MIM(Prisons) is a cell of revolutionaries serving the oppressed masses inside U.$. prisons, guided by the communist ideology of Marxism-Leninism-Maoism.
In the article
“Pennsylvania
Digitizing Prisoner Mail” in ULK 65(1) Soso points out that
PA’s new policy will restrict prisoners to purchasing books directly
(after the publication is first approved by the DOC). By enforcing this
policy the PA DOC is implementing a state-run monopoly on reading
material within its prisons. The obvious reason for this imperialist act
is to further censor prisoners’ reading material.
Illinois comrades have heard our brothers’ cries for help. This policy
can be fought, but it will take time and dedication to prevail.
Crofton v. Roe, 170 F. 3d 957, 961 (9th Cir. 1999) is a case
finding that a regulation that only allowed a prisoner to receive
publications he ordered and paid for directly bore no relationship to
the interest of screening for contraband. You’ll need to Shepardize this
case to find cases from your Circuit that support this judgment.
What does this mean? It means that you can combat the current policy
denying third parties to order you books. That might seem like a small
victory compared to the digitization of your mail and pictures, but any
victory against the state is a victory for the people. Unfortunately,
due to the security concerns regarding drugs being smuggled into the
prisons through the mail, it is unlikely that this policy will be
overturned by any court. The only method left for this issue is direct
action in protest of the policy which garnishes public attention and
support (i.e. the mass hunger strikes in California in protest of the
SHU which resulted in the abolishment of indefinite placement in the
SHU). In Solidarity!
MIM(Prisons) responds: We hope that this PA mail policy will be
challenged in the courts. Although MIM(Prisons) does not have the
resources (or lawyers) to do this from the streets, we print this letter
to support our jailhouse lawyers who are working on this battle. At the
same time, this writer makes a good point that we are unlikely to win
these legal battles entirely. We can sometimes gain some small
victories, that allow us things like greater access to educational
materials in prison. But we need to keep in mind that political power
only comes to those who take it. The imperialists and their courts will
not give up this power without a fight.
I’m writing about a problem that I’ve been dealing with for the last two
years of my incarceration. If you all have any information that will
help me, please send it or put me in touch with someone who can help.
Basically I had a normal life before I was incarcerated. Meaning I had
bills. Due to my incarceration I fell behind on all my bills, ruining my
credit.
I’ve found information in the library to run my credit report and
contact my debtors. But the mail room here will not allow me to send out
anything that has to do with finances. They advise me to appoint a power
of attorney.
My problem is this, how does DOC expect us to be “rehabilitated” while
incarcerated, but won’t allow us to do for ourselves? I’m going to be
released to society with terrible credit, no money and no means
(legally) to provide for myself. And I’m certainly not the only one.
This system is creating a cycle that turns DOC into a revolving door.
And does nothing but add to the paychecks for the state.
Everybody doesn’t have family out there to provide for them. So I
thought I could try to handle my own business but I’m being held back. I
read the policy and it basically states that as a prisoner we are not
allowed to sign financial contracts or start/conduct business via mail
or phone.
So I’m reaching out to see if any other prisoners are having this
problem. If so has there been a solution? Because I have several ideas
on how we can help ourselves to have the funds to start over once
released. But how do I implement them with the restrictions applied by
DOC? Hell I don’t even know if they’ll let me send this out asking for
help.
MIM(Prisons) responds: This comrade describes just one of many
problems releasees will face as soon as they hit the streets. Usually
thinking about your credit is not the first order of business for a
released prisoner. But this can have a big impact on your ability to
find housing and set up basic services (which require credit cards).
There are ways to rebuild your credit rating, but it’s slow and one more
problem to add to the difficulties of life on the streets with a prison
record. And as this writer points out, all this adds up to a revolving
door of recidivism.
We don’t have any easy ways to help fix this credit problem, or the
bigger question of how to set up businesses from behind bars. However,
we hope that our comrades with release dates or finite sentences will
start thinking about this well in advance. If you have someone on the
outside who can help square up your delinquent bills, it’s never too
early to ask for help. And if your prison allows you to send mail out to
those billers directly, you might be able to work something out with
them to defer the debt.
If anyone else has ideas to help folks hitting the streets to deal with
these sorts of financial challenges, write in to share them. We want to
help our comrades hitting the streets to ease their transition as much
as possible. This is critical to making it possible for releasees to
continue their political work on the streets. We need an army of former
prisoners building independent institutions of the oppressed, to support
new releasees.
Gangster mentality can mean different things to many. A gang is a group
of people with a common goal. I must emphasize that all words/concepts
are subject to connotations that don’t necessarily have good intentions.
Gang/gangster therefore carry negative and positive connotations, like
other words like socialism, anarchism, communism, etc. It has been
MIM(Prisons)’s aim to educate us about these ideas through the proper
usage of science.
