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.
We are currently [5 November 2013] on lockdown since 29 October 2013 and
each housing facility on D facility is being thoroughly searched due to
an isolated “threat to staff” and weapon being found here on the SNY
yard.
On 26 June 2013, while being interviewed by Lieutenant C. Waddle
concerning the improper cross-gender and group strip searches of
transgender inmates, Lt. Waddle fabricated a spurious disciplinary
charge of “illegal sex acts” with my cellmate, which Sergeant M. Jones
wrote in a falsified report. Two days later I was placed in ASU
[isolation] and given an additional RVR for simply notifying Lt. Waddle
of specific transgender housing and safety concerns by her intentionally
rehousing me with a homophobic inmate!
Black & Pink has led an advocacy campaign, with letters of protest
to Warden M.D. Biter and CDCR Secretary Jeffery Beard, concerning the
sexual harassment and retaliation I have experienced at Kern Valley
State Prison.
When I filed a property appeal for items lost during the above
incidents, I was subjected to more retaliation, a punitive cell search
and RVR disciplinary action for “Falsifying records and documents,” by
Sergeant D. Williams and Correctional Officer Walinga. This also was
witnessed by my cellmate.
I believe that things may improve in the immediate future as a result of
my appeals, but I have suffered irreparable harm in my struggle for
equality and liberation. 602 appeals are currently pending in
Sacramento.
MIM(Prisons) adds: While all prisoners (both male and female) are
in a position of subjugation that leads to gender oppression while they
are locked up, gay, lesbian and transgender prisoners face additional
harassment, abuse, and oppression. As we discussed in our review of
The
Anti-Exploits of Men Against Sexism, fighting gender oppression in
prison is part of the battle against imperialism in general. We have
seen some
recent
examples of growing awareness and unity around this struggle, and we
will continue to publicize these battles and educate prisoners on gender
oppression in general. For more reading on gender, write to us to
request a copy of MIM Theory 2/3.
Of all the agencies and offices I filed the California grievance
petition with, only the U.S. Department of Justice and the California
Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation bothered to respond. They
only issued form letters disclaiming any responsibility for further
investigation, and simply redirected me back to the same dysfunctional
process that I had complained of!
MIM(Prisons) responds: It is clear that the U.$. Department of
Injustice and the CDCR won’t back up their words to give administrative
remedy to prisoners with actions when they discover the process isn’t
working. In fact, it’s to their benefit if the grievance system is
broken so that they won’t have to actually deal with the problems that
arise in the prison system. This ensures their control over oppressed
nations peoples.
The prisoner who received these defeating form letters asked for more
copies of the petition in the same letter. S/he recognizes that the
response from the bureaucrats isn’t the be-all-end-all goal of the
grievance petition. We want to show that if we ask nicely for a
solution, we will be given the brush off. We also want to use this
petition to recruit others into doing political work, even if it’s just
sending out the petition to a few administrators. Hopefully this action
will be a simple beginning to a long history of contribution to the
struggle against oppression.
We currently have grievance petitions prepared for California, Arizona,
Oklahoma, Missouri, Colorado, North Carolina, and Texas. If you’re
experiencing obstructions of your grievance procedure but your state
isn’t currently covered by the grievance campaign, consider modifying it
to apply to your state! Write in for more info, or to get petitions.
In making a determination of what organizing strategy and tactical
approach will be most effective in achieving the revolutionary goals of
a political vanguard, we must first conduct a dialectical analysis of
our strategic objectives. Thus, we begin our examination with an overall
look at our political line. What are our general positions and our main
objectives? Which of these should be given priority? What tactics will
best advance the struggle for liberation, justice, and equality?
In the United $tates, the most oppressed groups are prisoners, First
Nations, and sexual minorities/wimmin. Therefore, it is these specific
groups to which I give priority and focus here. [We have excluded the
author’s analysis of First Nations to focus this article. - Editor] How
can we better organize these groups? What tactics have worked in the
past?
The
Congress
Report 2010 by MIM(Prisons) makes no mention of wimmin or LGBTQ
(Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transsexual/Transgender, Queer) prisoners, or
of issues and projects specifically affecting these groups.(1) As a
transgender revolutionary feminist prisoner, and a USW comrade, I feel
that the absence or exclusion of these oppressed groups from the
discussion is of significant concern. Whenever MIM(Prisons) is
confronted on the issue of gender, it merely refers to the old back
issue of
MIM
Theory 2/3: Gender and Revolutionary Feminism. But what is
being done now, today, in regards to gender oppression and the
advancement of revolutionary feminism within the ranks of MIM(Prisons)?
