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.
I’ve always been revolutionary-minded, but it’s a struggle here in Bill
Clements Unit. Here’s one example that happened early last month. I work
in the laundry. Well all of us are waiting for them to call for chow
(lunch), but all of a sudden the C.O.s running chow forget to feed
laundry! So the chow C.O.s tell the laundry C.O. that they are going to
give us sack lunches. All of a sudden, this is the sad part, a bunch of
my fellow coworkers are going back into the laundry. Well a few of us
spoke up saying we’ve been working and are NOT going to accept a sack
lunch. Eventually they opened the chow hall for us. Well I guess this is
all for now. Again thank you for all you do.
MIM(Prisons) Texas Coordinator responds: Small incidents like
this one might seem inconsequential to many people, like those guys who
just went back to laundry when told they were gonna get sack lunches.
These are small wins that make a huge impact on people’s minds, though.
Showing people little successes like this whenever we can helps plant
seeds in their consciousness about resisting oppression and standing up
for themselves. It was a completely fair argument to make, that the
C.O.s made a mistake and should fix it. So rather than get hung up on
how sad it is that so many people just were going accept the sack
lunches, i think it was really great that so many people got to see what
having a backbone looks like in real life. Inevitably, this is what
inspires people to grow their own backbones and start standing up for
themselves. Thanks for this awesome report.
In hopes of getting a back issue of ULK (preferably issue 53 -
with Texas reform updates) I shared ULK 59 with a few others.
Most had something to say about the drugs in prison. The best way I can
summarize most of the conversations is that thinking is hard and people
are reluctant to do it.
Most who I talked to fall into two groups: either they do drugs as a way
to escape, which I think is a psychological and environmental problem I
can’t say much about; or they do them to feel like they are “beating the
man.” These are the ones that will smoke openly in the dayroom, even if
it means the whole building will get locked down. Explaining to them
that they aren’t beating the man when he’s getting paid an obscene
amount of money to bring it in isn’t effective. Not sure where to go
from there.
MIM(Prisons) Texas Coordinator responds: Directly contradicting a
belief that someone holds strong enough to put a whole facility on
lockdown is unlikely to change their mind, like this comrade has
experienced. Peer pressure is often one huge motivator for people, and
I’m honestly surprised that the rest of the prisoner population isn’t
shutting down people smoking in the dayroom, for their own persynal
interests of not being on lockdown. A group of people telling someone to
stop a behavior is much more impactful than one individual.
On an individual level, there are conversational techniques that are
more or less effective, depending on the persyn we’re struggling with.
In this case, there’s one technique that stands out to me to try: asking
questions. Instead of coming at the persyn’s belief head-on, try to show
em the contradictions and illogical thinking in eir plan by asking
questions and getting a really deep understanding of eir thinking.
So rather than saying “your belief is wrong,” we can ask em “how does
that work?” and actually try to get em to explain eir reasoning.
Building trust by validating what is true about eir perspective (“you’re
right, we can’t just sit around and do nothing”) helps open em up to
share more. The main goals in this kind of conversation are 1) to
underline we’re on the same team (us against the pigs), and 2) to try to
understand where ey’s coming from, and 3) help em come to eir own
conclusions about what is wrong about eir thinking, and what ey needs to
think about more. This is just one technique to try, and i would love
others to write in on what’s worked for em in dealing with this kind of
problem.
I really appreciate you for informing me of this policy for an appeal of
all rejected publications from different units, but this unit I’m on
(Wynne) isn’t given a person or persons and opportunity to appeal our
right to have ULK 63 at all. I hope and pray that we win this
case in receiving all of Under Lock & Key pamphlets with no
problem. There is no riots or strikes or disruptions going on at this
prison that I’m on at all, period. These old folks are just waiting to
die and the authorities aren’t making it easy for us to just do our
time. Some are getting parole while others are dying and suffering a
beat down handcuff beating.
These officers are out of line handling us old people the way they treat
us, slam to the ground while in handcuffs, you grieve the incident and
are retaliated on when no life flight going over the railing from the
third tier. You might survive the fall and you may wish you didn’t make
it because you be in so much pain. Old people’s bones heal very slowly.
Some of us like to have some help from the outside world to get
political news to read on all what’s happening around the nation and to
stay connected to the free world even though you’ll never be able to go
back to the world ever again.
Reading the notification to the Director’s Review Committee 11/2/2018
for Under Lock & Key No. 63 on my denied yellow paper says Reason C,
page 1 and 5 advocate prison disruption/strike. But reading what’s on
these pages of that booklet there’s nothing of that such. See they have
taken all the manual’s out of the law library on procedure to fight them
when they are wrong in wronging one of us on their own policies.
These pages in ULK 63 said “publications shall not be rejected
solely because the publication advocates the legitimate use of offender
grievance procedures, urges offenders to contact public representatives
about prison conditions, or contains criticism of prison authorities.”
This don’t have anything to do with reason C at all. There is no
material that a reasonable person would construe as written solely for
the purpose of communicating information designed to achieve the
breakdown of prisons, through offender disruption such as strikes, riots
or security threat group activity at all period. So TDCJ denied the
publication because they didn’t like what they was reading and denied it
out of spite, but the law is the law and they is not exempt from the law
(DRC) and it is going down.
As Venezuela commemorates Hugo Chavez’s socialist revolution of 20 years
ago, bourgeois reactionary elements from within, with imperialism
support, work to sabotage Venezuela’s self-determination. Another case
of u.s. imperialist aggression, and on a continent most dominated by it:
South America.
While the self-declared president of Venezuela, Juan Guaidó, has been
receiving support from the united tates, actual elected President,
Nicolas Maduro, has been the target of u.s. imperialism for some time
now. Are we truly to believe that Venezuela’s recent issues are entirely
the fault of the Maduro regime? It should not be overlooked that the
problems in Venezuela, declared in the news as a humanitarian crisis,
seem to have occurred around the same time economic/trade sanctions were
imposed.
