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.
I am being transferred to another prison for inciting the whole
entire population with a statement that said i am an ‘Illuminati
Killer.’
I’m out of their established isolation unit and now being housed in a
quarantine housing unit. The housing unit is a 300 cell living unit,
double cell. There are probably 30 individuals scattered throughout the
entire facility/unit. All individuals housed here are from several
different institutional facility yards. None are General
Population(G.P.) that i know of.
SATF (Substance Abuse Treatment Facility) is bleeding the state for
medical benefits, like claiming this building as a medical facility,
under the guise of COVID quarantine. But the administration is using the
building as an isolation unit. All of the guys housed here are said to
be in transit, transitioning from some place to another, but on the cool
they all are trouble makers of the California Department of Corrections
and “rehabilitation” (CDCR). We get zero yard, zero dayroom, zero
facility activities like law library, education, canteen, vocation, etc.
They terminated all of our privileges except for writing a letter. And
if one doesn’t have postage stamps, it sucks to be you.
The current CDCR 602 [grievance form] is being remodeled thanks to
the San Quentin Prison Law Office’s latest negotiation to the
Armstrong lawsuit against CDCR to wire the institutions for
cameras and microphones to protect the disabled prisoners being abused
by pigs and covered up by crooked administrators trying to protect their
skeletons from being leaked to the public.
So chances of getting a 602 going anywhere right now is more slim
than the yester years.
Rumor has it that a pig killed emself not long ago, due to state
layoffs. So the bull shit is in the air. Free staff are refusing to come
to work in support of the California Correctional Peace Officers
Association (CCPOA) work strike against prison closures. The attitude is
that prisoners ain’t got shit coming right now at SATF. And if they try
pushing the issue, then label them a gang leader and transfer them into
an active gladiator environment.
The cadre here are educated to concentrate on being released. Don’t
bite into the pigs provocation. They are doing everything they can to
prevent us from seeing that free society because they understand the
power that we have with zero attachments and very little loyalty to what
they are loyal to. Leaders are locating Agent Smith in their comfort
zones, gyms, churches, restaurants, etc and revisiting some very awkward
conversations that originated on the prison yard.
Tupac Shakur responds to an interviewer That’s why i
put the ‘k’ to it. Know what? Niggas was telling me about this
illuminati shit while i’m in jail, right, like “the dollar, you know.”
That’s another way to keep yourself in chains yo. That’s another way to
keep you unconfident. And i put the ‘k’ there cuz i’m killing that
illuminati shit, trust me!”
DISL Automatic:
People yellin’ “Wake up!”
But they’re still dreamin
They say “killuminati”
But they don’t know the meaning
They took Pac’s saying way out of context
’Cuz what he meant is that illuminati shit is nonsense
he wasn’t saying we should kill anybody,
he was saying we should kill that talk of illuminati
’Cuz all it is is a bunch of hocus pocus
to make us feel powerless and shift all of our focus
from the corporations and the corrupt government
to the secret societies and sacred covenants
That’s what they want so they don’t have to take you serious
They brush you off as a conspiracy theorist.
April 2021 - The San Quentin (SQ) administration has been running two
modified programs on Death Row under the guise of social distancing
since the pandemic began. Both look so good on paper, but how they look
on paper and how they really work are the only things six feet apart and
the result was putting many six feet under.
Death Row’s seven group yards were divided into 14 yards back in the
first quarter of 2020. That was accomplished by sending half of East
Block (EB) out one day, then the other half the next day with Death Row
prisoners warehoused in Donner Section (DS). Which side of EB DS went
out with switched at least three times – before, during and after spikes
of COVID-19 on Death Row and throughout the prison. In addition to the
switches thrown on the tracks of this crazy train, at no time was there
a maximum allowed number of prisoners set for each of the yards.
Requests to set a maximum number per yard and prepare daily lists by
going cell to cell through both sides of EB and the DS tiers (as is done
for ‘walk-alone’ due to the limited number of cages) were ignored all
the way to Sacramento. Does CDCR prefer the truth be released at half
capacity perhaps? Appeal#SQ-A-20-01123 remains unanswered since it was
sent for final review on 14 July 2020.
No emphasis on social distancing regarding the shower program in DS
exists anywhere but on paper as well. The Daily Program Status Report
(PSR) fabricated 14 July 2020 explains only four showers can be used at
a time. It conveniently omits the fact there are only four showers
total. These consist of steel mesh cages – each sharing a mesh wall with
the other. Three are approximately 3 1/2’ x 3 1/2’. The fourth is
designed to accommodate a wheelchair. Nobody using these showers can be
6’ away from the prisoner in the adjoining cage. Perhaps CDCR hopes to
bring in waterboarding. That would certainly be the effect if you wear a
mask in the shower.
Prisoners can refuse to go to yard unless there’s a unit search.
Prisoners can even refuse to shower, opting for an in-cell ‘bird bath.’
However, the San Quentin administration is now moving all Death Row
prisoners from DS to EB. So, the four shower cage problem disappears as
if in a mist of droplets, because the EB showers only accommodate one
prisoner at a time.
It ‘seems’ all the moves are deemed safe and if that is indeed true,
there is still no purpose for a 14 yard program except to keep something
looking good on paper. It’s not working good at all if you read about it
on this paper though. That’s because this explains how CDCR managed to
execute prisoners even during a moratorium.
There is zero question that Kansas is using prisoners for cheap labor
and profiting tremendously from multi-year sentencing of first-time drug
offenders like myself.
I “earn” sixty cents per day to perform a skilled labor sewing
position full time. If I refuse to work I will receive a disciplinary
work report resulting in my custody security level to rise.
There is a 30-person crew that works at the Kansas State Fairgrounds
year round. These prisoners also receive 60 cents per day. The
fairground complex could not operate without prison labor.
These jobs are not maintaining KDOC prisons. They are part of the
state prison economy, for the profit of the state.
Also, this prison takes 50% of the earnings of all private industry
job income prisoners earn. At the private industry jobs, prisoners make
minimum wage ($7.25/hour). Incarcerating probation-eligible offenders to
minimum-custody facilities to work is proof that in Kansas, exploiting
prison labor is a motivating force for mass incarceration.
