very oppressive program, or I should say lack of program,
and keep everybody on lockdown 24 hours a day, even on the general
population and non-discipline yards. This was done all under the guise
of “safety & security.” Their stratagem is that we can’t file any
complaints on them if we don’t have access to legal forms.
For the more creative prisoners, we’ve been able to bypass their little
games and still file 602s and habeas corpus writs in our
attempts to inform the outside world of the illegal practices here at
the prison.
One of our writs must have struck a nerve because on 10 April at 4am,
the prison’s “Institutional Gang Investigators” AKA the goon squad,
raided our building in full riot gear, and confiscated everyone’s
paperwork (books, family/legal letters, and writing materials) all in
the name of “safety & security.” It has been over two weeks now and
the warden has given no word on exactly when we will be given access to
our legal/personal documents.
Even though the majority of us have already bypassed their little
blockade and have filed writs or found ways of informing our lawyers and
family on the outside, these things take time. So here we sit on
lockdown, with very limited access to the courts and family, awaiting
relief or a full blown revolution to kick off. And although it is my
personal belief that the latter will happen at some point, I also feel
that it’s going to take a whole lot more hard work in order to open up
the eyes and ears of our fellow brothers and sisters around the world,
before we all as a whole, can shout “stop!” and really have the means to
add weight to our words.
Until then keep up the faith and hard work. Stay strong! This current
system is at the breaking point. There is light at the end of the
tunnel!
MIM(Prisons) adds: We agree with this comrade that we have a lot
of work to do to educate our brothers and sisters before we are ready to
kick off the revolution. In the meantime we need to do what s/he is
doing: the day to day work of exposing the abuse and brutality of the
imperialist system and organizing others. We all have a responsibility
to educate others however we can, whether that’s by writing articles for
ULK, talking to others on our block or yard, organizing a study
group, teaching someone to read, or whatever else you can do to use your
skills and talents to advance the struggle. Don’t just sit back and read
about it, get involved!
The Texa$ Board of Criminal (in)Justice implemented new prisoner
Correspondence Rules on 1 October 2013 restricting indigent prisoners to
5 one-ounce domestic letters per month. The previous policy allowed 5
letters per week. This is a clear attack on prisoners’ access to the
outside world, and in particular
impacts
politically active prisoners who use the mail to expose the
brutality and abuse going on behind bars in Texas. In response to this
new policy United Struggle from Within initiated a
grievance
campaign, organizing prisoners to appeal this restriction. Below are
several new updates to the campaign:
Successful Grievance Against Limits on Legal Mail
From Hughes Unit: “I won my grievance due to interference from the
department law library which deals with offenders who are indigent. They
were saying five letters a month for everything and they were trying to
stop my legal mail from going out to the courts. There is no limit on
legal mail! They were also trying only to give us supplies like 25
sheets of paper, one pen, five envelopes a month. But an indigent
offender who is doing legal work can have this once a week, and mail out
as much legal work he or she wants.”
One prisoner from Allred wrote Step 1 and Step 2 grievances requesting
additional stamps. Because of his need to use his 5 indigent mail stamps
to pursue legal research this prisoner was unable to write to family and
friends and so requested additional stamps from the Warden. The first
request prior to the grievances stated “I need to mail 5 more letters
this month using indigent [mail]. … This unit law library is giving me
the run around having me write and ask everybody under the sun. They
don’t know about the 83rd Legislature House Bill 634 by Farias of Texas.
It’s the holidays, I need extra 5 letters this month.” The response from
the Warden: “That doesn’t meet any legal requirement and I don’t have
the authority to allow you extra postage for that.” Responses to his
grievances following up on the Warden’s denial included denying the Step
1 for “excessive attachments.” The attachments were copies of his
initial attempts to resolve the issue without filing a grievance.
Based on the victory from the prisoner in Hughes Unit, we encourage
prisoners to appeal their access to stamps for legal mail separately
from the restriction on personal mail.
Restrictions on Receipt of Stationary
A comrade in Eastham Unit reported: “Each year the big wigs running
Texas prisons decide on what to take from the prisoners next. This year
it involves indigent mail and stationary sent in from the outside.
Prisoners who have no money on their trust fund account are able to
receive supplies (paper, pen, envelopes) and send out letters through
the indigent mail. Before this March prisoners could send out five
letters a week, now it’s just five letters a month… What’s worse is that
we’re charged for indigent mail services. Whenever we get money on our
account, the cost for every letter mailed and each supply is deducted.