With this in mind, I consider myself a gangster. Since I believe in the
idea of working with others towards a common goal, to me it is not about
“defeating this gangster mentality,” it’s about embracing it and
re-directing it towards the “Shining Path.” We have a common enemy, and
resolving our minor contradictions doesn’t necessarily mean that we have
to defeat our gangster mentality. This kind of language is what causes
rejection from the lumpen organizations(L.O.s) in many cases. This is
the language that is used by state-financed organizations and Christian
groups/org.
I understand that MIM’s direction is different, but those who pick up
ULK and glance at it may see this language and will put
ULK down. My approach has, and will continue to be, one that
politicizes the gangster mentality. This is where you will find the most
dedicated comrades, and, because they are respected they find themselves
in a position to make real changes that erase that divide among
different gangs and further our struggle in the right direction. It is
about learning and teaching about our minor contradictions and working
to overcome these minor obstacles.
In ULK 67, USW 11 wrote about how the
state
of Washington is doing whatever it can to depoliticize prisoners,
and how among those places where you find the gangster mentality is
where you find the most resistance against the state.(1) When L.O.s
understand the power they have working collectively, things begin to
change and form. After all, gangs are in contrast with the
individualistic mentality in the United $tates, and are a response to
the socio-economic conditions we face in and out of prison. It’s a way
to survive, in a place where the capitalist and oppressive system
emphasizes individualism.
Growing up in the internal semi-colonies (ie. Aztlán, New Afrika or the
reservations), one is confronted with a certain form of oppression. This
national oppression naturally compels our youth to come together and
unite for survival purposes. This phenomenon is mirrored anywhere in the
world where the contradictions exist between oppressor vs. oppressed
nations. This results in oppressed youth forming youth survival groups,
which the capitalist state calls “gangs.”
Lumpen organizations, or lesser-organized youth survival groups, are a
reaction to living under an oppressor nation and although it is a good
alternative to assimilation or attempted assimilation to Amerikkka,
there is a need to develop more fully to political consciousness.
Political consciousness will be what leads to liberation of our nations.
In my own development, I realized how my varrio will always be my
varrio, my homies always my homies, my brothers always my brothers. But
in order to liberate Aztlán it will take more than being a rebel. I now
know if i truly love my people and community i should uplift their
consciousness, not turn my back on them. The goal is to bring my people
to the side of revolution. The goal is to have my people develop as did
the excellent example of the Young Lords Party. From a so-called “gang”
to a revolutionary organization. This can be accomplished via political
education. Each one teach one. Start with your cellmate, then neighbors,
then homies on the tier and branch out. Leaders should institute
political education and raise the consciousness of the org. This is when
real accomplishments will be gained. Rise!
“We find ourselves today forced into a re-examination of the whole
nature of black revolutionary consciousness and its relative standing
within a class society steeped in a form of racism so sensitized that it
extends itself even to the slightest variation in skin tone.” - Comrade
George (B.I.M.E.)
Almost 50 years after the assassinations of our comrades W. L., George,
Khata-Ri, etc, etc. and the enemy has totally disseminated our party and
reinforced their system to potentially negate our future revolutionary
movements! What do we do now?
Our demand for narcotics to temporarily numb the pain of half life in
capitalist U.$. is helping to fuel our distraction. Half of us sell dope
and the other half use it!! Killing our unity and revolutionary
potential! Now here we are, in capitalist U.$. torture chambers! Many of
us are addicts, chasing a high right now! Some of us “claim a set” and
from this identity cannot see being cool with the brotha of another
“set.” Some are lifers, who are weary of sacrificing themselves for the
reactionaries to benefit! Some have already fallen too far (i.e. KKKop
collaborators), and in turn, work covertly to undermine our movement!
Others are poltroons, and out of their fear(s), they knowingly sabotage
our progression as a U.$. disfavored minority. Many of us are “armchair
revolutionaries” in that our practice(s) never match our stated militant
goals. Others see control of the “underground economy” as being
revolutionary. I do not have the answers. I am simply a New Afrikan man
seeking community input as I continue to stride firmly. My questions
are:
How is the “revolutionary consciousness” developed in a time of
reactionary gangsterism?
At what point does this so called “revolutionary theorist” have
to put his theories into practice?
How can we ever trust a cat who has ever worked as an informant
or jail house rat? By his very obvious individualism he has demonstrated
his priority is ideal of “me first.” Which, to us, says that once the
pressure(s) of isolation, pig abuse(s), additional time, etc. comes into
play, he will tell again. Setting us back even further!
MIM(Prisons) responds: This comrade and eir questions posed was
one of the inspirations for the topic of this issue of ULK. And
we hope we have at least begun to provide some answers and guidance for
those of us struggling with these questions.