In almost every other state I would not have been sentenced to prison
for possession of medical cannabis.
I understand the point of the article was to look at medium and
long-term goals. As a non-violent, non-victim, first time drug offender
I believe cannabis decriminalization is a goal worth pursuing. Thousands
of people in Kansas have been incarcerated by a corrupt, prison labor
motivated criminal justice system.
Is the author agreeing that non-violent, non-victim, first-time
cannabis offenders should be working for 60 cents a day to assist the
state economy and provide cheap labor for giant factory farms in Kansas?
When I see corrupt judges play in to this state economy, there are no
myths in my first-hand facts. If I am misinterpreting Wiawimawo’s
writing, please clarify what the author intended.
Wiawimawo of MIM(Prisons) responds: First, thanks
for the details on how prison labor works where you are in Kansas. We
regularly publish such reports on our website and use them to keep tabs
on the realities of prison labor over time. You are our on the ground
reporters for everything going on in U.$. koncentration kamps.
One thing you don’t specify is who you are making clothing for at
your job. That is an important factor. Usually people are working on
clothing and sheets and now face masks for other prisoners to use. That
would be work for the prison system, not for profit. Similarly, running
the fairgrounds is for the state. These are parallel to the examples of
fire fighters given in my original article.
None of these jobs are making profits for anyone, which you seem to
have confused. Multiple times you refer to Kansas as profiting from
prisoners. States do not make profits. They have revenue and expenses,
and they can run over budget if they want with expenses being greater
than revenue by issuing bonds. Now the bourgeois definition of profit is
netting more money coming in then you put out in expenditures. But even
bourgeois economists do not use this terminology in regards to states.
As Marxists, we define exploitation as paying workers less than the
value that they produce and then selling the product (or service) to
realize the full value. This is the source of wealth accumulation in
capitalism.
Now to the prisoner sewing clothes for 60 cents a day, it matters
little whether those clothes are to be used for state-issued use or sold
in a store. So i can understand where you’re coming from. But if we want
to explain how the prison system works in this country this becomes an
important distinction. It is not profits for big businesses to
accumulate capital that drives the system. It is a combination of
financial self-interest of the people who work in these institutions,
people who some would have us see as the oppressed proletariat
themselves, and the broader interests of the oppressor nation to control
the oppressed nations in this country. Through this control of the
oppressed nations by Amerikans through criminalization and imprisonment,
they can further gentrify the places oppressed nations reside and create
further economic control for themselves. This is the heart of our
analysis. And it is why we have a very different orientation than the
petty bourgeoisie who is opposed to private prisons for profit and favor
drug decriminalization as discussed in my original article.
“Is the author agreeing that non-violent, non-victim, first-time
cannabis offenders should be working for 60 cents a day to assist the
state economy and provide cheap labor for giant factory farms in
Kansas?”
No, i do not argue that. We argue for more change, not
less. We are not reformists, and we don’t think drug
decriminalization in the United $tates will eliminate national
oppression nor drug addiction. If done well, it could reduce these
problems, and the specific expression of drug problems such as marijuana
consumption. Therefore the reform is progressive, but it does not solve
the problem of national oppression and the criminal drug economy. We
have much better solutions for national oppression and drug addiction,
and they certainly don’t include imprisoning people for victimless
behavior. They do include eliminating profit motives in all aspects of
our lives. In the meantime, we support an international minimum wage
that would apply to prisoners.
A California Prisoner: The Covid
and imperialism article in ULK 72 sparked my interest
because I am already vaccinated and I had to ask myself why I, a
prisoner, was vaccinated before tax payers? The answer was pretty simple
logic. Prison is huge profit for California and the cash cow has been
closed for Covid crisis, the sooner California can reopen the prisons,
they can continue to rake in the profits they make from our
suffering.
Wiawimawo responds: There was a significant effort
in California by lawyers and activists to get prisoners to the top of
the vaccination list. And this is at least part of the explanation as to
why you got vaccinated early. It made sense from a public health
standpoint, but this did not happen across the country because many
Amerikans don’t care about prisoners’ lives.
It is not clear why you argue that profits dried up in prisons during
the shelter-in-place, so i would need more information on that to
respond. But as i explain above, states don’t profit from prisons.
Prisons are a huge financial expense and do not create any economic
value. Prison labor is one way to slightly reduce some of the expenses
in running these prisons.(1)
All that said, i want to address this comrade’s talk about the “tax
payers.” The vaccination campaign across the United $tates is being paid
by the Federal government. The government has now passed a series of
bills in the trillions of dollars to address the fallout from the
pandemic. This is not “tax payer money.” They are just printing money,
or creating money out of thin air to fund these programs. Since the
dollar is the global currency, they can do this with some confidence
that other countries and investors will buy up the bonds to cover the
expense. It’s all funny money that we benefit from here in the United
$tates, even those in prison benefit at times, thanks to our position as
the premier imperialist power.
This is in stark contrast to countries like India and Brazil that are
now being hit hard by the pandemic and the people are being offered
little relief. One reason is that these countries can’t just print $1
trillion worth of their currency without causing massive inflation and
damaging the conditions of the people more.
To the extent that it is “tax payers” who are helping to balance the
budget deficit in the United $tates, we must also be clear where that
money is coming from – the Third World proletariat. The above is just
one demonstration of how value can flow from the periphery to the
imperialist countries. This is reflected in the incomes of all U.$.
citizens, who must give some of those super-profits to the state to keep
the imperialist system running.
So let us not shed a tear for the poor “tax payer” in this country
because California actually made some efforts to vaccinate people in a
way that made sense in terms of promoting public health. There is no
shortage of vaccines in the United $tates. In fact, we have far more
than we need, while other countries have not even begun vaccinating
their populations yet. If we were really working in the interests of
public health, we would have a more equitable distribution of vaccines
across the globe. We’d be prioritizing hotspots, which the United $tates
is. And we’d be sharing the technology needed to make vaccines freely,
releasing the intellectual property that is holding back progress in the
fight against COVID-19. Failure to do so means that the virus will
continue to evolve and likely continue to be a problem.