“Prior to March our friends and family could have stationary from an
outside store sent to us. This was eliminated, and now our only option
is purchasing stationary from commissary, and paying their prices. Like
any oppressor, TDCJ enjoys coming up with new ideas and ways to make
life more difficult for their captors. There’s strength in numbers. The
more of us who write grievances, send letters to state politicians, and
get the word out to our family and friends, the better chance we have of
telling our oppressors that we’re not going to take this lying down.”
This comrade is right on about the strength in numbers. We have a number
of prisoners across the state working on this campaign to end the
restrictions on correspondence in Texas, and we’ve come up with a few
key
steps for prisoners and supporters to take.
Some jailhouse lawyers have created guides to fighting this injustice as
well as a broader
grievance
guide for Texas, and we are seeing an influx of prisoners requesting
these resources. We look forward to the results of this growing activism
in this state with the largest prison population and one of the highest
incarceration rates in the country.
For this indigent mail campaign in particular, we have a sample step 1
grievance for prisoners to use as well as a sample step 2 grievance for
those whose step 1 is rejected. Write to us for a copy of the indigent
mail campaign guide.
I want to first send an encouraging word to the brother who exposed a
glimpse of
our
struggle here at Georgia State Prison. I can honestly say that the
author of the stand up article in the March/April 2014 Under Lock
& Key has inspired me to go harder.
As of this moment I am the head representative of the United Nation
Against The Machine (UNATM) movement. The UNATM promotes unity, peace,
and education amongst the various social groups within the system. The
goal is to cease fire against one another and unite in our struggle
against the oppressive pigs. We all have a common goal which should be
freedom and we all have a common enemy which is the oppressive injustice
system. There is no excuse for us to continue laying down when the bully
approaches. We still have rights and we still are human beings who
deserve better.
I want those in the segregation unit to know that you are not alone and
as a fellow comrade/soulja in this struggle I pledge loyalty. I pledge
to educate and decrease the illiteracy rate that confines our fellow
brothers in an enslaved mind. I pledge to challenge the unchallenged. I
pledge to finally put the pig head on the platter for all its wrong
doing. We are our own machine that will stop at nothing to obtain true
justice. I encourage all the souljas in this struggle to remain strong
for we will see better days.
MIM(Prisons) responds: We are encouraged to see the growing
activism in Georgia and in particular the conscious comrades building
unity and peace in that state. We have reached out to this comrade to
suggest that UNATM consider joining the
United Front
for Peace in Prisons (UFPP) as their goals line up with this effort.
Specifically, the first three
UFPP
principles are peace, unity and growth. Through this United Front we
can bring together different groups and individuals to fight our common
enemy in the criminal injustice system.
I had some thoughts on an article that i read in ULK 37
entitled
“Elevate
the Prison Struggle Beyond Day to Day Goals”. In this article a
comrade voiced the frustration of the disarray or disfuction of the
movement. I fully understand this.
There are times when i get frustrated at those who just don’t get it.
What seems like it is crystal clear to me is not grasped by so many. But
remember this is what separates levels of consciousness. We have to
remember most of us were knuckleheads at one time; at least i was. And
i’m sure those wiser than me were stressed out about me as well. We
don’t have to like it, but we do have to understand it if we ever seek
to change it. I must know that what i understand and grasp may not be
the same for others, but people develop consciously at different rates,
even two cellmates will not be totally on the same level.
A protracted struggle is not simply performing and being victorious,
rather it is a long drawn out struggle. It does not matter what one is
struggling for. If i am trying to get better health care or healthier
food to eat and i am up against a medical corporation or a prison policy
that prevents me from getting what i want, it will be a struggle. We are
not talking about just filing a grievance or refusing to go back in my
cell, we are talking about possibly YEARS of struggle.
One of the things a protracted struggle means is that it will be long
and rough. Not only that but it is a stop and go struggle where, in
between efforts for human rights when there is “down time,” the people
use this time to sharpen up educationally and learn more about the human
rights they are shooting for by studying similar historical struggles. A
protracted struggle then is struggle first in the physical realm THEN in
the ideological realm so that the people are struggling - preparing -
struggling.
Disarray and disfunction are signs of a lack of political education and
nothing more. This is why there is a great important necessity for
political education and building cadre. The lack of cadre in any group,
prison or organization will be the difference between obtaining human
rights or settling for a bigger variety of cookies on commissary; of the
revolution moving closer to reality or being extinguished.