This comrade also mentions a serious side-effect of the current gangster
era, which is propped up by the drug economy. This reality serves as a
material incentive in the form of profits for the seller and in the form
of chemical triggers in the brain of the buyer. We addressed this
situation in more depth in ULK 59 where we recognized the
challenges in even questioning the drug economy in today’s prison
environment. It will require progress on other fronts to make a dent on
the struggle against the poisoning of oppressed communities.
So what is to be done today?
Build a Revolutionary Culture on the Streets
USW30: Recently I heard of my older brotha/comrade’s passing and
it has me wondering… how do the brothas/sistas, who’ve embraced
revolutionary consciousness inside, transition to outside struggles?
Taking into consideration that the lumpen are in a state of defeatism
and quite fratricidal!
I personally exited Federal Bureau Of Prisons after 17 calendars. I
jumped right into local progressive politics and organizational
volunteer work, serving the lumpen! Yet, seemingly at every outing one
was forced to repel some form of gang reactionary threat(s). Most of
which, stern chastisements sufficed. However, all B.S. aside, I guess
what I’m saying is, without a “progressive culture” in play within the
“hood” We are at risk of A) being victimized by our misguided lumpen,
conditioned by capitalism to fratricidal violence, B) or we ourselves
react to reactionary threats and in turn reinforce the lumpen’s
perceptions of us, “prison revolutionaries” that return to “gangster”
conduct once out.
In truth, the only communities I saw which had requisite support
systems; minimal threat of intra-national violence, and universal code
of community morality were Islamic. I continually read pieces in
ULK, where cats profess to be “materialist dialecticians” and as
such, against “spirituality.” What I suggest to those living in New
Afrikan areas in particular is to analyze the impact of Islam on it.
Contrast that with that of the so-called revolutionaries. We must figure
out more effective ways to bring unity, as we methodically strive to
bring Babylon down. Rather than spit unproductive rhetoric which
services interests of the pigs by dividing militants from one another.
Those who are truly analyzing the body of facts (i.e. U.$. history)
would have to acknowledge that those of Afrikan ancestry have always
held spiritual connections and/or beliefs in a higher power/creator.
Upwards of 40% of enslaved Afrikans were Muslim. Leading many slave
captors to recommend traffickers firstly “break” them (i.e. torture
Islam out of them) prior to bringing these known rebels to the United
$tates and England. My point being those who truly work to build
revolutionary culture must work with Muslims and in turn find common
ground to then gain traction in revolutionary culture building.
Materialists must dialectically look at U.$. history and correspond
tactics to today’s realities confronting historically oppressed peoples!
Teach Christians examples of Nat Turner, Denmark Vesey, etc. Teach
Muslims about El Hajj Malik Shabazz (Malcolm X), etc. That even though
we may come from varying socio-cultural backgrounds, we have the very
same oppressors and system. That the Muslims, Christians, Buddhists,
Atheists, Communists, etc. who live within U.$. borders all share the
same injustices, inequalities, and pig brutalities on a daily basis. As
such, we must cast side the divisive rhetoric and build class unity or
die. As a Muslim of New Afrika, I am obligated to fight all oppressors.
Personally, I could care less if the askari at my side believes or not.
Long as he/she is committed to struggle…to death or death row. Does it
matter if I must make Salah, before we run towards our oppressors? Well,
that’s my take and regardless, I will continue fighting, organizing, and
striving! Peace.
MIM(Prisons) responds:We agree with this author’s point that
we should be working with the left wing of the Muslim movement, and
other religions. We addressed this question in depth in ULK 48.
As communists we embrace materialism and encourage scientific thinking
about the world. But this does not prevent us from uniting with all who
can be rallied against imperialism. And the rabid anti-Muslim sentiments
coming from the Amerikan imperialists creates fertile breeding ground
for anti-imperialism.
Although we cannot find evidence of such a high percentage of Muslims
among enslaved Africans. At the time that slaves were captured from
Africa indigenous religions were the most common practice. But
traffickers (and slave owners) attempted to break slaves of all their
practices that tied them to their homeland, regardless of what religion
or other cultural norms.
While we often talk about the imprisoned lumpen as being one of the most
revolutionary populations in the United $tates, it is also in a
backwards state of affairs. Meanwhile, the last time we saw a strong
revolutionary consciousness penetrate the prison population was when
there were strong vanguard organizations in the oppressed nations on the
streets. We must recognize that part of building a strong revolutionary
movement in prisons is building an even stronger one on the outside.
United Struggle from Within serves as a conduit for connecting the two,
via prisoners who are released. MIM(Prisons)’s Re-Lease on Life Program
attempts to provide support to those who are struggling with these
challenges after release. But we have a lot of work to do to build
strong revolutionary communities for comrades around the United $tates.
Revolutionary Theorists or Revolutionaries
USW30: Within the context of criticism-self-criticism, I am
wondering when we as revolutionary theorists on the inside, shall
righteously analyze the definition(s) of “revolution”/“revolutionary”?