The concept of principal contradiction comes from dialectical
materialism, which says that everything can be divided into opposing
forces.(2) The revolutionary feminist struggle against patriarchy is by
no means secondary to the principal contradiction in the world today
between imperialist countries and the oppressed nations they exploit.
Sartre has observed that: “if the feminist struggle maintained its ties
with the class struggle, it could shake a society in a way that would
completely overturn it.”(3)
The struggle for gender equality also includes transgender wimmin and
other sexual minorities. The situation of transgender prisoners,
particularly, is so vexing to prison administrators that the National
Commission on Correctional Health Care has drafted a position statement
titled “Transgender Health Care in Correctional Settings,” which reads
in part: “when determined to be medically necessary for a particular
inmate, hormone therapy should be initiated and sex-reassignment surgery
considered on a case-by-case basis.”(4)
Transgender females, especially in prison, are often discriminated
against and sexually abused in much the same way as biological wimmin,
but far worse. Representative Bobby Scott (D-VA) has introduced a much
needed piece of legislation, the Prison Abuse Remedies Act (PARA), which
would end the widespread impunity enjoyed by prison officials when
inmates are raped on their watch. It would change the worst parts of the
PLRA, which makes it virtually impossible for prison rape survivors to
seek redress in court.(5) Attorney General Eric Holder and Justice
Department officials are dragging their feet on implementation of the
National Prison Rape Elimination Commission’s recommended “Standards for
the Prevention, Detection, Response, and Monitoring of Sexual Abuse in
Detention,” the deadline for which passed in June 2010.(6) In the
meantime, more than 100,000 adults and youth continue to be sexually
abused each year while imprisoned.(7)
In failing to discuss these issues, MIM(Prisons) has missed a great
opportunity to revolutionize these oppressed groups and link their
struggle to the overall anti-imperialist movement. This is a strategic
and tactical mistake on our part, in my humble opinion.
Wimmin and the LGBTQ community are oppressed groups and potential
revolutionary classes nearly on par with oppressed nations, particularly
within the criminal “justice” system, and MIM(Prisons) must raise their
level of importance on the list of priorities at least to the level of
national liberation struggles and prisoners’ struggle. This is in line
with the Maoist theory of United Front and the expansion of the
anti-imperialist struggle among lumpen organizations, as well as
internationalist solidarity. Wimmin and Queers of the world, Unite!
PTT of MIM(Prisons) responds: In a discussion of what the
principal contradiction is in the world today, and what role feminism
plays in that contradiction, let’s first clearly define what a
“principal contradiction” is:
“There are many contradictions in the process of development of a
complex thing, and one of them is necessarily the principal
contradiction whose existence and development determine or influence the
existence and development of the other contradictions.” -
Mao,
“On Contradiction”
Ending oppression is our goal. The struggle towards this goal in our
current society is our “complex thing.” It has many contradictions which
are interacting with each other throughout the course of its development
(we say gender, class and nation are the main three). Determining which
contradiction is principal in the world today gives us a guide for how
to organize and what issues to organize around. We determine which is
the principal contradiction using a materialist (based in material
reality) analysis of history. The principal contradiction is principal
(and not secondary) because of the way its development will impact the
development of other contradictions. We do not choose it, it is shown to
us in history.
Establishing a principal contradiction is not a matter of
deciding which struggles most affect us on a persynal or subjective
basis. The principal contradiction is not the most subjectively
important contradiction; it is the one we need to focus on because
history has shown that it will bring the best results. As sympathizers
with all oppressed peoples in the world, including wimmin and LGBTQ
people, we hope to reach communism as fast as possible to minimize humyn
suffering. But based on our study and analysis, we say that nation, and
not gender, is the principal contradiction at this time in history, and
we need to organize to push the national contradiction forward.
For example, and contrary to what Queen Boudicca claims, oppressed
nations are far more oppressed by the criminal injustice system than
biological wimmin. In 2009, men were 14 times more likely to go to state
or federal prison than wimmin, while Black men were 6.5%[this
incorrectly read percent] times more likely than white men.(1) The
gender gap is bigger than the national gap, but in favor of oppressing
biological men. To argue that bio-wimmin are more oppressed you’re gonna
have to base your argument somewhere else.
Our comrade does present here examples of the unique oppression faced by
wimmin and LGBTQ prisoners in the United $tates. Yet, the form of
solutions proposed are reformist at best and at worst the demands of the
gender privileged. We must not focus on these examples of oppression in
isolation, as a replacement for a scientific analysis of how development
of the gender contradiction will affect other contradictions (namely
nation) and our overall goals, as Queen Boudicca does.