Mao spoke of cadre and summed it up as follows:
“In order to guarantee that our party and country do not change their
color, we must not only have a correct line and correct policies but
must train and bring up millions of successors who will carry on the
cause of proletarian revolution.
“In the final analysis, the question of training successors for the
revolutionary cause of the proletariat is one of whether or not there
will be people who can carry on the Marxist-Leninist revolutionary cause
started by the older generation of proletarian revolutionaries, whether
or not the leadership of our party and state will remain in the hands of
proletarian revolutionaries, whether or not our descendents will
continue to march along the correct road laid down by Marxism-Leninism,
or, in other words, whether or not we can successfully prevent the
emergence of Kruschev’s revisionism in China. In short, it is an
extremely important question, a matter of life and death for our party
and our country. It is a question of fundamental importance to the
proletarian revolutionary cause for a hundred, a thousand, nay ten
thousand years. Basing themselves on the changes in the Soviet Union,
the imperialist prophets are pinning their hopes of”peaceful evolution”
on the third or fourth generation of the Chinese party. We must shatter
these imperialist prophecies. From our highest organizations down to the
grass-roots, we must everywhere give constant attention to the training
and upbringing of sucessors to the revolutionary cause.”(1)
Here Mao is referring to how a bourgeoisie arose within the Bolshevik
Party, taking the Soviet Union down the revisionist road after Stalin’s
death. The younger generations, not having a deep enough understanding
of revolutionary science allowed such preposterous ideas as a peaceful
evolution from capitalism to communism to be promoted and accepted as
guiding principles. Mao’s solution to this was the Cultural Revolution,
which advanced socialism to its furthest stage of development to date.
It is not good enough for the wise, the vets, the double O.G.s to be up
on game as far as what it means to come together in peace and struggling
for human rights. It’s important that the young buck must also be
educated on the importance of peace and the United Front for Peace in
Prisons. Young people must be taught why human rights are important and
what ways to acquire human rights.
What many forget is education comes in many forms, conversing with
someone about social justice can be just as effective as passing a
political newsletter down the tier. Sharing an article one tailored for
a specific bunch can be just as effective as giving a fiery speech on
the tier and, well, doing all of the above is good too. Without one
studying him/herself one is unable to learn ways to improve one’s
environment and instead is left in a chaotic atmosphere which never
moves forward.
Educating those who never listened to anyone in their life is no walk in
the park. I get this. The thing is i know it must be done.
MIM(Prisons) responds: This essay is a good introduction to the
focus of this issue of Under Lock & Key, which is an update
on the theory and practice of building the United Front for Peace in
Prisons. Cipactli gives us some good theory to chew on here, but we
would not go so far as to say that problems in the movement are “signs
of a lack of political education and nothing more.” While every prisoner
is oppressed by the same state, there are contradictions within the
imprisoned lumpen that contribute to disorder and conflict. Some of
these contradictions may not be resolved by education. These
contradictions must be recognized, it must be determined whether or not
they are contradictions among the people and they must be pushed to
resolution. Hashing this out is a big part of the process of building an
effective united front. These are tasks that we are working with USW
leaders to take on in addition to outreach and education work. At the
same time these tasks will serve to train and develop leaders within
USW.
I’m writing in regards to an article that appeared in issue 37 of
ULK titled
[url=https://www.prisoncensorship.info/article/fighting-for-useful-legal-counsel-in-arizona/“Fighting
for Useful Legal Counsel in Arizona.” The author of this article
outlined their legal strategy to help prisoners receive legal counsel in
the very early stages of their cases. The writer stated that he had
filed a Writ of Certiorari asking the court to resolve the
issue of the constitutional question left open in Martinez V. Ryan,
623 F.3d 731, 132S.CT1309(1023) of
“whether a defendant in a state criminal case has a Federal
Constitutional right to effective assistance of counsel at initial
review collateral proceedings specifically with respect to his
ineffective assistance of trial counsel claim.”
The case that the writer cited in his article was from the district
court, but this particular case made it to the U.S. Supreme Court
(Martinez v. Ryan 132 S. Ct 1309), and was decided favorably.