The United States and its South American followers, through the
Organization of American States(OAS), an organization formed at the
behest of the united states over 50 years ago in order to consolidate
geo-political influence and quash revolutionary movements and
too-far-left regimes that were spreading throughout Latin America at
that time) have largely created Venezuela’s most pressing issues with
their refusals to do fair business in the form of trade and diplomatic
cooperation which has left Venezuelans lacking many necessities.
The United States and OAS have been making it very difficult for the
Maduro administration to help the people to properly live, let alone
develop. So outside looking in, to the unaware, it may seem as if Maduro
is “the bad guy” and this Guaidó character is “the good guy” and that
u.s. support for him looks righteous, even humanely necessary, to oust
this “corrupt socialist dictator” and “rescue the Venezuelan people.”
But understand that the Venezuelan situation is a product of u.s.
imperialism. The same u.s. imperialism that caused the people of Cuba to
suffer for over 50 years by the trade embargo and dictation that the OAS
cronies turn their backs on Cuba as well or suffer the same fate. This
all because Cuba fought to break the chains of neo-colonial dependency.
Helping to frame the narrative of Maduro being a “brutal dictator who
refuses to treat the Venezuelan people humanely” is the reactionary
propaganda machine: u.s. news media. Daily they broadcast images of
shipments of supplies going into, and remaining at the border of,
Colombia, where u.s. politicians and reporters give interviews in front
of the supplies they call “aid” that “Maduro refuses to allow to enter
into Venezuela.” Maduro said that he will not accept this “aid” because
it is “tainted;” he understands that this “aid” is not aid, it is
imperialist bribery of the Venezuelan people.
Now footage of deadly clashes with police at the border, along with
reports of Venezuelan police and soldiers defecting, are being shown on
a loop, further destroying Maduro’s legitimacy and portraying the united
states as “the good guys just trying to help while Maduro continues to
brutalize the people.” If you ruin peoples lives and then offer some
handouts, that doesn’t make you a hero.
This type of economic imperialism being so effective is a consequence of
the interdependency of economies (especially those of the
undeveloped/developing nations battling with neo-colonialism) due to the
globalization of capitalism and consolidation of a world market. Now an
empire like the U.S. can destabilize an entire nation’s internal
economy, causing mass chaos, without invading and plundering it. Mere
trade imbalances (unequal exchange) and economic sanctions can have the
imperialist-desired effect of social upheaval, causing the targeted
nation to look at the leadership as the cause, and welcome foreign
intervention to come and save them from a situation created by
imperialist aggression.
We can’t know for certain what the reasons for this aggression are, but
we can make informed speculation based off of historical analysis. Could
it be that Maduro has instituted too many socialist-like policies, like
nationalizing much of Venezuela’s oil production? Or because Venezuela
does too much business with Russia, China, and Cuba? Does the united
states want to own oil firms there and is upset that Maduro won’t allow
that? Past u.s imperialist endeavors point to the latter as the primary
motivation for its efforts toward regime change in Venezuela.
These efforts to destabilize and destroy a regime’s credibility and
ultimately to overthrow it is nothing new, especially in this
hemisphere. Panama, Guatemala, Nicaragua, Dominican Republic, Chile,
just to name a few of the more known and overt examples of u.s.
imperialism in the Americas. If these actions prove to be successful
then a puppet government of the united states, via Juan Guaidó, will
most certainly be the outcome. But if these current actions don’t
produce the desired effect of regime change, then, as per usual, a
military invasion seems to be next.
It doesn’t help Venezuela’s cause that no one seems willing to come out
against this aggression and show solidarity with the president elected
by the people. It is these times when we most lament the fall of the
Socialist Bloc and its global influence and support for oppressed
peoples. Cuba, only 90 miles from the united states, was only able to
withstand imperialist aggression and resist capitulation to demands
because it had socialist solidarity coming from China and the Soviet
Union. But who will support Venezuela??
It shouldn’t come down to a military invasion (as it did in Iraq and
Vietnam) to raise people’s consciousness and get them to mobilize to
demand an end to imperialist aggression. It should be called out and
reacted against now. We must articulate to the people the real forces at
play here, because they won’t learn it from the news. Support has to be
mustered to oppose these types of actions from the united states. The
unconsciousness of people in the world, and the united states in
particular, that allows these things to go unchecked, is support for
imperialism itself. As Fidel Castro put it: “to cease solidarity with
the revolutionary movement does not mean to deny a pretext but actually
to show solidarity with yankee imperialism and its policy of domination
and enslavement of the world.”
Venezuela’s cause may not be a revolutionary one, but it is a victim of
imperialism from an empire incessantly working to consolidate its
influence and turn every nation that it can benefit from into a
neo-colony, which requires us to raise this truth as a common cause
worthy of the most support. Defend Venezuela’s self-determination!
Facts: Oil revenue is about 90% of Venezuela’s revenue. The United
States is the #1 buyer of Venezuelan oil at over 400,000 barrels, per
day.
MIM(Prisons) responds: Our
recent
article on Venezuela very much agrees with this writer’s analysis.
While Venezuela was never a socialist country in the Marxist sense,
Maduro implemented many reforms in the interests of the people, and is
staunchly fighting neo-colonialism. This government represents the
national bourgeoisie and continues to operate within the capitalist
system. It is an ally of the oppressed in this fight against
imperialism. The imperialists are the real murderers and destroyers of
planet Earth that we must stand against. And we stand with the
Venezuelan people and their elected government against the U.$. coup
efforts.