And in turn, be honest with ourselves (within the New Afrikan community)
about if we are truly on that path that Col J (RIP), W.L. (RIP) etc.
strode. I am questioning myself as well?! As the
Kentucky
comrade pointed out on p. 8 of ULK 65.(1)
Many of us claim to be revolutionaries, but have yet to truly embrace
the reality of revolution! Or, shed the ethos of Gangsta. We create
plethora of revolutionary documents in prisons, only to return to
society and criminality. Recently a young New Afrikan referred to a
fellow rad as “homeless dopefiend!” This made me think back.
The economy of capitalism murders millions daily. We have seemingly been
co-opted by enemy cultural tenants! We have comrades embracing drug
dealing as acceptable conduct! Poisoning our communities, profiting off
of the destruction of our underklass citizenry! Then, returning to
prison in turn advocating for addicted rads to be cast aside! We have
rads claiming revolutionary authenticity, that have yet to stand against
the real enemy, yet take pride in shopping blood of their own! The
contradictions are glaring and I believe these are just a few of the
things which have a real progressive and revolutionary movement
stagnating!
Perhaps a retracing of steps is needed? As in… acknowledgement of
enemy’s defeat of the revolutionary movement in the 60s! That the “Black
Power” of the 70s was a reformist attempt(s) to somehow safeguard some
aspect of sociocultural pride, while rejecting the dominant amerikkkan
kapitalist culture! Which in turn, led to the 80s crack epidemic and
subsequent abandonment of all things revolution. For a “piece of the
pie!”
These cats coming into prison today… fratricidal, apolitical, and
addicted! Are the effects of our failures as leaders, in our
communities! How can he claim Col J (RIP), when our day to day conduct
is a reactionary affirmation of “Superfly” and “the Mack?” These youth
see the hypocrisies, and this is why we cannot gain their support! To
speak about revolution and yet not live a revolutionary example is
unacceptable! And fraudulent in the 1st degree! I am no longer going to
refer to myself as a revolutionary until I engage in revolution! Nor
will I reference Col J(RIP) as my “comrade,” until I follow his
examples!
I thank the Kentucky comrade for eir critiques in the last two
paragraphs, as they struck home for me! We must reform the “gangstas”
within our movement… or destroy them! As their overt materialistic
individualisms will destroy us… or, turn the progressives back into
elements of reaction!
MIM(Prisons) responds: There is a bit of an existential crisis
for the revolutionary in non-revolutionary times. We don’t take on the
term “revolutionary” as if we were superheroes, but merely to describe
our political goals and ideology. But, it does bring us back to question
2 above. And we’d say that a revolutionary must always be putting eir
theories into practice. And that includes not waging revolutionary war
in a non-revolutionary situation. That is a basic principle of the
guerilla.
As USW30 says, the youth can detect the phony revolutionaries who just
talk the rhetoric while acting out the negative aspects of the gangster
role. We can act as revolutionaries, as individuals, in our day-to-day
behavior in interacting with, serving, and standing up for the people.
There’s a reason we get letters regularly mentioning the comrades who
died in the struggle 50 years ago. Their legacy lives on because they
stood up as examples. And even if our names don’t become legendary, we
will inspire the youth and the masses around us through our correct
actions.
Transforming the gangster mentality into a revolutionary one is possible
because they are two sides of a coin. As an intermediary class the
lumpen can act out both bourgeois ethics (in the form of gangsterism) or
proletarian ethics (as revolutionaries).
The lumpen implementation of bourgeois ethics is the gangster. The
gangster in many ways imitates the most ruthless aspects of bourgeois
behavior, allowing them to be potential tools of the imperialists. Yet
there are aspects of the collective identity, the discipline, and
perhaps most importantly the connection to an oppressed nation, that you
see in both the gangster and the revolutionary. This is what
distinguishes the lumpen organization (L.O.) from the criminal gangs
made up of correctional officers and police departments.
The lumpen implementation of proletarian ethics is the revolutionary.
The lumpen revolutionary may be more adventurous and tend more towards
left errors than the proletariat. Regardless, choosing the proletarian
road, means reforming oneself to take on proletarian morality. The
collective action and rebelliousness of the lumpen organization must
mature into pure dedication to the people and a strategic approach to
protracted peoples’ war against imperialism.
We discussed these two roads in our review of J. Sakai’s
“The
Dangerous Class and Revolutionary Theory”.(1) As we said then,
there are two roads today, the communist and the capitalist. The
capitalist is the old road, the decaying road.
So when comrades keep bringing up this question of “how do we overcome
the gangster mentality,” it is essentially a question of how do we move
the lumpen off the old capitalist road and into building the new
communist one.