A New York prisoner: In response to ULK 72
(2021) article “Help
Fund MIM(Prisons), Donate Now!”, I would like to offer a suggestion
outside of charity from donations which seems to be a necessary form of
income for the production, maintenance & shipment of ULK’s.
What if MIM took some of its donations and invested them in the stock
market? I know that seems pro-capitalist, but as the old adage goes you
gotta fight “fire with fire.” Making a few short-term trades could
possibly boost revenue for expenses (solely), and make donations a
welcomed part of production but not so necessary. This would keep MIM’s
line of no foreseeable future in capitalism by not becoming long-term
investors in the stock market, but instead looking for quick returns in
order to fund revolutionary work (i.e. short selling, which is basically
betting against the U.S. market, which is still in some ways inherently
communist behavior). I am enclosing an articled dated 11 January 2021,
“Jay-Z Fund to Help Minority-owned Cannabis Businesses.” What do you
think about this venture? I don’t really believe lumpen have the luxury
of investing in non-essential production/consumption as cannabis right
now, when they don’t even have land to cultivate on. But financial
freedom is nonetheless a form of independence… so keep on keeping on
Jay-Z!
Wiawimawo responds: First, we agree with using the
oppressors’ tools against them, and have no moral qualms about the stock
market. Proletarian morality means we do what will most benefit the
liberation of the exploited and oppressed. Whether it is a wise
investment is another question. Conventional wisdom is that it is a good
long-term bet, but unpredictable in the short-term. As for shorting,
well hedge fund Melvin Capital Management lost 53% in January in its
infamous shorting of Gamestop.(2) They lost about $6 billion on that
bet. That’s what the stock market is, gambling.
Now cannabis businesses, that might be a more sound investment. As
the article points out, and as i discussed in my article on Tulsi
Gabbard mentioned above, the legalization of weed has been a bonanza for
white petty bourgeois interests trying to get small businesses up and
running before the large corporations dominate the market. New Afrikans
are under-represented in business ownership overall at just 10%, but in
the states listed that number was 3-6% for cannabis businesses.(3)
Jay-Z, and New York State are correctly recognizing this gap and trying
to do something to not let it happen in New York.
What do we think about this? More equal opportunity for the petty
bourgeoisie just reinforces imperialism. When it was illegal, oppressed
people selling weed were targeted by the state and potential allies to
the anti-imperialist movement. People running successful weed businesses
aren’t likely to be our allies, regardless of their skin color.
The weed game is in a major transition. It is still in a semi-legal
state, where the Feds could crack down on you (and they have). Getting
access to loans and bank accounts can be difficult as a result. One
group that is proving successful as early pioneers in the trade are
former law enforcement. They are less likely to be targeted by the state
than a former felon, and they have clout to deal with the pressures from
extortion rackets and the lumpen organizations they are competing with.
Therefore as revolutionaries, the weed business might be risky.
You suggest that we need to invest in stocks to free us from our
reliance on donations. On the contrary, we are trying to become more
reliant on donations so that our cadre don’t have to worry so much about
funding everything ourselves, which we do by working or investing or
whatever. Maybe some of us are investing in the stock market to fund
this work, but that is not a reliable source of income. We want to be
going strong when the market collapses again. And that is why we want to
be reliant on the financial support of the masses. Only by relying on
the people is our future secure.
As i said above, legalization of weed will not eliminate national
oppression in the forms of cop killings and disproportionate
imprisonment rates. It will make pacifying substances more readily
available to the masses. And for better or for worse it will undercut
the underground economy in favor of public tax revenue. And that is what
this is about of course, it is providing tax revenue to maintain
government funding at the local and state levels.
Until the import of weed is legalized by the feds, this shift of
production to the United $tates will be undercutting a source of profits
in the drug trade – the Third World farmer. Historically the farmers who
grow and process weed are the ones being exploited in Third World
countries. As production shifts to the First World, wages will have to
increase to exploiter-level wages, with the possible exception of using
migrant labor from the Third World. This means the profits must come
from other sectors in the Third World instead, to pay the farmers,
marketers, sales people and accountants in the First World running the
new weed economy, as well as the state taxes. If the exploited weed
farmers are eliminated, then the profits must now be squeezed from the
banana farmers or copper miners, and all the other exploited workers of
the Third World. This puts more pressure on the already dangerously low
international rate of profit.
Finally, we agree with your point about land. Without land there is
no power. National liberation means liberating the territory of the
oppressed. Owning land as individuals is not it. Oppressed nations must
control land as independent nations, and be able to defend that land.
This is a central task of the New Democratic movement.
The Nevada Department of Corrections, under Director Charles Daniels
and his pet warden, Calvin Johnson, at High Desert State Prison, have,
since their arrival, waged an all out war against Nevada’s prisoners.
This includes illegal theft and misappropriation of prisoners’ money
under the guise of Marsy’s law (money which is still unaccounted for),
to the ban on prisoners’ access to visits, chapel, yard, law library, or
tier, under the premise of safety concerns over COVID-19. Meanwhile
prisoners are still required to work in unsafe and crowded warehouses,
kitchens, etc. as if COVID-19 does not target workers.
These same criminals also committed the crime of biological warfare
when they knowingly ordered prisoners to work while 15 of them had
recently tested positive for COVID-19 but were left unaware of their
status. This was used as a way to spread COVID-19 throughout the prison
more quickly. This was, by definition, a criminal act!
And now, while prisoners are fighting to get access to visits,
chapel, yard, law library, and tier (since the only time they are out of
their cell is when working, or their 30 minutes to shower or use of the
kiosk, or phone when permitted) these criminals have taken another
action to attack prisoners’ rights.
Starting 1 February 2021, High Desert State Prison will implement
O.P. 750 mail procedure as outlined in Warden’s Bulletin #21-07. This
revised operational procedure is an unconstitutional attack against our
right to communicate and be informed.
In effect this new operational procedure mandates the following.
All incoming mail must be in a 4” x 9.5” white envelope written in
black or blue ink only. If the mail received is not written in black or
blue ink on the envelope, the mail will be returned to sender.
All letters and correspondence within the envelope must be written
in black or blue ink. Any other colors will be returned to sender.
