MIM(Prisons) is a cell of revolutionaries serving the oppressed masses inside U.$. prisons, guided by the communist ideology of Marxism-Leninism-Maoism.
Under Lock & Key is a news service written by and for prisoners with a focus on what is going on behind bars throughout the United States. Under Lock & Key is available to U.S. prisoners for free through MIM(Prisons)'s Free Political Literature to Prisoners Program, by writing:
MIM(Prisons) PO Box 40799 San Francisco, CA 94140.
A Colorado Springs city council will vote to approve a city ordinance
that will fine $2500 to all homeless who are found laying or sitting in
front of a business. Many who support this claim that it provides better
safety for the community and will increase the property values of stores
and restaurants in the area.
A few days prior to this the town of Monument, Colorado successfully
blocked the building of a methadone clinic in the area, arguing that it
would cause a “decrease” in property values and bring a new “wave of
crime.”
For me, I see this in two ways. Number one, as the richest country on
earth, we all still see that basic human needs, such as food, housing
and clothing are privileges and one has to choose to engage in the
so-called free market to attain these things. The very contradiction in
this not withstanding, when one isn’t able to have a job, is homeless,
begs for food and maybe on drugs, the number one solution is to enforce
their way out of it. Place the homeless in jail, that’s smart. Let’s not
develop independent programs that view these homeless as humans that
need healing to be a strong part of society.
The methadone clinic run off is a disgrace. Methadone is to help people
get off heroine, the fact that a higher crime notion can be spoken of
here is a joke. People act like when methadone clinics, or homeless
shelters arrive in their communities that a wave of crime will suddenly
appear. Why is it easier to jail us, rather than to have compassion and
tolerance? Well in a capitalistic based class society, homelessness and
addicts are contradictions in the system. Of course they can say that
we’re lazy, or choose to be this way, but according to economics, we are
not choosing anything.
Lastly, social sicknesses can’t be blamed upon individuals, and using
jails or fines to remove a section of the population will only force
that population to move elsewhere. One day these cities in Colorado will
have to deal with the homeless as humans, with human and civil rights,
until then the class struggle will continue.
MIM(Prisons) adds: This comrade is correct that homelessness and
drug addiction are problems of capitalism. Opium (which heroin is made
from) addiction was a widespread problem in China before the revolution.
The Chinese Communist Party attacked this problem by eliminating the
supply and offering people engaged in distribution alternative
employment. This approach attacked the problem at its root. And by
giving people employment and health care they had both the resources and
the incentive to stop using drugs. This communist approach values all
humans and sees the potential contribution everyone can make to society,
rather than writing off some as the dregs who have no hope for anything
better in life.
In a show of bourgeois solidarity, on a Sunday in January, 4 million
people flooded the streets of France in the name of “support for freedom
of speech and expression.” Representatives from some 30 different
countries marched arm in arm to show their displeasure and cooperation
in France’s pursuit for justice against the
French
satiric weekly Charlie Hebdo.
We only need to look at the list of who was on the front lines of this
march to see the contradictions in this expression. David Camron, the
Prime Minister of the United Kingdom has participated in the
imprisonment of Middle Eastern journalists. The king of Jordan for years
has imprisoned journalists and those who participate in marches.
Benjamin Netanyahu, the biggest war criminal of our time, months ago,
blew up Al Aqu Alquxa news services in Palestine, and also killed two
journalists. The fact that there was an “absence” of U.$. officials at
the march really shouldn’t be surprising. U.$.-sponsored bombing of Al
Jazeera in Iraq at the Sheraton hotel, and the imprisonment of African
journalists in Guantanamo Bay Naval Base are only a few small examples
of Amerikan hypocrisy on the question of freedom of speech.
I think it’s truly contradictory that when 17 people die for insulting a
prophet many take dear, the world takes the opportunity to cry crocodile
tears. Amerika and its western pigs can only speak honestly of human
rights when they pull out of the Middle East and Asian countries,
i.e. the Third World. At last count, 20 countries in Afrika and Asia
were under U.$. and Western occupation. This count doesn’t include
countries facing drone strikes and military intervention from military
contractors such as Haliburton, and other corporate conglomerates such
as Shell, Texaco, etc. We say that when people are attacked in whatever
circumstance, they have a right to fight back.