Our critics might counter, “wait a minute, plenty of people give up a
violent gang life without becoming proletarian revolutionaries.” And
they are correct. But this also has not put a dent in the presence of
the gangster mentality in our society, has it? Individuals aging out of
gangs and integrating into bourgeois society does nothing to combat
gangsterism because the motivation, the causes are still there. Even
those who reach out to dissuade youth from taking the same path only
provide a band-aid. A class of people, excluded from the means of
production and distribution, living in an economic system driven by
profit, will keep reproducing the gangster mentality. Until we can
replace capitalism with a system where everyone has a productive role to
play and peoples’ needs drive our society, instead of profit, only then
can we truly overcome the gangster mentality.
A few years back, in ULK 51 a comrade summed up some
discussion around this topic among USW comrades:
“Today’s youth show the same apathy, indifference and nihilism as the
youth of 1955. It was the civil rights movement that awoke the youth of
that era. USW comrades struggled over what today can take the place of
the civil rights movement. War, environment and imperialist expansion
were three good starting points to organize around. We lumpen youth have
more stake in the future environment and it is us who fight the wars. It
helps to understand that those starving to death and suffering/dying
from preventable diseases are our people. We must fulfill our destiny or
betray it. All this nitpicking and betrayal between sets/sides
contributes to humankind suffering. We must overcome this flaw.
“The principal enemy we must defeat is the glamorization of gangsterism.
A revolutionary or a gangster? What are we? Can the two coexist in a
persyn and still be progressive? Gangsterism plants fear by oppression,
and revolutionaries are in struggle against oppression. This internecine
violence we perpetrate between sets is what the pigs want us to do. They
sold us this shit in Scarface and we’ve built on to it and made
it our own. Overcoming the glamorization of gangsterism will take
proletarian morality, conscious rap, exposing the downsides and ills of
gangsterism, the glamorization of revolution, revolutionary culture, and
possibly to redefine the word gangsta. Gangsters are parasites and
revolutionaries are humankind’s hope. It’s as simple as that. We need to
leave the lumpen mentality for a proletarian one. Many true
revolutionaries were once gangsters. Gangsterism is a stage, basically.
“Self-respect, self-defense and self-determination define transitional
qualities of a revolutionary. Bunchy Carter, Mutulu Shakur and Tupac all
transcended the hood and grew into progressives. What we are seeking as
USW is opening up the spaces for gangsters of all walks of life to enter
the realm of anti-imperialism and begin a transformation of mind,
actions and habits to develop into the model of a revolutionary gangsta
with the capability of forwarding the cause of the people. We must
understand our potential. It is us, we reading these ULKs, that hold
imperialism in our fists. A real gangsta is one who has gone
revolutionary and has kicked off all the strings of social control -
mental illness, drugs, fantasy, despair, escapism, etc.”(2)
A program for overcoming the gangster mentality involves a multi-pronged
approach. We must expand and develop the membership of the vanguard
cadre organizations. Simultaneously we must organize the lumpen masses
around a minimal program of unity. As K.G. Supreme of USW stressed in an
article on this topic, it is revolutionary nationalism and
anti-imperialism that provides a viable group identity and movement to
rival that of the current L.O.s that dominate the terrain.
“Cultural Freedom is the best weapon for defeating the gangster
mentality. Cultural freedom that is geared in nationalist liberation of
oppressed nations, and exploiter nation suicide for members of the
euro-amerikan oppressor nation. As Marcus M. Garvey of the African
nationalist organization, UNIAACL said, ‘Power is the only argument that
satisfies man.’”
And as Pilli discusses in
“Love
Your Varrio by Liberating Your People,” we must embrace the
oppressed people, communities and organizations. And we must encourage
growth within them. Communists are not here to attack the gangsters or
the addicts, that is what the bourgeois state does. We are here to guide
others down the same path of education and growth that we have found.
United Struggle from Within has long put forth the slogan, “Unity from
the inside out.” This embodies the dialectical process of developing
unity within one’s own thinking so that one can better build unity with
others; that an organization must struggle within its membership to
build unity before it can unite with others in the nation; and that a
nation must build unity before it can properly unite in its own
interests with other oppressed nations.
“Unity-struggle-unity” is a related slogan that depicts how we should
approach building unity among the people, addressing contradictions
amongst the people. We can’t be all unity, we must challenge, question
and struggle. But we start and end with unity, so that we can grow in
that direction.
“Each one, teach one” is a slogan that stresses the role of education,
especially in these early stages. It also embodies the truth that we all
have things to learn from each other. Education and learning are a
central part of our program for building the cadre and the masses.
These slogans, and others, should be actively built around. Comrades
should study and popularize the 5 points of the United Front for Peace.
We should organize events and study programs around Black August, the
Commemoration of the Plan de San Diego and the September 9th Day of
Peace and Solidarity. MIM(Prisons)’s Free Books to Prisoners Program
offers study materials around all of these topics. We also offer
correspondence study courses, which all comrades wishing to work with
USW should join. We offer a wide array of revolutionary literature for
your own independent study and for prison-based study groups.