This statement is written under the full authority of the USW cell known
as Loco1, or L1, underneath the instructions of the Countrywide Council
for USW, to [members of our cell] for a self-criticism, acknowledging
political incorrectness and a public mis-representation of the USW
organization as a whole. These council members are involved in the
release of a statement published by the Turning the Tide
(TTT) news journal titled “United Struggle from Within (USW)
‘Building Bridges’ Initiative” and “United Front Public Build,” and they
were out of pocket in many ways. To say the least, this is our apology.
First off, [our cell representative] had already been advised as to
releasing statements that can be indicative as representing USW as a
whole without clearing said statements with the Countrywide Council.
[Our comrade] participated in a Countrywide Council session where it was
decided that all members of the USW Double C (Countrywide Council) would
get prior approval before releasing statements with other publishing
groups. However, a member of eir cadre published a statement without
having it cleared with the Council, thus [our comrade] is responsible
for said infraction.
The statement is offensive to many groups involved with the upliftment
of the oppressed First World Lumpen (FWL), to say the least. Everyone
involved in this self-criticism, please understand, Loco1 is not a
person, it is an entity. […]
The particular members involved in the authoring of the statement went
so far as to call the very same group that published the statement a
ghost group. Alongside of Anti-Racist Action, the statement calls out:
Malcolm X Grassroots Movement, IWOC and members of The Committee of the
Afrikan Peoples Liberation Tribunal (The Committee) to “…address the
conditions which cause FWL to become petty exploiters and oppressors of
their own, after suffering under similar [conditions] versus becoming
liberators of the self-sufficient conscious collective?” Though these
members of USW, L1 may have their heart in the right place, to raise
public awareness regarding USW, as a collective USW doesn’t act off of
the heart, so to say. The authors’ actions sowed seeds of dissension,
where the goal is to build a united front. By calling out groups in a
public forum, no matter how hard it is to get a reply from its members
on the private channels, it only goes to deepen the wedge between all
parties involved. And USW as a whole suffers.
The greatest damage done by L1 and its members is its violation of
security policies established to protect the identity of not only the
principal but also all those who engage the principal. The authors of
the statement not only published private information about USW but it
also took up a particular position of leadership for a sub-committee of
the Countrywide Council by the name of the New Afrikan Subcommittee.
Comments are made that identify the states that NAS and the Double C is
operating in, a mistake that could result in enhanced censorship and
targeting from the state. The statement borderline disrespects the
Minister Louis Farrakhan of the Nation of Islam, labeling him an
exploiter of Black people for capitalistic preference. In short, the
statements air out the dirty laundry of New Africa while occupying a
leadership role of an organization that very well may have members who
share citizenship with the Nation of Islam. This is wrong. USW doesn’t
champion any one Nation, whether it be peoples, folks, Islamic, Jew,
Latin, Spanish, Tutsi or Bantu. The statement could be construed as
every bit of wrong.[…]
[The councilmember representing our cell] has been suspended from their
position at the Countrywide Council because the actions of this said
statement came from a cadre that answers directly to [em] as a
Councilmember. For the sake of protecting sensitive topics of the
Countrywide Council sessions [our representative] has been suspended
until the Countrywide Council approves a self-criticism.[…]
It suffers this cadre, the entire cadre, to be disconnected from a body
that it played a key role in organizing. But it goes to show, discipline
will be enforced by the peer support of USW’s Countrywide Council. It is
not only for the sake of re-enrollment with USW that this political
apology is released, it is because as a Maoist cadre we know that when
we are wrong we are wrong. We cannot allow our personal,
psycho-egotistic stubbornness to get in the way of progress/success. The
publishing of the statement, “United Struggle from Within (USW) Building
Bridges Initiative” was driven by a selfish motive to say, “Hey look at
us, we are struggling and building.” to draw attention. The intentions
were right but the actions were wrong. So be it, [our representative]
criticizes these members’ actions as wrong, and accepts responsibility.
It will be ensured in the future that these members of USW, who rise to
the call of USW, that they are correct and exact to not make mention of
USW in affiliation with themselves if they have not had their statements
approved by MIM(Prisons) and the Countrywide Council. […] If ever put in
the position to approve such a release again, would we? No. This is an
action that we recognize as having serious consequences for all parties,
if not ironed out in a timely fashion and never repeated. The revolution
is not a game.
In closing, let it be understood, though USW is inclusive of all
prisoners and born of the minds made accessible by MIM(Prisons) it
cannot use MIM(Prisons) as a crutch for its political development of an
organization of prisoners controlled by prisoners. [… We] will busy
[our] cadre with some much-needed self-assessment test that will involve
re-evaluating the actions of this cadre and developing plans for the
future that will protect against opportunistic behavior. Until the clock
strikes, power to those who deserve it!! But protect the body by all
means necessary. The police don’t play fair, make no mistake about it.
MIM(Prisons) adds: This is a slightly redacted version of a
self-criticism submitted in early December 2018. We wanted to print this
self-criticism in ULK because we know many of our readers also
read Turning the Tide and saw these articles. We also want to
take the opportunity to re-address questions around who is USW and who
represents USW. The Countrywide Council of USW has been discussing this
matter and struggling with the comrades of the Loco1 cell since the
articles appeared about 6 months ago. In ULK 64, we did
briefly
criticize one of the articles in question for claiming the IWOC didn’t
do anything. (1) But had to go through the process, limited by mail
correspondence, to come to the point of printing this statement
addressing the broader issues with those articles. The self-criticism
above accurately addresses the criticisms that were brought to Loco1’s
attention over a series of back-and-forths in the previous months.
Another comrade from this USW cell, who was involved in submitting the
articles in question also submitted a self-criticism more recently. In
it, the comrade wrote, “I will not concede to no terms of censorship… I
will print for whomever I choose.”