There are two other cases that I know of that deal with this same issue
after Martinez, both of which were decided favorably. One was
decided by the U.S. Supreme Court and the other by the 8th Circuit. Both
cases expand upon the ruling in Martinez and may be useful to
the Arizona comrade or anyone going through the motions of trying to get
their case back in court on an ineffective assistance claim. The cases
are Trevino v. Thaler 133 S.Ct.1911 and Sasser v. Hobbs
Nos. 02-3103, 11-3346.
MIM(Prisons) adds: The state sets the rules and then doesn’t
allow those accused of breaking the rules to effectively defend
themselves within the injustice system. This is all part of the system
of national oppression in this country; it’s no coincidence that
effective legal counsel is denied to those accused of breaking
Amerikkka’s laws.
We appreciate this comrade sharing h legal knowledge with others via the
pages of ULK, and a lot of times this is the only way prisoners
expand their legal arsenal. The author of the original article in
ULK 37 said it took h eleven years to exhaust the
remedies within Arizona state courts. Undoubtedly much of this time was
spent translating legalese, and trying to figure out which motions to
file when and where, with much trial and error along the way. With the
assistance of a competent lawyer these speedbumps would be easily
leveled.
While we know eventually we need to take up arms to liberate ourselves
from national oppression in this country, at this stage in our struggle
we are only advocating legally permitted campaigns. Like this comrade is
attempting to do, setting valuable legal precedent that makes space for
revolutionary organizing and defense of the humynity of the most
oppressed Amerikan prisoners would be one step in the direction to
overthrow the imperialist state. We can facilitate this work by sharing
information the most effective approaches with each other.
Comrades who want to contribute to our collective legal knowledge should
work with the MIM(Prisons)-led Prisoners’ Legal Clinic (PLC). One of the
primary tasks of the PLC is to compile legal knowledge into help guides
which MIM(Prisons) then distributes to prison-based activists and
jailhouse lawyers. The PLC only focuses on battles that will push our
revolutionary struggle forward. Whether it be our efforts to put a
complete end to solitary confinement, or simply to have our grievances
not thrown in the trash upon receipt, the PLC is for jailhouse lawyers
with a strong left lean! Write to MIM(Prisons) for more information.
April 22 - The U.$. Supreme Court upheld a Michigan ban on affirmative
action in admission decisions to public universities, a final decision
that reinforces national oppression in education from grade school
through college. The majority opinion of the court upheld the state law
that was enacted by Michigan voters in 2006. In addition to Michigan,
seven other states have enacted similar bans: California, Florida,
Washington, Arizona, Nebraska, Oklahoma and New Hampshire.(1)
The Supreme Court couched their ruling in arguments about upholding
democracy: “It is demeaning to the democratic process to presume that
the voters are not capable of deciding an issue of this sensitivity on
decent and rational grounds,” justice Kennedy explained in the majority
decision.(1) This faith in the capability of the voters in Amerika is
only correct if we seek to reinforce white supremacy. 76% of Michigan’s
population is white, and Amerikan capitalism promotes individualism and
self-interest, so we should expect this population to vote in their own
persynal interests, which rest on national oppression. “Decent and
rational grounds” cannot be found as the basis for banning a practice of
affirmative action that attempts to address the unequal access to
educational opportunities offered oppressed nation youth in the United
$tates.
As we explained in 2012 when a lower court ruling was issued on this
case, bans on affirmative action are fundamentally reactionary in that
they preserve white privilege, but
overall
affirmative action itself has failed oppressed nation youth.
Affirmative action does not address the fundamental inequalities faced
by oppressed nations within U.$. borders, it’s just an attempt to deal
with the effects of these inequalities in young adults. As we wrote in
that article: “The achievement gap between Black and white children went
down between the Brown v Board of Education ruling and the late
1980s. But it started to grow again in the early 1990s. By 2005, in
about half the high schools (those with the largest concentration of
Blacks and Latinos) in the 100 largest districts in the country less
than half the students entering the schools in ninth grade were
graduating high school. Between 1993 and 2002 the number of high schools
with this problem increased by 75%. These numbers, not surprisingly,
coincide with a drop in Black and Latino enrollment in public
universities.”(1)
The affirmative action debate highlights the ongoing existence of
national oppression within U.$. borders. And it underscores the
intersection of class and nation, keeping a sizable portion of New
Afrikans and Latinos without a high school diploma and unable to take
advantage of affirmative action in college admission even where it still
exists. This goes back to the way that public education is funded in the
United $tates, through property taxes, ensuring that poor neighborhoods
will have lower quality education and denying kids from those
neighborhoods the opportunities availabile to kids from wealthier
neighborhoods. This economic segregation is tied to national
segregation, creating a cycle of poverty that reinforces national
oppression within this wealthy imperialist country.