While uniting around study groups and education is important for
building cadre, most people will only be able to unite with us around
concrete battles. It is up to comrades on the ground to determine what
winnable battles exist where you are. What are the masses’ righteous
demands and how can we mobilize them to achieve them? How can we build
Serve the People programs locally by pooling resources and helping
others out? It is in these concrete battles that we gain mass support,
and we learn to organize, lead and challenge injustice.
We believe we have the correct theoretical basis and the framework of a
program for this stage of the prison movement. But there is much to be
done to experiment and learn from. As K.G. Supreme stresses, the lumpen
masses must get deep into the gangster mentality, understand it so as to
transform it.
“It is important, in defeating the gangster mentality, that those
serious about raising the consciousness of the subjects of gangsterism,
first come to terms with the mentality as a lifestyle from the vantage
point of inside the mind of a first world gangster. Approaching the
subject from any other angle would be an inferior method promised to
fail in producing any significant impact in the social behavior of those
that are the target. The investigation into this gangster mentality
should be led by those who are infected with the mentality. This isn’t
to say petit bourgeoisie nationalist groups cannot support the
leaderships of those struggling against the gangster mentality. It is to
say that the petit bourgeoisie nationalist must not seek to dictate the
leaderships that struggle to defeat the gangster mentality, as to not
contaminate the nationalist liberation objective, spreading culture
indifferent to the destructive culture, spread by the bourgeoisie.
“…As more and more ground level leaderships disconnect themselves with
the lifestyles that encourages behavior motivated by the gangster
mentality, there becomes a need to replace the un-natural behavior with
disciplines motivated by reconnection with natural lifestyles that are
in harmony with the growth and development of a parasite outkaste of
society, matured into a productive component of the internationalist
objective to end national oppression by the exploiting nations in
independent nations. Only culture that promotes national liberation
struggles, applying political methods in interest of the oppressed can
be relied on to replace the mentality of gangsterism… Emotions do not
dictate the course of action in gradual transformation from unconscious
behavior to conscious population. Instead the culture of educating
against defeatist mentality, borns the scientific approach of the
analytical prisoner, who in turn of reversing the gangsterism pop
culture for a popular culture of upliftment in nationalist liberation
objectives that free the available remedies of exploited and nationally
disadvantaged, free themselves. The key to defeating the gangster
mentality is investments in engineering techniques that make
anti-imperialist culture popular.”
We just got word that the Texas Department of Criminal inJustice (TDCJ)
has denied delivery of the TDCJ Offender Grievance Manual to one of our
subscribers in Texas. Not just at the unit level (we were not informed
of the censorship at the unit level by Polunsky Unit mailroom staff, in
direct
contradiction
to TDCJ’s own policies)(1), but the Director’s Review Committee even
upheld the censorship of the grievance manual. The Director.
Well, what could possibly be the reason given for censoring TDCJ’s own
manual which was written for “offenders”? Couldn’t tell you. All the
notice says is it was “received in contradiction with BP-03.91, Uniform
Offender Correspondence Rules.” Don’t forget, BP-03.91 doesn’t just say
that this item is denied delivery to this particular subscriber. It says
that this item is banned in the entire state for all time. Just like
Chican@ Power and the Struggle for Aztlán, our “Defend the Legacy
of the Black Panther Party” study pack, and multiple issues of Under
Lock & Key (at least including Nos. 63, 57, 54, 51, 45, 35, 32,
28, and 27).
You might be wondering why MIM Distributors is sending in the grievance
manual anyways. It’s a TDCJ document, after all. And according to the
Texas Board of Criminal Justice,
the
grievance manual ought to be available to prisoners.(2) Well, in
September 2014, a memo went out that
removed
the grievance manual from all TDCJ law libraries.(2) Why would they
do this? Don’t know, they didn’t say. TDCJ’s grievance system is
notoriously ineffective and deliberately obstructive. And Texas is
historically one of the worst states when it comes to brutal national
oppression. Seems to be part of those overall patterns.
We did have a “victory,” so minor that it’s even embarrassing to use
that word. The Director’s Review Committee Decision Form actually listed
the name of the item that they censored! Wow! We didn’t have to go
hunting around in the list of mail we sent to this subscriber, guessing
which item was censored based on the date we mailed it out. This is
often a very difficult detail to pin down, considering how much mail we
send in and the weeks- and months-long delays in the TDCJ censorship
procedures.
So, we’ve been protesting the ineffective grievance process in Texas for
almost ten years. The grievance manual was hidden almost 5 years ago.
And now we can’t even mail in the grievance manual. We do plan to appeal
this censorship to the Director’s Review Committee, but often our
letters to them go unanswered. In the short term, we need people (and
lawyers!) in Texas to put pressure on TDCJ to stop obstructing
prisoners’ access to the grievance system. Ultimately we need to
overthrow this totally bunk injustice system and the economic system it
protects.