Like any publication, the editor of Under Lock & Key decides
what to print. We also edit for clarity, brevity and political line. If
a writer disagrees with us we will not change eir political line, but
respond to it. However, we may change or clarify line in articles by
people who are regular contributors to fit the line of Under Lock
& Key.
We don’t consider this censorship, but normal practice. “Freedom of the
Press” applies to us not being censored by the government, even though
we are almost every day. It does not guarantee that any publication will
print your writings. Now, what this comrade is getting at is that ey
will contribute to other publications what ey wants. That is fine, and
we encourage contributing to other publications. We do ask that if you
send us an article that you submitted to other publications you let us
know so that we can properly protect your identity and perhaps
coordinate with the other publication to publish the same version of
your article. Otherwise, the following rules apply if you wish to write
articles as a member of USW in forums that are not led by MIM(Prisons)
or the USW Countrywide Council:
USW members cannot openly disagree with MIM(Prisons) 6 main points (see
p.2 of ULK). If you do, you are not USW, and if you write
articles in the name of USW disagreeing with those points it will be
treated as wrecking work.
To clarify, this does not mean that all USW members agree with the 6
main points, or that they accurately uphold them. Just that they do not
hold opposing views.
USW members cannot put the struggles of one nation over another, or take
stances in support of imperialism. This does not mean that USW members
cannot be nationalists, as revolutionary nationalism of the oppressed is
applied internationalism. [We use Stalin’s definition of nation, and do
not consider lumpen organizations or religions to be nations as Loco1
implies above.]
Anyone who agrees to the above points and contributes to
MIM(Prisons)/USW projects and/or campaigns is a member of USW, and can
speak or write as a member of USW representing eir own beliefs or those
of eir local USW cell. If you wish to publish something that you’re not
sure represents USW’s beliefs you can either submit it to the
Countrywide Council for review, or just publish it under another name
that does not identify you as a USW member. We prefer you submit to the
CC for review and feedback, to develop unity through struggle within
USW.
The USW Countrywide Council is made up of the advanced cadre of USW, and
works to guide USW’s work across the country by developing campaigns,
positions, study materials, and strategic guidance for the organization
overall.
Statements on behalf of the USW CC must be voted on and approved by the
CC, or the appropriate subcommittee, and published via MIM(Prisons)’s
P.O. Box, email address or, most likely, in the pages of Under Lock
& Key where the council can be accountable to the mass
membership of USW.
Interested in joining the council? To be recognized as a candidate for
CC membership, you should do the following:
Complete the 2 intro study courses offered by MIM(Prisons)
Organize others around USW/MIM(Prisons) projects and campaigns
Submit monthly work reports to the countrywide council addressing any of
the following questions that apply:
What types of activities did your cell participate in that contributed
to USWs mission?
What campaigns did your cell participate in or promote in the last
month?
What Serve the People programs did your cell operate?
What were the responses from the masses and USW recruits to this work?
What questions came up? How did you answer them? Or do you need help
answering them?
What lessons did you learn in the last month?
What are the most pressing issues that are of concern to the masses in
your location? Are there any new or developing issues of concern to the
masses there?
What organizations/services have you recently found useful in your work
(include contact info)?
What successes have you achieved in the last month?
MIM(Prisons) will not share revealing information with the Council.
Please keep in mind that your outgoing mail is being read and report on
your work accordingly.
One aspect of organizing that is paramount for recruitment and retention
of revolutionaries is comprehending the psychology of the oppressed.
Oppressed psychology is not meant to insinuate some distinct or
identifiable character flaw, or what not, inherent in those oppressed;
nor something which destines us (oppressed) to be the whipping boy of
the oppressor. Oppressed psychology denotes how the system influences
oppressed nations into believing, accepting and living in adherence to a
mentality and mode of existence calculated to promote the greatest
benefits for both the oppressor classes and capitalism overall. Just
contemplate: what allows us to lash out at others who are equally
oppressed, but by and large do little to resist or confront our
oppressors?
In prison, this wall (oppressed psyche) expresses itself in no uncertain
terms: “This is what we are.” “It’s what we do, all we can do.”(1) It’s
an acceptance of the lot foisted upon our shoulders. I have identified
this as a type of Stockholm Syndrome, where we, the oppressed, validate
and reinforce an ideology and mentality detrimental to
self-determination.
An oppressed psyche is a crippling inhibitor. First, it dissuades us
from considering any meaningful steps toward resistance. For instance,
“This is the way things are, have always been,” or “Any resistance can
only worsen an already bad situation.” Second, because we accept it as
part of who we are, its loss equals our loss of identity. This is
expressed in comments such as “There’s nothing else for me in life,” or
“If not a criminal, then what am I?” Third, it promotes half-measures
and depreciation of our value as revolutionaries. We may very well feel
nobody will care one iota about what we have to say or think. These, and
more, are the serious impediments to scaling the oppressed psyche wall.
Indeed, these are monumental obstacles but not insurmountable.
As stated elsewhere, the surest method of overcoming walls is
demonstrative action. It is the duty of revolutionary leaders to
disseminate among the masses the consciousness of their destiny and
their task. This duty translates to practice in “Build, Break, Build.”
Once we, as organizers and leaders have forged an iron weapon of proper
foundations – correct political line, appropriate application of
dialectical materialism, and understanding of the struggle – it must be
launched at oppressed-psyche walls like a spiked hammer, in order to
chip away and break them down. After breaking down the walls, it remains
to build up a new revolutionary structure.