The debate over affirmative action at the college level gets at the core
of what equality is. Those who demand “blind” admissions practices have
to pretend that everyone applying for college admissions had equal
opportunities up to the point of college application. And this gives us
a chance to challenge people on what many like to call a “color-blind”
society. Even looking at the privileged Blacks and Latinos who went to
schools good enough to qualify them to apply for college admission,
pretending equality is only possible if we ignore all the aspects of
oppression that these groups face in the U.$., from overt racial hatred
to subtle cultural messages of inferiority. Society sets oppressed
nation youth up for failure from birth, with TV and movies portraying
criminals as Black and Latino and successful corporate employees as
white. These youth are stopped by cops on the streets for the offense of
skin color alone, looked at suspiciously in stores, and presumed to be
less intelligent in school.
But the real problem is not the privileged Black and Latino students
qualified to apply for college admission. These individual students from
oppressed nations who are able to achieve enough to apply to colleges
that have admissions requirements are a part of the petty bourgeoisie.
The reality is very different for the other half of the oppressed nation
youth who are tracked right out of college from first grade (or before)
and have no chance of even attending a college that has admissions
requirements beyond a high school diploma.
Among the students who entered high school in ninth grade, 63% of
Latinos, 59% of Blacks and 53% of First Nations graduated high school in
2009. This is compared to 81% of Asians and 79% of whites. Overall the
Black-white and Latino-white graduation rate gap narrowed between 1999
and 2009 but is still very large.(2)
This recent court ruling reinforces our belief that we cannot expect
Amerika to reform away national oppression, even within U.$. borders
where some formerly oppressed nations have been integrated into the
oppressor majority. At this point in history, imperialism vs. the
oppressed nations is the principal contradiction both globally and
within u.s. borders. The dramatic differences in educational access and
achievement are just one example of the oppressed/oppressor nation
differentials. MIM(Prisons) fights on the side of oppressed nations
everywhere for the revolution that will overthrow imperialism end
national oppression.
I recently wrote to you inquiring about how I can contribute to the
struggle within, possibly by joining forces with USW. A few solid
brothers and myself are in accordance with the 5 basic key
principles/ideas that the
United Front
for Peace in Prisons represents. However, at Perry Correctional
Institution (where I am currently confined), the consciousness is low
amongst the masses due to the oppressor’s effective psychological
warfare tactics being enforced at all angles (fear, divide &
conquer, rewards, isolation, etc.). This specific prison is designed to
be the “breaking camp” for prisoners, where they train prisoners to be
more “obedient” to further assist the oppressor’s aim for control and
financial advancement.
There are a lot of prisoner violations that occur at this plantation,
but one in particular is the grievance system. South Carolina Department
of Corrections (SCDC) has recently implemented a procedure where you
must first submit a request form to the appropriate officer/supervisor
attempting to informally resolve your issue. The officer is then
provided 45 days to respond to your request, which most officers refuse
to do. If you are lucky enough to receive a response, then you are given
only 5 days, including weekends, to submit your grievance after your
request form has been answered. Then to add insult to injury, many
grievances are never returned and the grievance officials feign
ignorance as to what happened to it.
The grievance process/system within South Carolina Department of
Corruption is substandard and blatantly violates prisoners’
constitutional rights. I am unsure whether South Carolina is covered by
the grievance campaign or not, but we are definitely experiencing
similar issues in our grievance process and I would like to join this
campaign. Please keep me updated in the decisions or proposals for
combatting the grievance system and let me know what is needed of me and
my comrades here.
Also, please provide any material available which may assist me in
awakening the masses of how to fight against the oppressor and how to
unite on a common ground with individuals in different groups. I will
strive to become a ULK Field Corespondent for South Carolina in the
future, whatever I can do to assist the struggle.
MIM(Prisons) responds: We commend these comrades in South
Carolina for coming together around the United Front for Peace
principals and doing the work to identify the critical campaign needs in
their prison. The grievance campaign is not yet active in South Carolina
but we look forward to working with these folks to customize the
grievance petition for that state and get the struggle moving forward
there. To work on this campaign in your state, write to MIM(Prisons) for
a copy of the petition, and if one does not exist for your state you can
help by modifying the petition for use there.