I am personally connected to this topic, being an active high-ranking
individual of an organization. I have struggled trying to make the
transition to become a better man. 22 years young, growing up I was
never exposed to positive black New Afrikan role models, or anyone older
I could look up to who defined what it meant to be a man. Everyone I
hung around was in a 5 years span older or younger and everyone who was
successful was either an athlete, entertainer or criminal.
So when basketball or rapping didn’t work out I turned to the street
where toughness was defined by aggression and fearlessness. Fighting and
shooting. I turned to my organization for the loyalty and love and the
brotherhood. Being a gangster to me was being heartless to anybody who
was not with you, and if they cross you, deal with them like an enemy.
Being incarcerated I learned that leaders and high ranking members need
to revolutionize our organizations and get back to the original
principles that we were founded on. Having influence is great power, we
need to use this influence for education and fighting oppression. It is
easy to talk about, it’s a learning process. I can’t define toughness or
what it means to be a man, but I can explain personally why I am the way
I am and what it takes to prevent another from falling victim. Unity is
key. Changing your values so you cannot be controlled by privileges and
understanding if you are not part of the solution, then you contribute
to the problem. Most people care what people think so they let that stop
them from acting on what they really feel. But you can’t be for the
revolution in mind but not in action.
Education and unity! Use the “negative” organizations as a vehicle for
positive influence and change. It starts from the top O.G.s teach the
Y.G.s. Teach them how and they will fall in line.
Part 2: What is a man? What defines a gangster?
A lot of New Afrikan brothas like myself have no idea because no example
was taught by any positive New Afrikan role models. All we know is what
the white-washed media portrays to us. We listen to rap music that
glorifies violence and objectifies our women. Our role models being dope
dealers and our definition of gangster is Scarface, Larry Hoover, Pistol
Pete…
Being fearless and cold, making money by any means makes you a man, not
tolerating disrespect, toting guns and how many women you had sex with
all define your manhood. I sit here explaining that mentality and see
the flaws in it.
Now let’s talk about the cycle. Every parents’ purpose should be to make
the world a better place for the generation coming next. Speaking from
my mind, the older generation kills me complaining about the younger
generation and in order to solve a problem, first things first, you must
start at the root. I will not deflect or place blame but this older
generation, our own fathers, uncles, brothers start the cycle by failing
to educate and expose their children to something different, something
positive. They allow their children to be influenced by white imagery of
what a Black man is: violent, or supernaturally talented, only good for
white man’s entertainment.
I won’t sit here and talk about it with no solution, so how do we fix
it? Everything starts with the children and what we teach them and what
they are exposed to. New Afrikan men must learn the most important part
of parenting is presence. Just being available is so important for a
child growing up. We need to expose our children to successful business
leaders and entrepreneurs that look like us, not only athletes and movie
stars or entertainers. Teach them to be financially literate. Teach them
about this racist society and how to be prosperous in it. Only way to
break the mentality is to replace it. A man is responsible, reliable,
self-sufficient, wise, a man does not make mistakes. A man takes care of
his children and family. Now that’s Gangsta!
MIM(Prisons) responds: Everyone makes mistakes, and they are our
source of empirical knowledge. So we should not fear them. What we think
this comrade means here is that we should not keep making mistakes and
not learn. We shouldn’t live a lifetime of mistakes. If we listen to
what society tells young New Afrikan men, not living a lifetime of
mistakes means going against the grain.
Each One, Teach One! Whether a child or an adult. We all have things to
teach. And only by learning from each other does our collective
knowledge grow. While we can learn from our mistakes, most knowledge is
history. So we don’t need to make all the same mistakes the people of
the past did to learn the lesson ourselves, empirically. We can leap
frog ahead by building on the lessons from the past. It is this
collective, historical knowledge that gives humynity the power to reach
much greater heights.
Growth is key. We all go through many different stages of the learning
process at different times. As long as we are moving in the same general
direction, of liberation, then we can unite in our growth.
I am writing on the behalf of the UBN/BBA of North Karolina. The
movement is going downhill due to this new wave of beloveds. This new
generation of Damus (especially the Emus) are konfused. We are breeding
pliable brothers and placing them in strong positions as leaders of the
movement. All these new komrades know is violence and gossip because
time and patience is not being donated anymore. History is not being
properly taught anymore, so they don’t know where we come from as Damus!
Everybody want to be leaders nowadays. They say you must stand on your
own first before you kan stand with a group. Katz just want to make a
name for themselves.
I’m in tune with komrades in society as well as behind these enemy
lines. It’s getting a little bit better in some prisons in North
Karolina but in most kounty jails such as the one I’m housed in the
kommunication is shot to hell and it forces others to gossip and spread
rumors. With those actions bring acts of violence and the gangster
mentality. Which goes back to what I was touching base on at an earlier
portion of this where I stated people are “pliable.” They want to fit in
or feel like they’re important.