There are too many variations in peoples’ characteristics, backgrounds,
and such to lay down any definitive, universal rule, or guidelines to be
followed in the Build, Break, Build process. The only general rule I can
acknowledge is: after an initial engagement in “breakage dialogue,”
organizers should chart their next steps depending on the amount of (or
lack of) receptivity they encounter. Also, it is important to recognize
people generally treat new concepts with ambivalence at best. A key
aspect of the oppressed psyche is to cling to what is familiar, and be
cautious of the new, or unknown. To be certain, the oppressed psyche is
a formidable wall. Breaking it down may require several attempts, going
back over old sections of the wall previously chipped away.
Focus the breakage dialogue on hard questions like those asked in
“If
Black Lives Matter, Don’t Integrate Into Amerika.”(2) Or the issues
highlighted by the AV Brown Berets in
“Mobilize
Raza for Independence.”(3) The building of revolutionary
consciousness and purpose is a duty which demands thoroughness.(4) Like
an aggressive cancer, at times you must operate in an old area anew.
Walls, such as oppressed psyche, are a cancer degrading the
revolutionary movement, inhibiting the masses’ consciousness of their
role and task, complicating recruitment, and all but precluding
retention. In organizing we must recognize walls and be prepared for
Build, Break, Build.
I have learned a lot from ULK 63, particularly from an article
from a Michigan prisoner on
“Challenges
and Growth in Recruiting Skills.” I myself have always been a
passionate orator since my former days as an official of the Moorish
Science Temple of America. But as my political consciousness began to
rise and I became more of a revolutionary realist, I find that the
hellfire and brimstone approach is not always wise.
I have learned that most reasonable men can be persuaded through
intellectual dialing based on facts, statistics and logic. Then there
are the masses that really don’t know what they want but know something
must change. I have some good ideas on how to organize some comrades
although I must admit my objective is somewhat obscure. I love how this
prisoner from Michigan laid out the format of organizing through
dialectical materialism, which he later gave a definition of as I would
say “a scientific process of trial and error.” I love hearing and
reading the understandings of others, it raises my own.
Anti-imperialists got a little taste of good news from Trump last month
when ey announced plans to pull troops out of Syria. Ey later
backpedaled saying ey did not set a timeline for such a pull out. But
Trump has long made comments indicating that the new focus of U.$.
strategy will be to combat China and Russia. In other words, the war on
oppressed nations, particularly in the middle east and north Africa, and
euphemistically dubbed the “War on Terror,” will no longer be the
primary focus.
It has always been MIM line that we are in a period of World War III,
that is a low intensity war by the imperialists against the oppressed
nations. The hegemony of the United $tates allowed for this to be the
focus in the decades following World War II. That hegemony is fading,
and the emergence of a fourth world war, or a third inter-imperialist
war is bubbling to the surface.
Of course, inter-imperialist war does not mean the oppressed nations get
a reprieve from the needless brutality of capitalism, as
inter-imperialist war is always about carving up the oppressed nations
for their resources and markets. Enter “Prosper Africa”, the plan
announced by U.$. National Security Advisor John Bolton in December.
Bolton stated, “America’s vision for the region is one of independence,
self-reliance and growth, not dependency, domination and debt.”(1) This
is a hypocritical jab at China, from the country who has done more to
make Africa dependent and in debt in the last half-century than any
other. At the same time the Trump administration is calling for more
“honest” dealings with Africa, that recognize U.$. economic and
political interests more openly.
The “Prosper Africa” plan coincides with Pentagon plans to reduce U.$.
troops in Africa by 10%. Nothing close to our
demands
to shut down Africom, rather a subtle adjustment of current U.$.
strategy. The immediate focus seems to be drawing hard lines in the sand
of the African continent between those compliant with U.$. imperialism
and those who are not.
In recent years, China has joined forces with other emerging imperialist
or sub-imperialist nations with independent banking capital including
Brazil, India, Russia and South Africa (BRICS). As a group, the BRICS
countries have greatly increased trade with African countries over the
last decade. Increases in trade on the whole is a benefit to the
well-being of all peoples involved. While this trade provides outlets
and opportunities for capital from countries with growing finance
capital, the established imperialist powers (the United $tates and
France) face a reduction in their access to markets and in their ability
to strong arm the oppressed nations of the world into serving their
interests. This threatens to contribute to economic crisis in the
advanced imperialist economies, and trigger more militaristic and
desperate actions politically.
The Trump administration has hinted at pulling support from United
Nations (U.N.) “peacekeeping” missions in Africa. While opposing the
U.N. garners support from white nationalists subscribing to
isolationalism and Amerikkkan exceptionalism, the real motivation here
is likely to reduce Chinese influence in the region. More than 2,500
Chinese troops are stationed in war zones created by U.$. and French
imperialism in South Sudan, Liberia and Mali. China accounted for 1/5 of
the U.N. troops pledged to operations in Africa in 2015.(2)
China established its first military base outside of China in 2017 at
the strategic location of Djibouti in the Horn of Africa. This is in
line with a shift in Chinese foreign policy over the last decade from
non-interference to “protecting our country’s over-seas interests.”(3)
The United $tates, France and Japan are among the countries with
existing bases in Djibouti, where the government depends on military
leases as an important source of income.
The U.$.-backed coup and murder of Muammar Gaddafi in 2011 helped break
the continent’s resistance to Africom. Up until then Africom had to
operate out of Europe. With the pan-Africanist government in Libya out
of the way, Africom was able to operate from within Africa for the first
time. Now the United $tates has at least 46 military bases in Africa and
close military relations with 53 out of the 54 African countries. Many
countries have agreements to cede operational command of their
militaries to Africom.(4)
While the coup in Libya was a victory for U.$. imperialism, it continues
to be a disaster for Libyans, with repercussions for the whole region.
The United $tates will have a much harder time stemming the
still-expanding Chinese pole that challenges U.$. hegemony in Africa. As
this contradiction threatens the world with inter-imperialist war, it
offers opportunities for the oppressed to move independently as cracks
widen in the imperialist system.