The philosophy that Amerikan troops are defenders of anything humane is
a lie; troops from the United $tates are enforcers of economic
imperialism. So in closing here’s an idea: U.$. government if you want
to defend free speech, defend it when it comes to all people, and don’t
pretend to be innocent when the wars you’ve launched for liberation are
for your own interests. Save your tears about the murder of children and
wimmin for yourself. And if you really want to stand up for free speech,
close Guantanamo Bay, free your prisoners and stop the murder of foreign
Al Jazeera writers.
From the barrio to the pen all need to listen, the recent no verdict of
a killer should be on the minds of us all. Open season has long
announced its call and we see clearly what the lives of one of us really
mean to this system. The protests, the anger, the sadness, direct it,
engage in construction, use this unity to work to really analyze our
situation.
Mike Brown’s blood, Trayvon Martin, Andy Lopez and hundreds more call
from the grave. The killing fields have expanded, if we don’t die at gun
point by police who protect white workers and sellouts alike, then they
lock us away. It’s a war on the oppressed nations yet we kill ourselves
everyday.
This police murder shouldn’t go away in the minds of us all, we have
done what’s asked, we’ve voted, gone to courts, protested, petitioned,
and we’ve still got the same cycle, the same verdicts and the same
answers. It’s our turn to give them a response, but short-lived
reactions do nothing. Ferguson is burning, and rightfully so, but you’re
only burning those you know. The ideology should be burned. Remember
this is so much more than a case of Black and white, it’s a case of cops
killing people, cops who are supposed to enforce the laws, protect and
serve, yet have from the start used their power to promote a system of
oppression and white supremacy.
It’s the 21st century and kops are now the judge and jury, that no
longer use cuffs but bullets, and then scream how they were “just doing
their service.” If we want this hell to change silent vigils and
non-violence will just put a bandaid on a knife wound. We are not ready
to fight an enemy as large as the police. But we can unite and bring
back people’s power to promote peace.
My heart goes to those who fight and protest. Let’s remember these
feelings we have when injustice strikes and maybe we can lose the blue
and red hate and instead band together and smash the state. In
revolution, and science, education and love, peace, from solitary in
solidarity.
MIM(Prisons) responds: This writer is right on about channeling
our feelings of anger and frustration into something productive. For too
many years people have used the failed systems of the imperialists:
voting, petitions, and the law. And yet these systems never achieve more
than tiny changes to an overwhelmingly unjust system. We can still use
legal battles strategically when we have a chance of winning something
useful, but this must always be in the context of building a broader
movement of unity among the oppressed to take on the system of
imperialism. It’s not just a few rogue cops who are the problem, it’s
not just a few bad laws, and it’s not just a few corrupt politicians. It
is the entire system that is based on profit for a few at the expense of
the vast majority of the world’s people. This is nothing new, and it
will continue until we stop it.
When we jump to actions without planning, it damages future struggles.
While all political protest is good and absolutely necessary, it’s
always important to keep in mind when we issue a statement it means we
must follow through.
My failed hunger strike lasted for two days, and it can be seen as a
need to re-develop a line that can be implemented successfully. We can’t
put a strike or any other political statement ahead of knowing what
we’re capable of.
By my failure I allowed the pigs to win. But you win some, you lose
some, and ultimately you learn. One important factor is to define
ourselves and what we stand for, and not sound off before the bullets
are loaded.
My embarrassment hasn’t led me to quit, only to re-strategize. Not in
all circumstances are hunger strikes needed to achieve a successful
point. All actions have consequences; even and most especially those
that fail. A lesson I learned was, the louder you shout, the more our
enemies will watch. I guess some can say that revolutionary culture
develops when we learn from our failures. By using those things that
don’t work as lessons to learn from, these instances become pillars of
resistance.
MIM(Prisons) responds: This comrade raises an important point
about learning from our failures as well as our successes. Many times
our mistakes are the best source of learning we can get. But only if we
sum up honestly, and not pretend things worked well when they did not.
