Two
issues ago Under Lock & Key released the
Peace Issue. Now
we are working on an issue on migrants and non-citizens in u$ prisons.
The kidnapping of Homies Unidos director Alex Sanchez by the FBI
yesterday demonstrates the close relationship between prisons,
immigration, repression and peace.
Homies Unidos was started in El Salvador by 20 people who were deported
from the united $tates due to Clinton-era immigration legislation after
serving prison terms. Alex Sanchez played a key role in founding the Los
Angeles chapter 2 years later, building an important link to the source
of gang problems here in the belly of the beast.
The targeting and arrest of Alex by the FBI is just one more example to
support our argument in issue 7 that
the
state does not want peace. There are few who can claim to have done
more to bring peace to some of the worst affected gang areas in the
world, yet the state sees him as a threat.
In the 1980s people across Central America united for a new economic
system that served people’s needs. The united $tates responded by arming
and training death squads to combat these movements. They used
terrorism, killing local families in mass genocide, and carrying out
similar brutality against supporters from other countries to discourage
internationalism. Like most who Homies Unidos works with, Alex himself
was a victim of the mass displacement of people across Central America
caused by a decade of amerikan intervention. This period of brutality
was followed by economic policies that offered one job option for the
children of war: running product for the multi-billion dollar amerikan
drug economy.
While most travelled to the united $tates looking for jobs, others were
brought here via their jobs in the black market drug trade. Either way,
these new arrivers are targeted for imprisonment by the u$ injustice
system, which helped to consolidate and reinforce the criminal gang life
as the only option for mostly male youth. Just like those who came
before them, Salvadorans on the streets and in prisons formed groups to
defend themselves from a society who feared and attacked new comers.
Alex’s arrest is a blatant attack that is part of the same system that
has attacked millions coming from the same place he came from. But his
targeting has been very specific and ongoing because of his efforts to
organize for peace by building alternatives to violent crime as a means
of survival. He posed too great of a threat to the system of control of
Brown and Black youth in this country through drugs and low intensity
warfare, while simultaneously threatening the flow of drugs into the
richest market in the world.
Previously, Alex was targeted by the Ramparts CRASH unit leading up to
the infamous scandal within the Los Angeles Police Department, where
cops worked with the INS to deport drug dealers who wouldn’t work with
the LAPD. At that time he was threatened with deportation. He responded
by attempting to get asylum because of his social position in El
Salvador, where members of the main lumpen organization there are
targeted for imprisonment and assassination with more impunity than they
are in the united $tates. This would have provided a way out for
millions of youth stuck in the violent cycle. But the amerikan courts
would not go for this argument, and granted him asylum on the basis of
his political beliefs instead.
Alex has continuously put himself on the line for the interests of the
lumpen class, who on the whole have yet to return the favor. Part of
developing the consciousness of the lumpen is organizing the defense
(and support) of those who are doing the most to serve the lumpen.
Lesson for the Criminal Minded
There are two possible lessons that members of the unpoliticized lumpen
organizations can take from this. There is the message of the FBI, that
it is hopeless to work against the u$ imperialists, so you’re better off
working with government operations to drug and pacify oppressed
communities and hope you don’t get hit by the violence or addiction
yourself. This is the short-term, individualist view.
Then there is the lesson that MIM(Prisons) takes from this. Yes it is
true, anyone who does real work to help lumpen youth improve their lives
will be targeted by the u$ government. But rather than turning to
despair and capitulation we promote a message that encourages people to
look at the big picture and drop their fears as individuals. This lesson
leads one to recognize the necessity of a number of strategies. One such
strategy is shifting the focus of existing lumpen organizations to
provide real support for independent organizations that are really
helping lumpen youth. But with that comes risks, so another lesson is
that the criminality of the lumpen makes it harder for leaders to help
the lumpen as a class. In other words, cleaning up your act makes it
easier for us to work together.
In response to the recent arrests, many amerikans have already convicted
Alex of the accused crimes, because according to bourgeois idealism
people are born bad and cannot change. It just so happens that people
who are born bad usually have darker skin. Such idealism is only
consistent with an ideology of racism.
Like MIM(Prisons), Homies Unidos stressed education of the lumpen to
understand why they are where they are, while working to build leaders
to change that reality. Those who benefit from the oppression and
exploitation of others do not want such change to take place. They will
promote individuals who escape criminal life as examples that anyone can
succeed in this system (if they try). The lumpen know this is bullshit,
but the lumpen need to study to see what real solutions are.