Democracy, Hypocrisy, the lies of the ruling class Savery, bravery,
attributes to the oppressed mass We challenge what we’re told
Because going hungry is getting old They label us terrorists, trying
to hold us down But we communists will continue to gain ground
Every day ’til the trumpets sound Then the continuous revolution
will abound!
This issue of ULK is a follow-up to issue 63 (July/August 2018),
which dove into the question of tactics around engaging people in our
movement. We often see in these pages why we need to engage in
revolutionary politics, who we should be working with, and
what campaigns we need to work on. What is often lacking is
how to get people on board. In 2018 we dove deep into this
question, and this ULK is part of that ongoing conversation.
Some of our learning about effectively teaching and recruiting others
can come from historical practice. We can look at what the Black Panther
Party did to attract people through their Serve the People breakfast
program which included political lectures during the free meal. And we
can learn from the Chinese Maoists who helped people in prison learn
from their mistakes through the process of group discussion and
re-education. We learn from the Chinese peasants who, after the
revolution was won, saw that many poor peasants were still afraid to
speak out against religious leaders who had brutalized and exploited
them. A few individuals led by example, attacking not the religion but
the actions of these leaders, and this inspired others. We take lessons
from the Communist Party of Peru in the 1990s who mobilized the
indigenous countryside into a structured resistance movement that also
provided education and health care services to its communities. There
are many revolutionary movements that provide great examples and
inspiration for our work today. (If you would like to study these
revolutionary movements, send us some work to trade, or ask for a price
list of books available.)
Studying revolutionary history, and particularly the practices of those
communists, can give us some great ideas that we can apply to our own
practice. But we also need to evaluate our own work and look for what is
relevant in our current conditions. Doing this together, through the
pages of ULK, will help everyone learn and improve their
organizing, education and recruiting.
We can start by looking at our own persynal histories and how we
ourselves were recruited into revolutionary politics. Below, the
comrades in Arkansas and Maryland outline their lifetimes of political
development, which are common to many letters we receive from our
subscribers.
An Arkansas prisoner: I first started learning about the
struggles of being a minority from my mother who raised my siblings and
I in a strong Black Power presence household. Throughout my childhood we
were homeless a number of times, and the system didn’t provide any
alternatives for us. Instead, all the so-called programs they provided
were to keep us dependent on them, and remain in the revolving door of
helplessness. So I learned early that we were living in a broken system.
As I got older, I studied books like The Willie Lynch Letters,
The Making of the White Man, and studied the Black Panthers. But
I was too young to join the NBPP, so I became affiliated with the Crips.
The problem was we were screaming “community restoration in progress,”
but we were destroying more than we were building. After some years I
realized that we were on the wrong path. I then became a Muslim.
I was always taught the Muslims were the pillar for the Black community.
However what we lacked was political experience, or basic knowledge of
politics. As I became incarcerated I was having a conversation with
another brother about “Black Beauty over White Beauty.” Somebody
overheard our conversation, and pulled me to the side asking if I ever
studied Marxism-Leninism-Maoism. I hadn’t, and that was the starting
point of me being laced up with the knowledge of socialism.
That was two years ago, and I’m proud to say I’ve came far in my journey
on self-development so I may be able one day to greatly assist in
community development. I’ve been able to steer a few brothers on the
development of self so they one day will be able to aid our people in
our struggles.
A Maryland prisoner: Since I can remember I always had a natural
rebellious reflex instinct for injustices dealt to people of the
struggle. Growing up in the slums of East Baltimore it’s virtually
impossible to not have a leftist political perspective once you educate
yourself. In inner-city life, especially an inner-city that is mostly
populated by Negros, the evidence of oppression is clearly overwhelming.
I was fully turned on to revolutionary politics after Freddie Gray was
assassinated by the Baltimore city police department. That incident
alone sparked strong emotions in me that I’ve never felt before. I felt
as though Freddie Gray could have been me or any other youth from
Baltimore, which I think is true. I was incarcerated when the Freddie
Gray assassination took place, then I was released probably about a
month later.
At the end of 2015 I was back incarcerated again for a physical
altercation with two Baltimore city police officers. Since being
incarcerated this time I’ve sharpened up on my political consciousness.
Most of my days are spent on studying my religion, politics and the
history of the Negro people. I cannot stand to see people being
oppressed by the “power-to-be” and I wish I could somehow extend a
helping hand to every political injustice forced upon the people in the
struggle.
Another Maryland prisoner adds: I became a Revolutionary
Conscious Citizen of the Republic of New Afrika about 2 years ago. It
made me totally awake! Each day i stride forth in knowledge,
understanding and wisdom of my great Ancestors. I was recruited by a
dear friend who watched my character and actions and revealed to me
another side of life and how to truly make a difference. He showed me
how the universe moves and how colonization, capitalism and imperialism
destroyed nations and lives and how neo-colonialism is nothing but us
uniting with our oppressor! How patriarchy grasped our minds and
interacted in our way of lives in our daily actions!
I can honestly say i came a long way, yet i know that the community is
more important than the individual. And as a New Afrikan Communist i
overstand that everyone has the chance to change through learning and
relearning through a revolutionary education. Yet, comrades, the brothas
where i’m at – it saddens me! They walk around like walking zombies high
off the K.
Yet i know George Jackson said: The ruling clique approaches its task
with a “what to think” program; the vanguard elements have the much more
difficult job of promoting “how to think.” Thus it’s our job of building
consciousness to our dumb, deaf and blind Brothas and Sistas! Like
Johnathan Jackson said, “Some of us are going to have to take our
courage in hand and build a hard revolutionary cadre.” We can’t give up,
continue the struggle! Build to win! Can’t stop won’t stop!
