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.
In an effort to make work reports more useful within the Council, the
below was passed unanimously, with the majority voting to keep the old
method of reporting work hours in addition to the below. We are printing
this in ULK to solicit work reports from USW leaders who are not
yet Council members. By submitting short monthly reports to the Council,
we will better be able to sum up the efforts of USW as a whole, while
vetting emerging cells for Council membership.
All USW cells with an active Council representative must submit monthly
work reports to remain in the Council. All USW cells are encouraged
to submit monthly work reports to the Council. Work reports should be
one to two paragraphs. They should address the following points as
needed to update the Council on your work in the last month:
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.
In recent months, the Countrywide Council of United Struggle from
Within, or Double C for short, has been discussing campaigns, tactics
and strategies. One question posed by MIM(Prisons) was about the
September 9th Day of Solidarity, an annual event to commemorate the
Attica Rebellion of 1971 and to promote the United Front for Peace in
Prisons (UFPP). So far the consensus in the Double C is that this event
is an important one for promoting the UFPP.
One member told of an older comrade who has been in since 1979 who
recently told em, “Thank you for waken me up to this Sept 9 day.” Others
agreed that the people are hungry for this message. Another Double C
comrade quickly made copies of the fliers and distributed them at the
library and jobsite at eir new facility where ey sees strong prospects
for building anti-violence programs among lumpen groups.
In ULK 58, we printed a letter from the
Double
C to a reformist group called CURE, and laid out our strategy and
guidelines for reaching out to other organizations. In recent months,
Double C comrades have helped get excellent articles promoting the UFPP
in two newsletters read by prisoners: Turning the Tide and
Propter Nos. USW comrades should follow these examples of ways to
get the line out on the UFPP, a campaign we can unite with all
progressive groups on, revolutionary or not.
In writing to other organizations and newsletters, USW has goals of
popularizing USW campaigns and increasing ULK subscribership. But we
should not let these goals take us toward a strategy of sizeism. Our
goal is not to get our address in as many newsletters as possible at any
cost, rather we should be focused on unity and struggle. We should be
building unity where we see potential for it around practical work,
while struggling to push others ideologically.
Building a united front of prisoners, involving various prison-based
lumpen organizations, is a long campaign that must be carried out in our
daily work. September 9th is just one day when we organize a coordinated
action to actualize that unity. September 9th is a time to reflect on
the prison movement that came before us and on how to develop the prison
movement of today and the future. September 9th will not become big
overnight. When it does get big, it will because of years of hard work
of USW cadre across the country.
Comrades in the Double C are reviewing the September 9th Organizing Pack
and existing fliers promoting the United Front for Peace in Prisons, to
come up with tactics, art and slogans for further popularizing the
event. This is something that all USW comrades can participate in.
Starting with this issue of ULK we plan to print a piece of art
on page 3 behind the UFPP statement that can be ripped out and copied as
a flier. If you don’t have access to make copies write MIM(Prisons) for
more copies of these fliers. Send in your art promoting the UFPP and
September 9th. Send in your slogans. Report on your organizing
successes, strategies and challenges to share in the pages of Under
Lock & Key. Build the United Front for Peace in Prisons!
[These guidelines were compiled by the USW Coordinator of MIM(Prisons)
incorporating points made by members of the Countrywide Council of USW.]
The Countrywide Council of USW, or Double C, has been working on a
concerted effort to reach out to other organizations as a way to expand
organizing with people on the outside, and to build a united front in
general. The Double C decided to publish their letter to CURE in
ULK as an example of these efforts, and to provide a guide to
others. We invite all USW comrades to participate in this outreach
campaign, and this article is to provide some guidelines in doing so.
First, many readers may ask, am I a member of United Struggle from
Within (USW)? Can I write to other organizations as a member of USW?
Good question. Anyone could send out a letter and sign it “USW”, we have
no control over that. But we certainly hope you would not do that unless
you are pushing USW campaigns and politics accurately. USW has two
levels of membership: supporter and leader. Supporters are defined as:
“A USW supporter helps build USW in eir prison/area. This persyn might
not initiate projects by eirself, but will readily implement requests
from USW leaders and MIM(Prisons). Supporters may contribute in many
different areas of work including: writing articles for ULK, producing
revolutionary art, translating, sending in donations, running a study
group or otherwise educating people and building reading skills, working
on a campaign such as the grievance petition, referring new subscribers
to ULK, and conducting MIM(Prisons)-directed surveys. This persyn writes
to MIM(Prisons) less regularly [than a USW leader] but is responsive to
letters and completes work assigned within a reasonable timeframe.”