When we plan actions we need to lay the groundwork to gain supporters,
if we need supporters. And if we don’t think we need supporters we
should ask ourselves what we hope to accomplish by acting alone, and
what consequences we can expect. Each time we organize for an action we
should have these discussions in advance, and then we should sum up and
honestly criticize to determine what can be done better in the future.
It won’t always be true that we need to hide our voices from our
oppressors. Under different historical circumstances, when we have
gained enough supporters and hold a significant amount of power
ourselves, we need to be outspoken about our criticisms of our enemies.
We encourage our comrades who are struggling with questions of when and
how to take action to study the magazine
MIM Theory 5: Diet
for a Small Red Planet. We distribute it for $5 or equal work trade,
and can also send you an accompanying study guide.
The Brown Berets - Prison Chapter of Colorado would like to join on to
the United Front for Peace in Prisons (UFPP). We adhere to all that is
listed and we see the need for the UFPP as a major building block not
only to create a better culture, but to build better people.
Peace – We stand by this principle, because within our disunity and
conflict the system will always prevail.
Unity – The guards are a solid unit, and back up their own 100% of the
time. It’s time that all of us convicted comrades see past our internal
structures when it comes to defending against mistreatment and abuse by
the guards. We will back all convicted comrades 100%.
Growth – Education and deliberation, this is a way to develop
revolutionary mindsets to set us on a path toward communist ideology. It
only works with structure and discipline.
Internationalism – We stand with all oppressed people, their political
struggles and their fights for freedom. We will learn of the historical
basis for these movements and side with all nations combating U.$.
intervention, occupation, exploitation and imperialism. Free Gaza!
Independence – Not only is it important to build institutions apart from
the United $tates, we also need to tell the truth by showing examples as
to why this is necessary. We support all secession movements and support
all liberation struggles within U.$. borders. The military occupied
government of this monstrosity we call the United $tates has gone for
too long and we support all who wish to break free.
Long live independence! Remember Wounded Knee! Unite!
MIM(Prisons) replies: As this comrade writes, unity is something
the guards have and we need to work on. But this doesn’t mean we should
back up all prisoners 100% of the time. Sometimes people who sensibly
should be on our side will act in ways that are counter to the interests
of the oppressed. We don’t have an obligation to back them in these
actions. Rather than backing people based on identity (i.e. all
prisoners) we should back people based on the correctness of their
political line and actions.
Recently a new program was launched to further erode the self-esteem and
morale of captives within the bowels of neocolonial Colorado, “the
violence reduction program.” This program claims to target
lumpen-on-lumpen violence by “group punishment.” In essence, if violence
breaks out between individuals or groups, the prison can punish 5 known
associates of those who participated in the violence, even when those 5
had nothing to do with the incident. The administration says this will
help ease tension so all “offenders can live in a safe environment and
take advantage of what DOC has to offer.” Right, that’s bullshit.
Because of our tribal, religious, or political affiliations they will
hold us as a unit responsible for one another’s actions. Wouldn’t
isolation as a group only promote that much more strength of the group
anyway? If we as individuals came in alone and will ultimately go home
alone, why are the staff and administration telling us that we are
responsible for the actions of people we hang out with?
I know a lot of comrades in Colorado read this, so let’s get this
rolling. If they will do this to us it won’t be long until we all live
just like we already do in segregation (Ad-Seg). What more can they take
from us at all level IV places, maximum, etc.? We are only allowed two
hours out a day for showers and recreation. Two hours! With 22 hours of
isolation, we might as well be in Ad-Seg anyway.
I keep thinking of something I once read in MIM literature, that “people
will not live under oppression forever.” I can’t blame my comrades who
wish to resort to focoism, but we must remember violence and premature
acts of resistance will no doubt set us back. If you really care and
want to stop what’s happening, it’s time to bleed those pens. Unite –
fight back.