MIM(Prisons) adds: A lifetime of persynal experience being
oppressed in the United $tates naturally leads us toward revolutionary
politics. Our dedication doesn’t appear overnight with our first
exposure. Some incidents, like the murder of Freddie Gray, make a
stronger impact than others. But repeated exposure to oppression, and
resistance, is what leads us to make the struggle our own. A strong
parent or a good mentor can make a huge difference. Working as
educators, we can still be very effective even if it’s just one of us
working with one recruit.
Some people assume that since you were recruited, that you somehow now
possess an inherent ability to recruit others. Just because you’re
interested in a topic and want to contribute doesn’t in any way imply
that now you have the skills to do so. What to us (the recruit) looked
and felt like a normal conversation, to the organizer or recruiter is
actually a work of art. It takes time and effort to become an effective
organizer, not just agreement with a line.
One way we can become better organizers is to reflect on our own
practice. Below are letters from a variety of contributors on this
topic.
The first Maryland prisoner continues: In this prison I can
relate to most dudes because we’ve had somewhat a similar journey of
hardships growing up. At the same time most dudes understand and can
comprehend the very conditions of oppression, but show no signs of
resistance to the ill forces of the oppressor. It literally will be a
handful of brothers who’ll stand up for the whole tier if these pigz
blatantly disrespect or mistreat another brother(s). It is peculiar to
me that most times the brother(s) that is being disrespected or
mistreated will not stand up for himself, but will not hesitate to bring
harm to the next brother(s) if he even so happens to think about looking
at him wrong.
Each time it’s time to take a stand I’m usually right on the front
lines, me and a few other brothers. We try each and every time to obtain
some type of unity amongst ourselves against these pigz. I slowly but
surely engage in political conversations with certain brothers to try to
analyze their perspective and teach them a few things based on the same
struggle we’re in. Some brothers gathered a selfish outlook on the
struggle because they’ve felt as though why should they stand up for
other brothers who don’t want to stand up for themselves or yet anyone
else.
Due to the fact that there’s constant tensions brewing between brothers
of different gangs, the unity level is at an all-time low. Meanwhile,
these pigz set up “smoke screens” to delude brothers of what oppressive
techniques they’re putting into motion. I try to stress that point over
and over again to brothers around here but it’s to no avail. By me being
the person I am, I can’t let certain or every failure in progress to
justice for the struggle stop me like other submissive brothers. It is
my revolutionary duty to stay positive, encouraging, and consistent.
Now, as far as the outside society, I’ve put together a blueprint to
help the community to be self-sufficient. That’s why during their time
of me being down I’ll continue to educate myself and strategize plans
for the struggle ahead. In conclusion, this is my brief elaborate story
of “how I was recruited.” I greatly appreciate anyone who takes the time
to read this piece of material. All Power to the People.
MIM(Prisons) adds: This comrade consistently maintains a positive
and encouraging outlook. Any insight on how one goes about doing that is
always appreciated, as we all get discouraged sometimes and can use a
reminder on how to stay up. As for not understanding people’s
inconsistencies in what they accept vs. fight over, i have some
questions for reflection:
Has there ever been a time in your life when you were like one of those
brothers who doesn’t stand up for emself against the pigs, but will
bring harm to another persyn? What was your own thinking behind that
behavior? What were you afraid of? Can answering these questions about
our own histories help us have a better understanding of (and more
effective conversations with) people we’re trying to get on board?
I also have some questions about standing up for people who won’t stand
up for themselves, which is a common complaint. I’m curious if there’s a
way to find a middle ground on this. In one way, we are doing the whole
prisoner population a service by defending people and not letting the
pigs get away with anything. But on the other hand, we are enabling
people’s inaction because we’re doing the hard work for them. How can we
enforce some, even minor, participation from the people we’re helping?
For example, MIM Distributors has a policy about writing letters to
administrators when our mail is censored. If we had more resources, we
would protest all censorship of our materials. At this time, we only
write letters on behalf of people who are also appealing the denials.
Part of it is about our limited resources, and part of it is about not
going to bat for people who aren’t going to stand up for themselves, or
us. Same with our Prisoners’ Legal Clinic, Free Books for Prisoners
Program, etc. We ask for some kind of participation before putting extra
resources into people.
A big benefit of this approach is it helps distribute our limited
resources so the people who are putting in work are getting some
attention from us. It also functions to hold people to a high, yet
reasonable, expectation. We aim to be supportive, and demanding, and we
believe this approach will do the most to build participation and
leadership.
A Missouri prisoner: In this struggle I recruit by being willing
to spot for you on yo bench press, even though my thing is the
elliptical machine. I am willing to only listen when you need to do all
the talking. I am able to be the one whom doesn’t have to be “right”
when wrong is of no consequence!
I feed off of the energy that is already in existence! I know gangs,
religion, drugs, prison politics, music, nationalists, highways,
vehicles, food & find our connections. And the best part of it all
is I’ve recruited a comrade and not divulged a single plan yet!
reddragon of USW: Having different convos here and there it
dawned on me that I was able to engage others based upon certain
interests, and that in the past my attempts were fruitless based upon my
inability to understand that approaching political ideology/ theory from
one side only was the reason the convos bore no fruit!
Therefore i conducted a simple personal experiment in which I engaged
different persons from different angles based upon their interests. For
example, one brother is interested in business administration, another
in talking about military strategies/tactics, etc., and another in music
and the arts. All of these things have a place in the revolution. After
the seizure of power we will no doubt need planners, administrators, as
well as many other positions once held by the bourgeoisie and the former
oppressors. So by interjecting communist thought into convos about a new
society we can create certain sparks. There are those who feel
inadequate in certain areas that they feel are too complicated so they
shy away. So approaching them from angles of particular interest is
something to think about.