A leader is someone who launches campaigns and efforts to expand USW
independent of MIM(Prisons), and/or organizes others under that
leadership. Once you’ve developed a practice of leadership that we can
verify over a period of time, you are considered a leader and you become
eligible to join the Countrywide Council of USW.
As a mass organization, USW does allow for its members to also be
members in other local, lumpen or nation-specific organizations at the
same time. Comrades in the Double C should not identify themselves as
such. Statements representing the Double C, and USW as a whole, must go
through the Double C for approval first. Therefore publicly identifying
oneself as a Double C representative gives a false sense of authority,
while risking the security of the individual member.
The Double C is currently developing its protocol for conducting
official correspondence with other organizations. If you feel
comfortable representing USW work and positions, then you can write a
letter from “[Your Name], a member of United Struggle from Within.”
However, since you might not accurately represent certain aspects of
USW’s positions because you are new, the Double C will serve to provide
official responses from USW to other organizations. You can even mention
this in your own letters.
With this guideline, you do not need to be a USW leader to write other
organizations about USW campaigns. In fact, if you’ve been reading
ULK for a while, perhaps writing such a letter could be your
first action taken as a USW supporter. But before you do so, you might
ask: What should I write to these organizations about?
The focus should be on USW campaigns, projects and positions, and how
they might overlap (and differ) from those of the other organization. A
good way to structure your letter is “unity-struggle-unity.” Start off
talking about some aspect of USW work and how it connects to the work of
that organization. If you can identify disagreements with this
organization then you might bring those up as a form of struggle next.
Or the struggle may just be something like, “hey, I haven’t seen you
working on this issue, you should do more on it.” Then close with more
forward looking unity – try to lay out some practical steps for how they
might work together with USW.
You may also write to other publications in response to a specific
article or topic to point out a disagreement, or something that they
missed. We often print such struggles with readers in ULK. Again,
“unity-struggle-unity” is a good approach, and circling back to USW’s
practical work and analysis is helpful.
Regarding the letter to CURE from the Double C below, we should point
out that CURE is a very different organization from ours. CURE believes
imperialism can be reformed and it does not stand for the liberation of
oppressed nations in this country. But the letter focuses on where we
have unity and where we can work together, while pushing CURE to work
with us in those areas. That is a good example of building toward a
united front, where organizations with different beliefs and missions
can find commonality.
We encourage comrades to reach out to other organizations as a USW
representative on your own, and in many cases we will have multiple USW
members writing the same organization. This will build up USW’s
reputation among other organizations, and allow our membership to grow
by engaging in these dialogues.
What do I do when they respond to my letter? Once that dialogue
reaches a point where you are not sure how to respond or proceed, you
will want to hand it over to the Countrywide Council of USW or even to
MIM(Prisons), depending on the topic of discussion. We will keep you in
the loop on the ongoing discussion.
What is the goal of this campaign? There are multiple goals.
First, we hope to popularize the work of USW with those on the outside,
demonstrating our scientific work on the ground. This will increase the
chances of building support for that work in the future. Second, we hope
to build working relationships on campaigns and projects with other
organizations. We hope to expand the view of these organizations and
publications beyond select popular prisoners to the prison masses as a
whole. Third, we hope to increase political unity within the prison
movement. And where we can’t establish unity, we hope to clarify our
differences. This will help everyone in the movement better grasp the
issues and the different positions that organizations take.
If you think USW is focused on the right campaigns and issues, and you
think others should get on board, then this might be a good project for
you to get involved in. Let us know who you’re struggling with and over
what. Or, if it’s not too much trouble, even send us a copy of your
letters. We can work with you if you want feedback before you send your
first letter.
An Open letter to CURE National
from the Countrywide Council of United Struggle from Within
CURE National PO Box 2310 Washington DC 20013
5 September 2017
First and foremost, we would like to give you thanks for the service
that you offer to prisoners and the families of prisoners. In these days
prisoners find it hard to locate individuals and organizations worthy of
praise beyond the worth that most newsletters and papers are printed on.
Members of the Countrywide Council of United Struggle from Within have
read the latest few issues of CURE National’s Newsletter back to front
and front to back. We must say, it checks out, so thank you.
One of the first CURE National Newsletters that we received included a
listing of state chapters alongside the new requirements for state and
issue chapters, namely that chapters have to meet, maintain a
newsletter, and report the names of their members to their office in
Washington. Now, we reviewed the list and see California is listed, but
has nothing more than: [an individual’s name, email and phone number].
One of our Council representatives wrote Colorado-CURE, Iowa-CURE,
Nevada-CURE, New Mexico-CURE and Oregon-CURE of the western branches.