Any mail or correspondence received that is scented with perfume and
oils will be returned to sender.
Any letter received with drawings and markings that is not from the
letter manufacturer will be returned to sender.
Any letter received that are stained or discolored will be returned
to sender.
Greeting cards will not be accepted. All greeting cards received
will be returned to sender.
Inmates will not receive the original copy of letters and envelopes
being received with the exception of legal mail. All letters and
envelopes received will be scanned and handed out to the appropriate
inmate. Note: the legal mail procedure will remain the same.
If the inmate name is not properly spelled, the inmate
identification number is not noted, the senders name/address is missing,
the mail will be returned to sender.
If there is writing on the back of a photo sent through mail, the
writing must be written in black or blue ink.
After all mail is scanned and distributed to the inmate population,
the mail will be properly disposed of.
All magazines and newspapers received must come from an established
approved publisher.
Pamphlets and anything copied off the internet will be rejected with
the exception of pamphlets received through religious services.
This new operational procedure (O.P.) is the latest in a long line of
attacks against prisoner rights and protections since Director Daniels
and Warden Johnson have taken on their duties. This O.P. is
unconstitutional and deserves challenge.
First, in order to restrict prisoners’ Constitutional rights, the
state must show how the restriction is in furtherance of a compelling
governmental interest. We do not believe that they can. The fact that
prisoners are not receiving the physical letters/envelopes themselves,
any act or restriction that bars or bans letters for scent, markings,
drawings, stains, etc. cannot be in furtherance of a legitimate concern.
Thus, we believe a legitimate argument can be made that these
restrictions are arbitrary and unconstitutional.
Second, both the sender and receiver of mail/publications must be
notified that censorship occurred as well as the reason censorship
occurred. They must also give each party a chance to challenge the
censorship. This is a very clear due process issue.
Third, we believe that a reasonable argument against the disposal of
mail without due process is that the mail itself is the prisoner’s
property, thus protected by due process.
Fourth, denying all pamphlets and internet copies have already been
ruled unconstitutional.
Fifth, restricting all magazines and newspapers to established
approved publishers poses a serious threat as it will ultimately be used
to ban inmates access to materials and publications that the prison does
not wish to enter the facility, such as Turning the Tide,
Revolution, The Abolitionist, Black and Pink,
Prison Legal News, Under Lock and Key, and other such
publications. While “publisher only” restrictions have been upheld,
rules which outright ban or deny publications have been ruled
unconstitutional.
We are fighting this new attack, as we are fighting others. We are
calling on all prisoners within the NDOC to fight for their families and
friends, abolitionists, prisoner rights groups, and others, to stand up
for NDOC prisoners and call for the resignation or firing of Director
Charles Daniels and Warden Calvin Johnson.
Prisoners must utilize the grievance process, friends and families,
or anyone else who wishes to help must call or write Governor Steve
Sisolak or write Director Daniels - 5500 Snyder Rd. Carson City, NV
89702, and or Warden Johnson P.O. Box 1050 Indian Springs, NV 89070.
All Power to the People.
Let your voices be heard.
MS1 and MS26 - Revolutionary Front - NV
Caselaw: Turner v. Safley 482 U.S. 78.89. 107 S.Ct. 2254(1987)
Lindell v. Frank 377 F.3d 655 659-60 (7th Cir 2004) Allen v. Coughlin 64
F.3d 77. 80 (2d Cir 1995) Williams v. Brimeyer 116 F.3d 351 (8th cir
1997) Procunier v. Martinez 416 U.S.396. 94 S.Ct 1800 Krug v. Lutz 329
F.3d 692.696-97. (9th cir 2003) Thornburgh v. Abbott 490 U.S. 401,
414-19 (1989) Juchlovich vs Simmons 392 F.3d 420 (10th Cir 2004)
Montcalm Publ’g Corp. v. Beck, 80 F.3d 105, 109-110 (4th Cir 1996)
Murphy v. Missourri Dep’t of Corr. 372 F.3d 979, 986 (8th Cir 2004)
Clement v. California Dep’t of Corrections 364 F.3d 1148 (9th Cir 2004)
Prison Legal News v. Lehman 397 F.3d 692. 699-700 (9th Cir 2005) Green
v. Ferrell 801 F.2d 765, 772 (5th Cir 1986) Mann v. Smith 796 F.2d 79
82-83 (5th Cir 1986) Van Cleave v. U.S. 854 F.2d 82, 84 (5th cir
1988)
[MIM(Prisons) are not lawyers. The legal information provided by
jailhouse lawyers in ULK is verified to the best of our
ability. This particular issue seems like a winnable battle based on the
information provided, but winning will take more effort by comrades in
Texas.]
Prisoners in Texas are having the money from their stimulus checks
taken by the state to pay fees and restitutions. Section 272(d)(2) of
the Consolidated Appropriations Act provides that the second round of
stimulus checks ‘shall not be transferable or assignable, at law or in
equity, and no applicable payment shall be subject to execution, levy,
attachment, garnishment, or other legal process, or the operation of any
bankruptcy or insolvency law.’ This means that this round of stimulus
checks may not be garnished to cover overdue debts by federal or state
prisons.(1)
The stimulus checks have the same protections as the United States
Veteran Affairs Administration whom sends millions of checks across the
country to incarcerated former military service men and women whom only
get 10% of such checks.
People held by the Texas Department of Criminal Justice - Correction
Institutions Division(TDCJ-CID) are having their stimulus checks stolen
from their inmate trust funds accounts due to debts owed in the
following categories, with the percent of each deposit they will deduct
for each category:
current/prior TDCJ sentences (old or new, no amount specified)
I have written a complaint – a TDCJ Step One Offender Grievance Form
No. 2021020837 that said the direction would come form the IRS as to
whether those stimulus checks would be exempt from collection. The
response was that this “action was out of the control of the unit, no
action warranted.”
Thereafter, I appealed that response in another complaint Step Two
Offender Grievance Form. I wrote the agents in charge at the IRS
Department of the Treasury in Austin, TX but never received any
response.