Historically laws against rape have expanded, not combatted, gender
privilege. Similarly the development of
leisure
time related medicine has largely benefited the gender privileged at
the expense of the oppressed. The use of drugs related to
depression
and mood is a means of adapting to an oppressive system, or being forced
to submit as is more clear in the
prison
environment. That said, we would encourage comrades to utilize
antidepressants as a last resort if they are unable to put in work
without them. The initiation of hormone therapy and sex-reassignment
surgery could play similar roles as psychological aids to cope in an
oppressive world. But when we are considering strategic battles on
behalf of the oppressed, shutting down control units, for example, will
have a much bigger influence on mental health while also developing the
anti-imperialist struggle for prisoners as a group.
Under capitalism and imperialism, it is impossible for us to determine
whether hormone therapy and sex-reassignment surgery are objectively
medically necessary for all time or just useful as a crutch for people
who are justifiably maladjusted to an imperialistic world. Sex has long
been defined socially and not biologically for the humyn species. Under
communism, when gender oppression is eradicated, and gender ceases to
exist, will people still want to change their biology? These are
questions we cannot answer until we get there. For now we encourage
everyone who has a poor self-image and an unsatisfactory sex life to
recognize these as products of capitalism and join the struggle toward
world liberation.
There is a thorough analysis of how the gender struggle impacts our
struggle for communism, and it is contained in the 208 page magazine
titled
MIM
Theory 2/3: Gender and Revolutionary Feminism. While not new, it has
a more updated assessment than Sartre, specifically in regards to the
gender aristocracy. Queen Boudicca claims to have read and to uphold
MT 2/3, but misses a main point that the struggles of First
World wimmin generally lead to more national oppression here and
throughout the world. Examples include the lynching of Black men as a
trade for more gender privilege for white wimmin; the forced drug
testing on Third World wimmin directly leading to an increase in the
availability of birth control for First World wimmin; and the failed
pseudo-feminist movement which has had no positive impact on the gender
struggle for the majority of wimmin. It is true that we recommend
MIM Theory 2/3 as the best starting point for why nation trumps
gender as the principal contradiction.
Although nation is the principal contradiction in the world today, it
still may be possible to organize wimmin and LGBTQ prisoners under the
MIM umbrella against their own material interests as Amerikans. We
believe that prisoners hold the most revolutionary potential within the
United $tates, which is why we organize them. If Queen Boudicca is
subjectively inspired to organize wimmin and LGBTQ prisoners
specifically, then we would support h organizing these populations
around MIM line. There are many roles to play in our struggle toward
liberation and communism, and MIM(Prisons) can’t fill them all. As a
revolutionary feminist organization, MIM(Prisons) aims to end gender
oppression as part of our struggle for communism, and we would welcome
any group into the united front against imperialism that is willing to
accept the political leadership of MIM Thought.
Queen Boudicca accuses MIM(Prisons) of not publishing articles about the
issues she raises. Yet we have printed
letters
from this author in ULK, and dozens of other articles
addressing gender issues from a uniquely Maoist perspective. In
particular, our article from
ULK 1
discusses how imprisonment rates of Black men make them more gender
oppressed than white wimmin in the United $tates today. And
ULK 6 is
focused on gender and tackles everything from gay marriage to
pornography to the effect of prisons on the family structure.
I’m writing in response to your Unlock the Box survey. in my 22 years of
incarceration in California prisons I’ve spent over 13 years in control
units.
While I cannot provide accurate statistical analysis that you request,
or much historical background concerning some of these control units, I
can at least tell you my personal observations from first hand
experience.
California State Prison - Sacramento (aka New Folsom) Administrative
Segregation Unit (ASU): I was first placed in this ASU in September 1991
for “inciting” (i.e. participation in an institution food strike protest
by writing to the ACLU). The ASU back then consisted of A-facility,
housing units 5,6, and 7 (with 8 sometimes used as overflow), with 64
cells in each unit at double cell capacity (except in isolated cases of
“single cell” status).
I would say at least 50% of the control unit was, and usually is in any
control unit, Latino, the other 50% is divided by varying degrees
between Afrikans and Europeans, with a small percentage of “others”
(i.e. Native American, Asian, Pacific Islander, etc.). The most common
reasons for ASU placement include assault on other inmates or staff,
drug possession or trafficking, gang affiliation, enemy or safety
concerns, weapons possession, or conspiracy investigations. Sometimes
inmates are sent to ASU based on bogus confidential information or some
other fabricated reason as a form of retaliation by prison officials.
As far as I know, this unit was first opened in 1985 or 86 as a Security
Housing Unit (SHU) during the statewide crackdown on prison gangs. It
has since been expanded to include a psychiatric Services Unit (PSU) in
housing units 1-4 and a stand alone ASU building behind B-facility, with
ASU-EOP in A-5, and ASU-CCCMS in B-4.