Comrades, let us prepare with a sense of haste. As the conditions become
ripe, as economic crisis and the threats of war with a major power looks
imminent, the time may come sooner than we think.Dare to struggle, dare
to win, all power to the people! Victory is ours! In solidarity I
remain!
MIM(Prisons) adds: What reddragon and the comrade from Missouri
have in common is meeting the potential recruits where they’re at, and
engaging them on what they are already interested in, while relating it
to the revolutionary movement. The California comrade’s approach, below,
is slightly different. Ey gets into a single tactic, rather than an
overall approach, that ey uses in conversations with potential recruits.
A California prisoner wrote: When it comes to people and you’re
trying to impress upon them a particular concept or an idea, sometimes
the direct approach isn’t the best tactic. So #1, when having a
conversation with them, we utilize the ask-and-answer approach to see
how much they know, and how receptive they are to the topic at hand.
Because for the most part, uneducated people are negative and
close-minded. They become argumentative and want to express their
viewpoint in order to appear right and that they know what is correct.
But the truth of the matter is they know absolutely nothing.
So, the question and answer approach, in a sense, will expose them. This
will put you in a superior position to teach them without any
opposition. And now they know that they can learn a great deal.
However, through this Q&A tactic, you’ve now piqued their interest
in a profound way. Hence, becoming receptive and open-minded to
knowledge and understanding about revolutionary change. This is the
greater reality for us socialists who doesn’t fear the movement of
teaching what life is, and that a society without imperialism is
possible.
MIM(Prisons) adds: This tactic coming out of California is
similar to the Socratic method, which has been used for thousands of
years to test our implicit beliefs and present analysis. It helps expose
the errors in our thinking so that we can work through them and come to
a deeper understanding. If we approach the debate head-on, the
dialectics inherent in a conversation will have us arguing our side with
the other persyn going even harder arguing eir side. It takes a lot of
humility to give up one’s argument in this type of conversation, and
often leads to a dead-end debate or escalation of tension.
While i agree with this comrade’s approach in using questions to help
the persyn see the errors in eir thinking, one major thing i would adapt
about the approach would be to see these recruits more as friends,
rather than adversaries. We have no interest in teaching people “without
any opposition,” and we certainly don’t believe that people who are
uneducated “know absolutely nothing.” They might not be educated by
bourgeois institutions, or even in political philosophy or history. But
imprisoned masses have a lifetime of experience in living oppressed in
bourgeois society. Rather than knocking people down, to be receptive to
our “wisdom,” we want to help open people up and get us learning
together. Certainly there are occasions to just go at someone who’s
being loud and ignorant, but we don’t want to do it as a general rule.
Another part of recruiting tactics is choosing who to focus on, by
identifying who we’re likely to have the most success with. There are
probably lots of different views on this, and below is one comrade’s
method. The details of who we aim to recruit are likely to vary
depending on our own strengths and weaknesses as an organizer, as well
as the conditions where we’re at. We’ve received many letters that
contradict some of the principles below, so we don’t hold them as hard
rules for all organizing.
A Texas prisoner: There goes a lot into recruiting people into
Maoism. Once I have overcome the social stigma of communism by instead
calling it “Maoism,” I have overcome one barrier. Like the word “Islam,”
it is too taboo a subject.
I treat and focus on each individual differently. I look at variables of
my peers. Is my cellmate young or old? Is he poor or rich? Is he
antisocial or outgoing? Is he educated or uneducated? Many things go
into approaching someone and a good place to start is with my cellmates.
A young cellmate is easy to guide. That is why gangs approach the youth.
Instead of older individuals, the young person has not been “burnt out,”
has not had so many bad experiences in politics, as they are
inexperienced. The youth naturally enjoy to rebel. Most young prisoners
are here because of the capitalist systems’ manipulation in laws. So
they yearn for a revolution of change. The older are too mundane or too
frightened to rebel. Or they do not wish to get off their butts and
demonstrate. Rather than participate in capitalism, they should try
Maoism, I teach them.
The poor prisoners think of their oppression with disdain. The poor
prisoner understands the struggles of poverty. They already know that
capitalism has stacked the laws against them. Most prisoners have or own
little property. Though most prisoners have labored, there was never any
relief from poverty. I explain to them that under a Maoist system of
government all property would belong to the workers/laborers. And that
most of the elite are rich because others labor for them. Though
participating in the status quo, the laborer is exploited. Maoism would
abolish this system, I teach them.
An outgoing prisoner is preferable to the cause because they are out and
about. The behavior could be cultivated into political work or
demonstrations. An anti-social prisoner is often oppressing other
prisoners, while hindering his peers. He is not ideal for the movement.
They are difficult to work with and not worth the trouble.
I use the educational material provided in ULK to recruit and
teach my people. The most uneducated person with a drive to learn is
never a waste of my time. I enjoy taking the time to explain the
examples of capitalism and Maoism. There are many questions a curious,
young person might have and a outgoing individual should be more than
happy to explain. Never the less, patience is a virtue.
And finally I believe that I should start with my cellmates first
because they are here and available. I can show what I preach.
My ideal recruit would be a young, poor, uneducated but willing to learn
cellmate. As of this writing, I am recruiting my current cellmate. I am
not perfect but I am hopeful that my quest is the right path.
MIM(Prisons) adds: We encourage all our readers to go to this
level of thoughtfulness about their recruiting methods. Complaining to
MIM(Prisons) that “nobody is interested” is partly an admission that you
have a lot more work to do to develop into an effective organizer. The
effects of bourgeois capitalism on our recruiting base give us real,
hard challenges to our efforts. And with centuries of practice, the U.$.
criminal injustice system is very skilled at frustrating any movement
toward justice, progress, or revolution. It’s a tough job, but the more
we practice at it, the easier it gets.