Scholl v. Mnuchin, et al. No.4:20-cv-05309-PJH ND Cal.; Appeal
Docket No. 20-16915 9th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled in favor of
prisoners getting stimulus checks while incarcerated. The checks in
question should not be confused with the most recent $1400 checks under
current Presdient Joseph Biden. It was the $1200 and $600 checks under
President Donald Trump that were ruled on. These checks should be issued
whether one is incarcerated or not because everybody is affected by this
global crisis.
According to The Intercept the TDCJ was ironically the only
state they spoke to that claimed it was not garnishing stimulus checks
to its prisoners. Many, if not all, states have seemingly been breaking
the law in doing so.(2)
There is a solution to safe-guard some form of protection to those
stimulus checks or other funds.
MIM(Prisons) adds: The author provided names of some
companies that used to provide banking services for prisoners. These
companies all seem to have closed down. We leave this note here as a
suggestion for possible solutions to storing your stimulus money if you
can find a similar service that is trusted.
Also note, that according to caresactprisoncase.org, if you have not
filed the tax forms for the stimulus checks by 15 April 2021 you may not
be able to receive them. At the same time, the official word has gone
back and forth on how all this works.
Some comrades have written in to say they are boycotting the stimulus
checks. While we agree that these stimulus checks are a means of buying
off the population in U.$. borders with wealth stolen from the Third
World, as individuals we can still do good things with this money. Like
how we view investing in the stock market, we do not take a moralistic
view of this money and encourage comrades to get the funds they are
legally due and put them to good use in projects serving the people and
building independent institutions of the oppressed.
As social conditions on both sides of the walls cause dissent and
unrest, formerly disengaged elements are beginning to ask profound
questions regarding the contradictions of humyn society. As these
queries continue, people continue to seek out answers. It is at this
point where imperialist institutions begin to up the intensity of their
censorship.
In recent months, retail giant Amazon censored a book entitled
Capitalism on a Ventilator: The Impact of COVID-19 in China &
the U.S. The company sent a notice on its censorship of the book
and its up-to-date information on COVID-19 stating, “Amazon reserves the
right to determine what content we offer according to our content
guidelines. Your book does not comply with those guidelines. As a
result, we are not offering your book for sale.” Amazon claims to refer
people only to “official sources of advice” on the COVID-19 virus, yet
there are an abundance of conspiracy theory books on COVID, calling it a
hoax.
People and groups on the supposed “left” have initiated a campaign on
Twitter consisting of sending an ever flowing stream of tweets at Amazon
founder Jeff Bezos.
The above mentioned book was written by a collection of people around
the world and edited by both a U.S. and a Chinese activist. The book
puts forth answers to questions being asked, most importantly: “why is
China doing so much better containing the virus?” Evidence and available
data show that China’s containment of the virus stems from its free
medical care and its planned economic system being supposedly
“science-based and co-operative.” This book does an injustice to
socialism by insinuating that China, Laos, Cuba, Vietnam and North Korea
are socialist or are currently attempting to build socialism. That is
not true. But it does stand to reason that those previously socialist
nations, with their residue of socialism, are doing better because of
said residue.
Behind enemy lines on occupied Turtle Island, captives of the
imperialist state have been active in resistance during the recent rise
in social unrest. One of the various tactics used by the agents of
repression has been to pick up the intensity of institutional harassment
and mail censorship. Mail of prisoners known or suspected to be
visionary leaders and protagonists has recently begun to completely
disappear without any notice of censorship or denial. This same nucleus
of captives has seen the disappearance of stimulus checks, political
writings advocating communism, revolutionary nationalism, and writings
exposing recent pig physical abuse against defenseless captives.
These disappearances are clearly politically motivated, as only
activists and revolutionaries are subject to these tactics. Even more
far reaching, is the delay in mail, both outgoing and incoming. Comrades
within this nucleus received a recent mailing from comrades at MIM
(Prisons) one month after it was mailed.
In response, it is paramount that comrades and visionary captives
take steps to maneuver around obstacles put in place to neutralize our
righteous revolutionary cause(s). Security culture inside the walls and
out must be practiced in the extreme.
If there is nothing to be made known of the affects the bourgeois
mis-education systems have on oppressed nations and internal
semi-colonies within the (un)United State of Amerika, there is one thing
that will give truth to power. The U.$. is a police state. The majority
of the general public is a cop guard regime, and all parts of amerikan
society are affected, and infected, with the virus of police-ism.
Popular politics revolve around contest between the identities of
so-called classes that don’t even relate itself to the revolutionary
workers and exploited labourer of the internationalist proletariat.
The common theme of the COVID-19 era has been, big ups to the
frontline workers, and first responders. But it shows how little
resistance there is for the bourgeoisie news and social media,
non-truths trend on instagram and snapchat while those who are truly
exploited – from the prison population to the homeless and migrant
labourer populations, the disenfranchised are steady marginalized into
social sub-sects of the lumpen-proletariat. It sucks having little
determination of one’s national independence. The oppressor nation has
the power to Jedi mind trick its internal populations into accepting
ideas of itself as suffering classes deserving of priority in the
distribution of natural resources, while semi-colonies die the slow
painful death. The U.$. has been sick long before the rise of COVID-19
imperialist world order.
Many on the liberal leftist side of Turtle Island remain hopeful of a
sudden shift in the exploiters justice system, and the economical
maneuvering of the petty bourgeoisie to redistribute wealth and
punishment in equality. Thing is hopefulness is unlogical in
circumstances that requires skepticism. It’s as critical as Vietnam, the
draft and Muhammad Ali, refusing to attend the appointment with jungles
of the Asian continent in the Amerikkkan draft. Chances are, most of
those within the internal semi-colonies of these United $nakes, with the
least to lose in breaking with the exploiter nation, they will be
drowned out by the noise campaigns of dress-up revolutionaries, culture
vultures, and agent provocateurs. The last being the most dangerous to
nationalist leaders of the First World Lumpen amongst Turtle Island’s
internationalist Maoist modeled groups.