MIM(Prisons) responds: This practice of punishment of
“associates” is not unique to Colorado. In Washington a comrade sent in
a copy of a memo about the Group Violence Reduction Strategy policy from
Mike Obenland, Superintendent of Clallam Bay Corrections Center dated 22
October 2014. It states, in part,
“If a prohibited violent act occurs, restrictions are imposed on the
offender who committed the prohibited violent act (perpetrator) and the
offenders who interact with the perpetrator on a regular basis (close
associates). Information provided by staff teams is used to identify
perpetrators and close associates. This group of offenders is subjected
to a cell search and up to six of the following restrictions for
30-days: [list of restrictions].”
This comrade from Colorado raises a good point about the contradictions
inherent in the prison system and the repression against prisoners. On
the one hand this new policy gives the prison the opportunity to punish
and isolate anyone they want just by claiming they are affiliated with
someone who engaged in violence, even if they never broke any rules
themselves. But on the other hand, this repression will breed greater
resistance, both by solidifying the unity of organizations that are
punished as a group, and by incurring the righteous indignation of those
affected by this arbitrary punishment. We can use this repression to
build the revolutionary movement. As this writer says, we need to
educate and write about what’s going on, and we cannot be pushed into
premature actions that bring down more repression.
Fort Collins Colorado - a 25-year old Chicano lumpen was killed by a cop
today after what appears to be a robbery gone awry. The details are
still unclear and prison censorship interferes with information
gathering, but the news has sent shock waves reverberating throughout
the Chicano lumpen prison population. One question comes to my mind, if
being in prison isn’t enough, since we are under a new brutally
authoritative system in Colorado prisons, and now kkkops are killing us,
where do we find relief?
And to the fact that Chicanos use violence against one another with the
factions of various different lumpen groups, how do we use this new
murder to bring revolution to the forefront in Colorado? With the minds
and consciences in sadness, how do we really use this situation to
unite?
Violence between all Chicano lumpen only justifies violence against us
by the cops. My last article revolving around
Mike
Brown now pushes the genocide both external and internal to the
forefront and should be used to remind us that our conditions are our
responsibility.
Aztlán and the social responsibility for its liberation begins with
peace between all lumpen Chicano groups. However shocking this incident
is at the moment, I would like to take this time to express my deep
condolences, sadness and solidarity to the homies, family and loved ones
of this young comrade in the struggle.
Captive Chicanos: don’t react with focoism, premature acts of violence
against any guard will only continue to justify the use of force and
violence against us by the state apparatus.
Revolution is our only option. To turn our pain into a force of
revolutionary education, that will save our children and our comrades in
arms.
Understand how the police state and the overall imperialist class holds
an imaginative sway over us, by its use of things like patriotism and
calls to social responsibility to our government. This is not our duty,
our duty is to smash the internal divisions and unite. If we don’t we
all will not be safe. It is time to live for something more. Fight Back!
In the wake of the recent tragic death of Mike Brown in Ferguson,
Missouri, Fox News and other white nationalist mouth pieces
have been holding nightly segments on “Race in Amerikkka.” On Friday (29
August 2014), Fox brought on petty bourgeois “New Afrikan” leaders. What
appalled me about these appearances were the justification given by
these appointed leaders for the unjust actions taken, not just in this
horrific murder, but any point and time when cops kill people. Not once
was anything said about how this disproportionate system has pushed the
New Afrikan communities into further destruction. The removal of young
New Afrikan men to overpopulated prisons, underfunded schools, scarce
jobs, and lack of community investment are real problems, that get zero
air time. While these New Afrikan leaders could have gone into discourse
about this, it seemed as if they wanted to speak kindly and give answers
that reactionary views could agree with.
The solutions that this panel of “leaders” gave were borderline absurd.
1) Give the murderous cop the benefit of the doubt. 2) Stop looking at
the death of Mike Brown as a race issue, but a people issue. 3) The
nation’s problems can only be solved by church and 4) This would all
stop if all poor people jumped into the middle class. I can only agree
with one of 4 of these solutions. The killing of people by cops is a
society issue. Any time a cop kills anyone, 9 times out of 10 the cop
will never see jail, and if he does he won’t go for very long. As for
the rest of these solutions, I felt like it only gave excuses for all of
us to lay down and accept the militarization or police, state executions
of people in communities, and the immunity by police as a fact of life.
