For the past eighteen years a clear pattern of racial discrimination and
political persecution has reared its ugly head, its presence is vivid
clear and profound, a procedural manifestation within the protocols of
official -sanctioned practice here at Pelican Bay. Which simply means
the inherent propensity to discriminate against New Afrikan (Black)
prisoners, an antiquated evil which is still prevalent in today’s
society and is magnified ten-fold within the concrete confines of the
U.S. penal system and its deplorable code of conduct.
Though we can concede to the observations that socio-demographics
contributed and facilitates the proliferation and perpetuation of racial
discrimination, being that the majority of U.S. prisons are located in
white rural areas where New Afrikan people are only an image on the 5
o’clock news. It is only inevitable that racism flourishes in these
areas. Many of the local rural citizens are hired to work in these new
prisons, and they don’t leave their racist beliefs/attitudes at home. In
fact these folks bring/import their racist attitudes with them, and
these attitudes manifest themselves within the core penological psyche
of the Prison Industrial Slave-Complex thus influencing every aspect of
the Prison Industrial Slave-Complex and this is applicable to the entire
U.S. penal system.
In Pelican Bay State Prison the inherent racism has manifested in a very
blatant but unique way. The Institutional Gang Investigation Unit (IGI),
Investigative Service Unit (ISU) and the Office of Correctional Safety
(OCS) out of Sacramento have reduced New Afrikan (Black) history and
culture to prison gang politics. By doing so they have limited New
Afrikan politically conscious prisoners ability to learn and teach our
history and created a method to circumvent our first amendment rights,
for example: New Afrikan revolutionary prisoners presently being housed
in the security housing unit (SHU - Solitary Confinement). We are
forbidden to possess any book, literature/material or pictures/drawings
by or about George Jackson, we can’t even write about George Jackson.
This is considered contraband and gang activity. They have reduced
George Jackson to a prison gang symbol. This is a method they have
employed to conceal their racial and political persecution. But it don’t
stop there, we are also forbidden to possess any literature or
publication about/or that mentions Black August. Though New Afrikan
people in every major state including the New Afrikan Independence
Movement/New Afrikan Liberation Movement commemorate Black August. It is
considered gang activity for us to write about it or commemorate it.
They have also criminalized the New Afrikan Independence Movement by
reducing its primary ideology (i.e. New Afrikan Revolutionary
nationalism) to prison gang politics. They have confiscated any/and all
relevant literature. They have reduced our political activities to gang
activities. For example, about 8 years ago I wrote a pamphlet titled
“The Bell Curve Conspiracy - A Recipe for Black Genocide.” Two of the
New Afrikan prisoners who contributed to this booklet were also alleged
members of the Black Guerrilla Family (like myself). For this reason
alone this pamphlet was confiscated, claiming we were involved in gang
activity. Anytime we come together to participate in a clear political
act it is reduced to gang activity and every literature that is
associated with that project is confiscated.
Another example: I had Professor Dorothy B. Fardan (Sojourner Truth
Forum School, Center for Human Growth) send me a printed copy of a
proposal I had written back in 1996 and revised in 2002. this proposal
is designed to eradicate hunger/starvation among all children, Black
children in particular, because they content I had intended to
distribute copies to other alleged Black Guerrilla Family (BGF) members
it was confiscated and I was accused of participating in gang activity.
People, what I have described to you above is only a brief glimpse of
what we as New Afrikan prisoners are going through. We are also being
penalized for our political activities, when they reduce our political
activities to gang activities. They are then able to write negative
reports which can and have affected our release to the general
population, many of us have been in solitary/isolation over 20 years,
for me it has been 25 years in the hole. At least 12 of us have lawsuits
pending in the Federal Court, and many more are in the process. Before I
end this, I would like to provide you with one more example. On January
30, 200, special gang units from Sacramento along with IGI that ISU
raided our cells, the following is a listing of what all they had
confiscated stating it was gang related, list one consists of my
personal writings and list two consists of Black historical, cultural
and political literature and artwork and religious material:
List one: 1. New Afrikan Criminology 101 textbook. 2. Other literature
pertaining to New Afrikan Criminology 101. 3. Bell Curve conspiracy
(pamphlet). 4. The U.S. fradulent annual crime report (pamphlet) 5. All
material pertaining to the George Jackson University and Marcus Garvey
Study Group. 6. Pan-Afrikan Community Dept. of Agriculture proposal. 7.
Support the Pelican Bay State Prison peace summit (proposal). Note:
unbeknownst to many, California prison system averages 300-500
race-based riots/melees a year and this does not include the individual
race-motivated stabbings. This has been going on for the past 20 years
and now it has spilled over into the streets of Los Angeles. 8. Save the
Black Farm (proposal) 9. How to stop the spread of the Control Unit
Prison (proposed strategy) 10. All my writings concerning George Jackson
and Black August. 11. All my notes and rough drafts to at least 15
proposals. 12. Over 40 poems.
List two: 1. Blood in my Eye, by George Jackson. 2. Malcolm X Last
Speech. 3. Revolutionary Handbook, by Kwame Nkrumah. 4. A pamphlet on
the Black Liberation Army. 5. A pamphlet commemorating those members of
the
Black
Panther Party and Black Liberation Army that was murdered during the
1960s, 70s and early 80s. 6. All literature pertaining to George
Jackson. 7. A picture and art work of George Jackson. 8. A painting of
dead Black Panther members. 9. Revolutionary artwork. 10. All literature
pertaining to Black August. 11. A CD cover: one song titled Long Liver
the Guerrilla, one song dedicated to George Jackson. 12. Approximately
seven newsletters from the New Afrikan Black Panther Party. 13.
Pictures. 14. A number of handwritten material. 15. Chairman Mao
interpretation of Dialectical Materialism and Historical Materialism.
16. Swahili dictionary. 17. Seven Christian pamphlets by the army of
god. 18. Black history book catalog. 19. A class action petition (note:
they claim this legal petition is a cover designed to disguise a roster
of alleged BGF members).
All the property listed in both list one and two were all confiscated
under the fabricated contention it was all prison-gang related. In
addition to the censorship, political persecution, we are being
intentionally further isolated, New Afrikan prisoners are often assigned
to one cell in a pod, while our racist oppositions can occupy up to
five/six cells in a eight cell pod, leaving us with no one to
communicate with or share our political views. This is a deliberate act
by IGI, OCS and the administration.
People, we are presently developing a campaign, if you are interested in
helping us put an end to official censorship and political persecution
contact MIM(Prisons).
Petition Against Censorship and Political Persecution
- We demand the immediate end to the IGI/ISU censorship program
targeting New Afrikan politically conscious prisoners being held in the
security housing unit 1, 2, 3 and 4.
2) We demand the immediate end
to the ban on all material concerning George Jackson
3) We demand the
immediate end to the ban on all material concerning Black August
4)
We demand the immediate end to the political persecution of those New
Afrikan revolutionary prisoners who are presently being held in Pelican
Bay security housing unit 1, 2, 3 and 4.
5) We demand the immediate
end to the racial isolation of those New Afrikan revolutionary prisoners
being held in the Security Housing Unit 1, 2, 3 and 4.