Kicking
New Afrikan Internationalist Principles as a USW Leader
The bourgeois nationalists are able to quote the phrases of classical
revolutionary leaders and anti-imperialists but their necessities for
true internationalism is just a metamorphisized lesser form of activism;
never truly the form of Marxism-Leninism-Maoism. As the U.$ofA
imperialist and parasitic capitalist are brutally proliferating, the
lies of the petty bourgeoisie are spread. These lies have become a sort
of plague that infects the minds of our youth de-socialized as First
World lumpen (FWL). True works of revolutionary nationalist culture are
suppressed. Today’s youth (including many FWL) run to the bourgeois
nationalist for education, and these ideas of reactionary, watered-down
nationalist politics of New Afrikan and Aztlán liberation, with
political jargon by Liberals’ approach to revolutionary action for
national liberation.
Subjugation, colonialism and neo-colonialism is the cause of certain
lack of knowledge. Then, with social media acting as the death alter,
sacrificing one’s youth to do something the world SEES, these so-called
nationalist and internationalists become inept, specifically when it
come time for true actions to spring forth from the FWL. Yet, there’s a
pattern throughout history for this. We see these individuals protesting
against certain injustices, but is it truly Revolutionary Suicide? Does
it liberate all beings subjugated?
Dialectical materialism is a concept that We’ve adapted to due to
Maoist Internationalist form of thinking. One must know how to formulate
a purpose of an ideology-movement. Once we’ve compared all past actions
of national liberation, next we take revolutionary action. But how does
the youth of today know the works of Marxism-Leninism-Maoism, when their
grandparents and parents were fed misinformation about liberation? We
leave the youth no militant alternative but to turn to bourgeois
nationalism. These individuals that speak of half revolutionary truths.
They know the path of liberation, and what it will take to end
oppression in the world, but in their actions of so-called change these
bourgeois nationalist only aim to reform policies of subjugation. It’s
like asking to desegregate a school, but there’s still white/black,
girl/boy bathrooms, separating the ethnic groups of that school. We only
enable police policies, which aim to further the impression of
anti-socialism, capitalist-imperialistic psychology, determined
psychology because of how police-ism has become a philosophy that has
instinctively mingled with the psyche of certain amerikans, and as now
the psychology of most amerikans, including Blacks, Chican@, Asians and
First Nations.
#BLM/Black Lives Matter is an agenda that has attracted many
followers. But everything that is a trend has attracted many followers.
Just follow social media within the exploiter nation USA.com. The
Republic of New Afrika and Aztlán need to realize that if we continue to
separate the oppressed into subject classes and ethnic groups, their
nations will forever be tools of bourgeois nationalists.
These systems of oppression were constructed in the exploiter nations
constitution, a constitution bent on enslaving half of its population
and disenfranchising the rest into minorities. Bourgeois nationalists
disguised as bi-racial issue organizing groups. Protest that life or
these lives matter, but lets argue the case why the BLM agenda screams
Black Lives Matter, when more Blacks murder each other than so-called
police do year round? Though pigs murder of so-called black men and
women and children should be an issue addressed, it shouldn’t just be as
one particular race or class, when race doesn’t exist to be national
requirement of liberation and class struggle doesn’t really exist. The
majority of Amerikan society are cops, what’s there to struggle
over?
Take for example in other nations, like Palestine or Somalia, where
it is known there’s a military presence by the U$ofA Africom and other
oppressor nations, are all oppressing these independent national
struggles that are less armed than the colonialist military settlers.
The Liberal left of the U.$. scream pro-choice but in turn dictate to
Third World womyn what they can or cannot do with their bodies. How is
this pro-choice?? This is dividing the oppressed nations. And don’t
mention the sterilization methods of U.$. state prisons, used against
female prisoners to destroy reproductive powers of social rejects.
When FWL proletariat eradicate the pig system of abuse and instead
begin building platforms to proliferate the ideas of MIM, nationalist
organizers amongst lumpen organizations will have the voice of the
people in the revolutionary objective.
With practical application of class disturbance, integration with the
masses, and rigorous international study of Maoist theory, relevant to
revolutionary history, with understanding of the nature of fighting and
serving the people economically, we’ll address the flow of wealth that
exploiters use to control world-wide populations.
Serving the oppressed in the First World, amongst the First Nation
semi-colonies, tribes and lumpen organizations, means to eradicate
super-exploiter systems and bourgeois nationalist personalities who
advocate for said exploiting Amerikans. They won’t accept responsibility
in the crimes against First Nation populations. They will hide and
advocate increased police-ism reform vs. defund city council and police
unions satisfying their guilty conscious with exploitation by the lesser
of two evils.
Reformist and revisionist Black Lives Matter nationalists need to
take their method of study and use it to shapeshift into an ideology, or
philosophy that leads to MIM. These must become the FWL youths’
alternatives to ushering in a socialist revolution.
Global
Jubilee and Reparations to Africans in CA, USA
In the United $tates of Amerikkka, Black New Afrikan George Floyd has
their face plastered across the walls of convenience stores within the
territories of occupied Dakota, Aztlán, New Afrika, and Makesh. But the
true question is what will it take to unite the multitudes of FWL that
lumpen leaders like G. Floyd mentored?
The pop culture of police-ism disguised as socialist nation building
must be struggled against. Using the unity of fact checking and
scientific decision making, leaders strengthen national resources like
the independent institutions of learning, healthcare, labor, housing and
entertainment. Not to fall into the politrix of revisionist co-opting
for a lesser slice of servitude.
As USA.com states like California are manufacturing legislative
measures like the African-American Reparations Bill to wave liability of
wrongs committed against indentured servants/slave laborers of the
Afrikan diaspora. There will be no reconciliations between New Afrikans
and the oppressor nation pig regimes, unless the pigs swallow the cliff
edge of the square they so gladly occupy. In by none but armed struggle
will national reparations for all of New Afrika be possible, including
We imprisoned.
The death rate of oppressed nation prisoners, a number that is still
hidden from us, is part of what classifies them as semi-colonies,
members of the lumpen proletariat by the political targeting of cop
patrols disguised as social welfare workers. The fact remains the same
prisoners exposed to COVID-19 suffer physical attacks form the cop
union. The only way to mediate the national contradiction is to arm the
prisoners re-entering society with a distrust for integration with a
system that has deliberately exposed them to a terminal disease.