The stark reality is, this kkkountry has a real problem. A majority of
people in prison are from the internal semi-colonies, who come from
underdeveloped communities. Again if racism and white privilege isn’t a
fact in our society, why are we so encouraged to act, think, dress and
accept what white society tells us? In fact, white supremacy is so
ingrained in our society that we are raised with it, often times we
don’t even notice. Poverty, profiling from police, bad housing, and
schools that pipeline kids to prison, not to mention the criminalization
of social behavior from childhood to high school. It is no real wonder
that most of us end up in gangs, drug wars fueled by profit, single
parent homes or just unwanted and state raised. All those who spoke on
Fox News made me sick; prayer and peace is not a defense
against bullets and badges and prison cells.
What’s being done in this young man’s tragedy should be a wakeup call
and more importantly a call to arms. How many more of our children are
we going to let them kill? How many more family are we going to let them
lock up? Why haven’t we learned, this system doesn’t want us or accept
us. When we as captives choose to ignore the reality of this system, or
we choose to buy into it, then we are accepting all that comes with it:
white supremacy, cultural aggression, and more horrifying oppression and
imperialism. The system’s use of psychological warfare will always drive
us to hate our cultures, nationalities and ourselves.
The U.$. will always seize the opportunity to pin the classes against
one another and media outlets like Fox feed the misconception and
downplay the situation of us in bondage to the U.$. colonial system. If
we in prison build upon the reality of what life holds on the outside
and how it will lead us to always be on the fringe we will then chose to
feed revolution or fail.
This same attitude in national news feeds helps keep us kaptive, by
allowing them to think that we are the real dangers to society rather
than recognizing that we are kept in bondage because their government
has led us to a violent, overly repressed and suppressed society, that
drove us into poverty, fed drugs into our communities, gave us guns, and
let the pigs clean up the mess.
Fear is a powerful tool, the longer we keep disorganizing and keep
in-fighting the more we keep allowing the system, our kaptors, and
society in general to continue on the path of building prisons and
killing our children. We know the path, now it is time to build.
Standing in solidarity.
MIM(Prisons) responds: There have always been individuals from
the oppressed nations who the oppressor could use as mouthpieces for
their own ideas. But the petty bourgeoisie in the internal semi-colonies
of the United $tates is bigger than ever today. And as mentioned above,
the political solution offered by those taking up white nationalist
politics is to have all New Afrikans, Chican@s, or whoever the target
is, join the Amerikan petty bourgeoisie, or as they say, “the middle
class.”
There are two problems with this strategy. One is it is not happening on
the broad scale that they would hope, and is merely a pipe dream fed to
the oppressed to keep them pacified. The other is that joining Amerika
is joining the most hated nation on the planet. And these two points are
connected. On the one hand Amerika is hated because it oppresses and
exploits all over the world, and this is why they have such a large,
wealthy middle class. On the other hand, this oppression takes the
primary form of national oppression, which is justified by ideas of
race. Therefore there are both economic/structural limits to integration
in the United $tates as well as cultural limitations, as the white
nation must see itself as superior in order to support the actions of
its imperialist government.
We need to keep in mind that the mainstream media reflects the views of
the oppressor nation in Amerika, not just the views of the imperialists
in power. This is why we need a revolution, not only in the economic
base that allows oppressor nations to profit off the exploitation of the
oppressed in the Third World, but also a revolution in the culture and
institutions that promote reactionary ideas and justify the system of
national oppression.
Even after capitalism was overthrown in China, and the communists had
taken state power, they undertook the Great Proletarian Cultural
Revolution to criticize old reactionary ideas and create new
revolutionary culture, and to encourage the people to criticize their
leaders when errors were made. This is necessary because we cannot get
rid of so many years of capitalist/racist culture overnight. Even good
comrades can be influenced to wrong ideas. If this was necessary under a
socialist state, just think how much more difficult it is under
capitalism, in the richest country in the world, to create proletarian
culture. We do not currently have the resources to fight
state-supporting media like Fox. Work with us to build independent
institutions of the oppressed!