Two replied in favor to our inquiry to be involved in local struggles,
on account that California has no official branch of its own. Dianne
Tramutola-Lawson, Chair at Colorado-CURE, suggested our Council
representative write to the national office with comments.
The Countrywide Council is a leading body of a prisoner mass
organization under the name United Struggle from Within (USW). USW is
the brainchild of members and their students within an organization by
the name Maoist Internationalist Ministry of Prisons, or MIM(Prisons).
Though it is an organization that is political from the vantage point of
anti-imperialism and thus is anti-prisons, USW works for any reforms
that are scientifically sane with the potential to [contribute to]
end[ing] prisons as they stand.
USW has a leadership in prisons across the United $tates and can attest
to a strong following in the pages of our bi-monthly newsletter (free to
prisoners), published by our mother group, under the title Under Lock
& Key. In the state with our strongest source of political
activity, California, there isn’t even a CURE branch?! We believe CURE
is missing out on the greatest opportunity it could have, and this is
why the Council is committed to help CURE remedy this.
It is the job of our members to find ways to keep our movement working
on issues that have the greatest potential of reducing prison
populations and partnering with groups and organizations who share our
vision of a world with less to no prisons. We believe that working with
CURE National to develop a CURE California, the California Statewide
Council of USW can put to use much more of the information and resources
available, but only in a more direct way.
Take CURE National’s policy initiative for 2016. USW missed the
opportunity to involve itself with the CURE policy initiative for 2016
due to unfamiliarity with CURE and the lack of any direct line of
communication with its leadership, which would be needed before we moved
for the Council to follow. We commend the democratic process of decision
making in regards to what struggles CURE concentrates its resources and
power. Particularly, CURE National Policy 924 – prisons. As USW is a
group heavily engaged in struggles with nearly every state in the United
$tates – addressing “The failure of prison grievance systems”, we are
sure that we, and our memberships may unite in forces to bring about a
uniform grievance system in prisons across the board.
USW, and its supporters, has been working on a national prisoners
campaign demanding prison officials address, honor and upkeep prisoners’
grievances. Petitions have been developed at prisons in all of the
following states: Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Florida,
Georgia, Kansas, Montana, Nevada, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Oregon,
South Carolina, and Texas. Each state has a petition drawn particularly
for its local conditions and regulations. [There is also a more generic
petition written for use by prisoners held outside these states.]
USW’s most difficult task is finding public support to move forward our
campaigns in a peaceful and legal way. CURE National’s policy
initiatives 2015 1185 hinted at what it thinks is the root of prisoners’
problems: “Introducing a Constitutional Amendment into Congress that
would repeal the exception clause in the 13th Amendment. This clause
provides that slavery is not abolished for those incarcerated. Prisoners
are exploited, and for many groups the exploitation raises to the level
of slavery.” For the purpose of saving time and space, we will not share
our science on the subject, but instead guide supporters of the
amerikkkan Constitution to the very First Amendment and protecting it.
The salvation of the entire Constitution relies on the sound voice of
the civilized people. If it is believed that prisoners are slaves and
not citizens then it should be understood slaves are property, not human
beings. Slaves are objects of labor, tasked as tools and instruments to
build or destroy an ideal society. Slaves have no voice to speak of
injustice, but instead masters and lords who represent them as Power of
Attorney.
Prisoners have not signed off of the grid (U.$. citizenship). So it is
extreme to take up struggles to have the state abolish prison slavery,
however it would be totally reasonable to educate the public about the
need for public oversight and community advocacy for the First Amendment
rights of prisoners to be protected. It is with greater grievance power
that prisoners and their supporters may address the injustices of
prisons.
Prisoners, their organizations and the support groups behind grassroots
crews lead in civil rights battles with the state. The problem is that
the massive so-called grassroots base is alienated when it comes to
discussions regarding the general body of the massive population (or
masses). We believe this comes at the expense of a care-free public.
People aren’t interested enough in the affairs of prisoners or their
families. The general consensus is that prisoners did the crime and must
face the time.
Organizations like CURE National are in a position to change the public
opinion. Its members, who are of the public, may interact with
communities in ways that prisoners cannot; whether it be due to high
levels of censorship applied by prison guards disrupting our lines of
communication, or interference from a higher power (the U.$.
intelligence agencies). Prisoner leadership behind these walls requires
greater socialization opportunities if the Prison Movement is to impact
upon our state of existence the change that rehabilitates. So here you
have it, an open letter calling on you to serve.
In Struggle,
Countrywide Council of United Struggle
from Within PO Box 40799 San Francisco, CA 94140