National liberation for fighters in the First World must materialize
into stronger leanings towards the culture of anti-police-ism,
struggling against increased police occupation of internal semi-colonies
disguised as national liberation healthcare relief or economic rescue
plans. It’s a trap, B. Don’t eat the swine of the captors, invaders from
the petty bourgeoisie. None of what the pig state offers will appreciate
in time. The military presence of the U.$. army brigades and national
guard’s COVID welfare systems are surely signs of the time.
Be mindful, stay watching and prepare to fight! Uhuru Sasa!!!
There’s been a substantial amount of reports on increases in
depression and mental health disorders in the United $tates due to the
shelter-in-place orders. In September, Time Magazine cited a
study that showed severe depression being reported by 5.1% of people, up
from 0.7% before the pandemic. The common explanation for this increase
is social isolation combined with uncertainty and fear. Yet we have a
prison system that regularly uses more extreme forms of social isolation
(for example no internet, and being locked down in a literal cage),
uncertainty and fear and people often look at the people in these
prisons as being mentally ill. In reality, we are seeing a massive
experiment on the larger society that shows this is how most people
react in the conditions we face in prison. So what does it mean to be
mentally ill, if this is socially induced?
It means this place will drive you crazy. If not by having hardly any
contact with the opposite sex, then by isolation in a small cell
(including being allowed 3 showers a week and an hour of recreation
outside your cell 5 days a week). This is not normal and causes abnormal
effects.
As you sit in your dwelling long enough you become a different
person. You may find yourself venting or doing things you normally
wouldn’t do, like burning down your cell or town.
A person may go a period of time without speaking. An elderly
self-disciplined person may stay quiet, longing, but when one does break
their silence they will talk for an hour or two until they burn
themselves out. This will usually occur once a day in conditions where
there’s only one person to talk to, as it is an HCON (high) Control
Purpose.
Others began to talk to spirits and demons. In some cases, this is
stimulated by them making up stuff in their mind, but there are also
diagnosed paranoid prisoners who scream every time the light cuts on and
they open their eyes. They also fight demons.
Solitary confinement can also lead to suicide, as an escape. There
have been people committing reactionary suicide, like Biscuit from the
movie Life, when he ran across the gun line because he
“couldn’t go on living.” Psychologists don’t even bother to get to know
who you are or talk you through your problems. They either give you some
drugs to experiment with or decline to help you altogether. They are
unconcerned that abused children are liable to grow up with an
attachment disorder which doesn’t necessarily require medication but
does require TLC, which a half-dozen psychiatrists can’t provide for the
1200 prisoners here.
On Segregation we receive even less communication with our families
who can provide that loving sanctuary and keep us sane, because we have
no phone and only one non-contact visit a month (we should be able to
receive more TV visits).
Our families mail is sometimes held for a month after it arrives at
the prison. This creates depression by worrying about our families and
why they haven’t written over the holidays, to later find out
devastating news from our loved ones. Talk about fear and
uncertainty.
Some people become anti-social in solitary confinement for different
reasons. One reason may be that after so much chaos and falling out with
people around them in distress, they began to fall back from
everyone.
Others find themselves through self-discipline and block out all
other worldly distractions to work on their goals.
Some stressed adolescents in solitary confinement turn towards music
as escape and begin to sing lyrics at the top of their lungs, others
find refuge and entertainment in woofing. With all this racket going on
in Restrictive Housing, it will drive a perfectly sane person insane and
into an insomniac.
At Polk Correctional Institution in North Carolina on supermax (or
HCON, High Risk Security) we don’t go outside because the officials will
trash your cell, steal your property, fully restrain you with your hands
behind your back connected to chains around your waist, and leave you in
a recreation cage with giant brown recluse spiders, all to deter you
from going outside again. Similar tactics are practices here at Central
Prison.
The air in the building is insufficient for a human being to breathe
at times and I’ve experienced shortness of breath. Compare that to
wearing a mask that you can easily remove if you choose.
Comrades at that camp have developed bone marrow cancer, and there is
probably cause to expect that this cancer may have been caused by the
contaminated water they were working in. There was also strong gasoline
type chemicals in the food that was being served at the time.
Right now at Central Prison our lunch consists of one bologna and
cheese sandwich, 2 crackers and a 2oz (1/4 cup) of fruit with a juice
packet every day. Dinner’s no better, and staff will fight and curse you
if you speak out, because they have PTSD and other disorders themselves
from war, childhood and other experiences. In this way, mental health
patients (the staff) are responsibly for the well-being of other mental
health patients.
There’s a mental health program called T.D.U. for patients on RHCP
(Restrictive Housing Control Purposes) that they can send you to where
you can slowly earn privileges like television, canteen, phone, being
allowed to come out of your cell, but they never send any New Afrikans
to the programs.
By contrast, RHCP pods have 16 cells each, and I have never seen more
than 5 non-color people at a time in any pod. At HCON there are four
blocks each with two tiers that hold 12 cells each. I have never
witnessed more than 2 non-color people on any tier at a time during the
2 years I spent there.
If a non-colored comrade gets in a scuffle on the yard at Central
Prison, they may receive a week or two in segregation, but a negro will
receive 12-18 months on RHCP. Right now, we are receiving more time at
Central Prison on RHCP than prisoners at Polk CI on HCON who spend only
10 months on HCON, but after they do their HCON at Polk CI, Polk may
hold them for 6-12 months on RHCP.
Some people haven’t been guilty of any charges to be placed on RHCP
or HCON, so Classification will lie and forge paperwork (no due
process). They are con artists who don’t follow their own laws.
The ill-treatment we receive from the institution only creates more
PTSD and brings unnecessary bad energy towards people. Workers should be
focused on taking care of their families and not risking their lives to
oppress others for no gain, but of their master’s amusement.
This room becomes our life. At Polk CI on HCON our cells have showers
with food being delivered to their doors, and some guys never want to
leave. Some people aren’t going home and to some poor men on the street,
incarceration provides 3 meals a day. In the County jail I’ve seen
people live in the hole and refuse to leave on numerous occasions.
Solitary confinement is the only place I’ve seen a man smear shit
everywhere including his face, and eat shit sandwiches. Tell me this is
normal and something you see people do. Thankfully they finally sent
this particular prisoner to the mental hospital where he may get some
help (and not get thrown in a cage for sleeping in some bushes on public
property because he’s a poor New Afrikan man who was stripped of his
assets).