On 5 August, President Obama announced plans to send $12 billion in aid
to support an electrification program for six sub-Saharan countries in
Africa. This is in addition to U.S. firms investing $14 billion in
banking, construction and information technology in Africa.
Are these efforts really about helping the African nations, or is it
just to protect the stake certain parties have in the region? I can’t
help but remind myself of the economic consequences that will befall an
already impoverished nation. When it comes to the class divisions, I
think this new effort will only push the proletariat into deeper
starvation and exploitation. As I’ve read in MIM Theory 12,
investment from an imperialist country like the United $tates usually
comes with dire consequences. Funny, not once did I hear the U.$.
imperialist president speak of self-determination of all African people.
This is either lip service paid to the petty bourgeoisie or when it’s
all said and done the “pound of flesh” which the United $tates will
eventually get will come at a greater cost to those held in oppression.
The puppet governments of southern Africa gained a large victory today,
but as we all know, no amount of policy or investment will really
benefit the most oppressed people. This is true until all peoples’ needs
are met, not just profit gained for a few. It looks like more economic
imperialism to hold the already poor people in bondage with the illusion
of expanding the Amerikan dream. Raise! Fight! Stop U.S. imperialism!
The solution should be what can be done to empower and enable the lower
class and proletariat into rising up and controlling their own
destinies. Only when this is pursued will conditions improve. People
from the proletariat need to understand that they have the power to
educate and engage in armed struggle to gain their rights.
Picture a 6-man goon squad, in full riot gear with a gun, a barrel of
tear gas, and an electric riot shield. And now realize that this tactic
is used on us prisoners any time we get out of line for any reason. This
particular incident happened over a flooded cell, broken state TV, and
covered window. Not only was a comrade gassed, the pigs shot him two
times with 30mm rubber bullets at close range.
What we’re seeing first hand is the militarization of prison guards, but
it’s also an attack upon our psyche. The gas, the riot gear, and the
shock shield are all visual reminders of the pigs’ control and what is
supposed to result in our subservience. This action can take place at
any time the pigs feel a threat to the order of the prison. What threats
could we possibly cause behind a steel door in the presence of 6 fully
armored and armed guards? When these situations happen the pigs turn off
the vents so when they get gassed we taste it too.
I often spend long hours thinking about why such an awful use of force
is ued for something so benign. In MIM Theory 5 it is said that
one can’t go on increasingly repressed by fascism forever. And while
premature armed struggle is a hindrance, doing nothing at all is even
more detrimental.
We spend more time fighting over small and insignificant bullshit, and
we let the pigs take advantage of our disorganization. We fill our time
checking our paperwork or fighting petty beefs, and the more we do this,
the more important it becomes, until eventually it becomes a belief
system that causes our own subservience. We need to look past what the
DAs tell us and pay attention to what is happening right now.
There are many prisoners who love the United $tates, those who do not
understand the evil it causes abroad, nor domestic slavery it’s done
here. For those who are struggling, keep engaged. It’s our duty to fight
injustice and racism, and unite. Unity is a deep concept. It’s a
constant struggle to help someone who’s not from your own and it means
reaching out being the first one to overlook what keeps us at one
another and lets the pigs run all over our rights. If you’re not doing
something you’re feeding the problem. Educate, teach, unite, fight back.
MIM(Prisons) adds: This comrade underscores some important points
that are part of the
United Front
for Peace in Prison. First there is the principle of Peace; we fight
for peace while the prison guards stir up and perpetuate violence. “We
organize to end the needless conflicts and violence within the U.$.
prison environment. The oppressors use divide and conquer strategies so
that we fight each other instead of them. We will stand together and
defend ourselves from oppression.”
Second there is the principle of unity; we must build unity even when it
means taking the first step to overlook differences. “We strive to unite
with those facing the same struggles as us for our common interests. To
maintain unity we have to keep an open line of networking and
communication, and ensure we address any situation with true facts. This
is needed because of how the pigs utilize tactics such as rumors,
snitches and fake communications to divide and keep division among the
oppressed. The pigs see the end of their control within our unity.”
We call on all individuals and organizations to study the United Front
for Peace in Prisons
Statement
of Principles, join the UFPP, and build unity in your prison.