The state has recently implemented new control units in some prisons
called the Behavioral Modification Unit (BMU), which I don’t have much
information on at this time. Additionally, most level 4 prisons have
built separate “stand alone ASU” facilities which are modeled after
Pelican Bay SHU to impose maximum sensory deprivation. In fact, these
control units are worse than Pelican Bay SHU because of the deprivation
of inmates televisions.
I
was unable to finish reading ULK10 because I was motivated to begin this
letter as a contribution to issue 12: Health Care. The front page
article “Brutality Leads to Death” by a Texas prisoner describes an
almost identical incident that happened here at the R.J. Donovan
Correctional Facility (RJDCF, in the Administrative Segregation Unit
(ASU).
On September 13, 2009, a prisoner’s death occurred here in ASU Housing
Unit 6, Cell 128. This prisoner died of a drug overdose, which is being
blamed on one of the PM med nurses who was apparently fired and escorted
off the grounds. At the same time, they are investigating another
prisoner suspected of selling drugs to the prisoner. It should be noted
that this unit has video surveillance security cameras.
The fact is, on August 4, 2009, a federal judicial panel found that the
entire California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation (CDCR)
was in violation of the Eighth Amendment rights of prisoners, that the
prison health care system was inadequate and constituted cruel and
unusual punishment, and that denial of adequate medical care caused at
least one unnecessary death per week. In addition to the federal take
over of the prison health care system, CDCR was ordered to reduce prison
overcrowding by 40,000 prisoners within the next couple of years.
The most recent prisoner death can only be viewed as a criminally
negligent homicide, caused not by the nurse or prisoners, but by the
inhumane conditions and treatment we are subjected to every day in these
disciplinary segregation units. Prisoners are stripped of all personal
property and thrown in an empty cell without basic human necessities,
are denied prescribed medications on a regular basis, and are ignored by
custody and medical staff when they bang on the door and scream “man
down” in the case of a medical emergency.
I have been confined in this ASU for nearly a year, because I “refused
to double cell” with a non-compatible, sexually violent predator, a
known rapist! As a Jailhouse Lawyer, I am currently pursuing two federal
civil rights lawsuits for inhumane treatment, denial of due process and
sex discrimination under patriarchy.
The relevance of the ongoing legal battles, deaths of prisoners, and
prisoner resistance in relation to the larger anti-imperialist struggle
is not lost on me. With all the hoopla about Obama’s health care reform
proposals in the liberal corporate-controlled media, one can’t help but
read between the lines and separate the real from the BS.
Let’s keep it real, this health care reform will not include prisoners.
Additionally, right-wing Republican legislators in congress are already
raising a ruckus about inclusion of immigrants. Why not talk about the
California prison health care crisis in these national debates? Or the
billions of dollars being wasted in the imperialist Iraq war? Money used
to commit mass murder to protect the rights of U.$. oil companies should
instead be used to solve the economic and health care crises caused by
capitalist greed and medical neglect in this country, and in the prison
industrial complex! Revolution, not reform, is the only way to stop the
oppression, mass murder, and health care neglect under U.$. imperialism.
The program of MIM(Prisons) promotes the “elimination of all oppression
- the power of groups over other groups” and “independent
institutions…to provide…medical care.” Additionally, the MIM Platform
states “Abolish the Amerikan prison system…prisoners who do not
represent a violent threat to society will be relased.” These are steps
in the right direction. And so is the struggle against patriarchy and
gender oppression!
I’m a 40 year old transgender prisoner activist. I’ve been held prisoner
by the state of California for 20 years, including 10 years in Pelican
Bay SHU and am currently confined to Administrative Segregation Unit
(ASU), awaiting transfer to Tehachapi SHU for the past year.
I was initially placed in ASU for “refusing to double cell” and put in
disciplinary segregation for objecting to random housing assignments
with sexually violent predators because I am a transgender female on
hormone therapy. I was placed in punitive, inhumane conditions, simply
for exercising my constitutional right to personal safety.
Subsequently I was charged with “battery on a peace officer” for
spitting on the lieutenant in ASU. Then I was physically assaulted by
Correctional Officer Llamas, who falsified a report charging me with
“battery on a peace officer” because I stuck my arm out of the food port
on my cell door; he pepper-sprayed me and twisted my arm for demanding
to see his supervisor.
I am an experienced jailhouse lawyer and am currently pursuing two
federal civil rights lawsuits: 1) concerning medical neglect at Pleasant
Valley State Prison, and 2) inhumane conditions and sex discrimination
at RJDCF-ASU.