Comrades, we are not ourselves behind the door, so I’ll leave you
with the words a knowledgeable man left with me:
We mourn the hundreds of thousands of people who have died due to the
incompentancy of the U.$. government from the federal to the local
levels during this pandemic. Deaths in prisons from COVID-19 are at
2,173 as of 19 January 2021.(1) We know of one comrade in California who
died who was working with a local USW cell.
In California, Governor Newsom put prisoners at the forefront of
their vaccination roll out plan. However, things have not gone so
smooth. All over the state vaccines are sitting unused, while they have
opened up access to more than 10 times the number of people than they
have vaccines for. According to the COVID Prison Project, which is
tracking the vaccination of prisoners across the country, almost all of
the 19,000 vaccinations administered through the California Department
of Corrections and “rehabilitation” so far have gone to prison staff.
Though California is one of a handful of states that have confirmed data
of vaccinations having begun (currently at 65 prisoners).(1)
As infections and deaths reach record-breaking numbers every day,
prisoners continue to be much more likely to be infected with SARS-COV-2
virus and they are more likely to die from COVID-19, despite the fact
that the population in prisons is younger than those outside prisons.
Old age is a very strong risk factor with COVID-19. This demonstrates
that being in prison in the U.$. has a significant negative effect on
your health status and the health care that you receive. It is very
ironic. One would think that prisons are the most effective way to “stay
inside” and get a population safe from a viral plague. The fact that
prisons are rampant with this disease shows that “natural” disasters
such as plagues, earthquakes, and floods are in fact bound with social
relations just like all other things.
On top of that, prisoners
are suffering disproportionately from the conditions of
shelter-in-place, nominally to stop the spread of the virus. The
rest of the country gets to decide for themselves whether they want to
follow best practices and stay at home and where a mask. As one might
have predicted, this model failed horribly and is leading to hundreds of
thousands of unnecessary deaths. But for prison staff, lockdowns are a
routine affair. In many rural, white communities, sheriffs have refused
to enforce state ordinances to promote public safety by sheltering in
place. In prisons, correctional officers are happy to lock oppressed
people in their cells for months with little access to the outside. This
hypocrisy exposes the pigs true intentions.
Being in prison is about controlling all your time; the labor time
you could have spent building up wealth and the leisure time you could
have spent building your relationships and community. As mentioned
above, being locked in a prison in the United $tates has a strong
negative affect on your health status. It seems that many who don’t die
from COVID-19, will have long-term effects. This will affect people’s
ability to be productive and enjoy leisure time after being released
from prison. U.$. prisons have long-term affects on peoples’ class and
gender outcomes throughout their lives, especially for the oppressed
nations which have less resources and support to overcome these
setbacks.
Meanwhile, there is some pleasure involved on behalf of staff
instituting lockdowns to make their jobs easier and refusing to wear
masks because they “don’t feel like it.” Pleasure that would not exist
for people who actually cared
about others.
While there are economic reasons at the heart of why the oppressed
always bear the brunt of “natural” disasters, there are cultural reasons
as well. So much death and suffering could have been prevented in U.$.
prisons without any affect on capitalist profits. And arguably, the U.$.
economy would be doing better right now if the government had
implemented better, clearer practices in society in general.
The struggle for basic health, including mental health and social
connection, are struggles for basic humynity. Struggles we see falling
more in the realm of gender than class, because it is not about
economics and production. It is about transforming the relationships
between people in a cultural way. A way that works to eliminate the
possibility of one group finding pleasure in the oppression and
suffering of another. We see the examples of the oppressed coming
together in these conditions to struggle for basic humynity, and to
build it between each other, as the early steps of a revolutionary
transformation of national and gender relations in our society.
Up until 12 December 2020, the day we as Mexicans celebrate Our Lady
of Guadalupe, we had been very fortunate here at California Medical
Facility - Vacaville (CMF). That morning I came out at 0500 hrs, for my
insulin and it didn’t take long to notice the change, the C.O.’s and
nursing staff wearing not just masks, which had become the norm by this
time, but wearing face shields and PPE also. Then later that evening
when I came out my cell at 1705 hrs. for my insulin C.O. White informed
us that someone in T-wing had tested positive for the virus. By 2015
hrs. two more men went down with COVID.
Then came the push to once
again take our CPAP breathing machines, and the night of the 13th
they came in the middle of the night with their Gestapo tactics to take
our breathing machines and most of us resisted and did not have to
surrender our DME’s. Then came the threats of 115’s but they had a
problem and that was how to justify level II prisoners in Unit IV
insulation single cells which is where they put us after we fought to
get our CPAP’s back – a fight that MIM was instrumental in our being
able to get our DME’s back the first time.
Then they sent a Sgt. to explain: either we surrender our power cords
to our CPAP’s or they would cell extract us and thereby confiscate our
power cords. So we complied under duress to the confiscation of our DME
power cords. This as almost daily they tested us for COVID and constant
temperature checks at our cell doors as time after time we were slammed
down in our cells. On 15 December, they pulled out 18 more prisoners
with COVID, by the 18th we had at least 35 men down with the virus in
T-wing and we are hearing this is the same throughout the institution.
And the same across the street at Solano State prison, surging. By
Christmas T-wing had become like a ghost tier, not many men left. And
for those of us left breakfast and dinner meals were coming in brown
paper bags, though I must say Christmas dinner was the BEST I have had
in years to keep it real. On 27 December, C.O. Smith was telling us that
we had 200 prisoners hospitalized and a hundred plus C.O.’s with the
virus. My son who is in the hole at Corcoran State Prison tells me that
it was surging where he is at as well. He himself got the virus, thank
God he is young and healthy and was able to pull through though still
feeling some effects of the virus.
On 6 January, while Trump
supporters were engaging in acts of insurrection, I am happy to
report that I did receive the Coronavirus vaccine. The institution is
telling our families that they are returning our DME power cords,
however I can tell you I have not seen it, but I can only speak of what
is happening here in T-wing as we are still on “modified program” here
at CMF at the time of this writing.