We need to go back to the original teachings. Go back to mandating the
study of our history, our founding fathers, our true purpose, etc. We
also need to create a better form of maintaining better communication
behind these enemy lines as well as the blakktop. We are weakening our
ownselves with all this bullshit we are doing as an entity! We
forgetting that Damu is about “Positive over Negative.” We are about
killing oppression with a positive impression. All this Damu on Damu
shit is a double oh banga.
Before we can expect to make a difference behind these enemy lines we
must first make a difference within our own movements due to the fact we
are who make up the prisons and in unity, we will be the ones to make a
difference. We must first unify though! This system don’t give a fukk
about us beloveds. Fukk the pig$, and stop all of this snitching shit B!
WTF is going on? The oppressors know more about us and our shit than we
do. Tighten up komrades we gotta do better.
MIM(Prisons) responds: This comrade echoes the USW slogan of
“Unity from the inside out.” Lumpen organizations must build unity
internally first, before solid unity can be built with other
organizations. And building this unity inside prisons can also transfer
to life outside of prisons. So this is an important call to be made. We
look forward to hearing more from this comrade’s efforts, successes and
failures, and how they can be applied by others facing the same
situation.
In the February 2019 issue of the SF BayView there was a headline
that read, “California Prisoners endangered by forced merger of Snitch
Yards.” And it dawns on the world, how can a prisoner in the prison
state capitol affect change on a national, and international level, if
they can not find unity as a population suffering under the exact same
conditions of: Police Brutality, Don’t ask Don’t Tell, Code of Silence
Policies, Corrupt Administrative Justices, and Counterfeit Social
Justice/Prison Reform Advocates. Prisoners in California suffer, as a
whole, under these conditions, yet the leaderships of the most
politically advanced wrestle over popularity contests between who is
“active” and who is non-active, who is with the business and who is not.
Just what business is it that defines whether a person in prison is
active or not? Is it not the Freedom of All Persons in Prison we
struggle for, or is it but a select few?
Aren’t we all political prisoners, under these current conditions? Of
course, there are those amongst the population of prisoners who are
deserving of a bit more popularity than others. Those who carry the
publicity of high profile cases as social justice activist, militants
and radicals. All in all however, do we not share the similar suffering
under this condition called imprisonment?
In California, leaders must really mature themselves and their followers
to the level of love and reconciliation, this be prisoners and former
prisoners. The time is: N.O.W.
Headlines like this one in the SF BayView, designating all
Sensitive Needs Yard (SNY) facilities as “snitch yards,” are not only
mis-leading the public support of the California abolitionist
population, but also an abuse of power that promotes dis-unity amongst
the prison populations. Prisoner leaderships must be wise in the manner
with which we allow for our movement to be represented by members of the
public. The most important aspect should be the information that leaders
allow to be published on the state of population affairs. It must be
accurate information, based on facts, that the leaders use when
representing the movement, or its population.
It is a fact, not all prisoners housed at SNY Facilities are snitches.
So for the headline, “…Forced Merger of Snitch Yards” to be presented by
the SF BayView does a (dis)service, to not only one of the
strongest vehicles and stages for the prison abolitionist movement, but
it hurts the movement as a whole. What, social justice and prison reform
for all but SNY prisoners?
Prisons across North America are faced with a similar issue to the SNY
facilities. Those who benefit the most from the all-too-common misnomer
that all SNY are snitches, child molesters, sexual deviants, are the law
enforcement agencies. This too includes mainstream corporate news
reporting agencies. #Fakenews. There are individuals who testified in
the event of their commitment offense all over prison, not just SNY. And
what is to be said about leaderships within prisons affiliated with drug
operations, serving poison to the community, gun violence involving
non-combative casualties of peoples, kids, grandparents, relatives? And
what about the big homies on the line affiliated with pimping, pandering
and prostitution. How many underage homegirls have we condoned being out
in the trap after curfew?
Prisoners across the United $tates in the states of TX, OH, LA, AL, NY,
PA, FL, VA, NC, and SC have begun concerted efforts to consolidate the
various factions of their prison populations, scattered across the
board, for the sake of unity. This effort is known as the National
Freedom and Justice Movement. If the leaderships, and their followings
within California prisons do not cease in their petty quarrels and
name-calling skirmishes on both sides, SNY and GP, those who have often
been at the center of the global discussions for prison reform and
abolitionism might find themselves on the wrong side of history. This is
a most sincere call for prisoners in California, whether it be former
prisoners, juvenile lifer prisoners, non-violent offender prisoners,
level 4, 180 & 270 prisoners.
See, the one thing you all have in common? You’re prisoners. There may
be some who hold strictly to the Agreement to End Hostilities while
others will develop under the United Front for Peace in Prison. Wherever
it be, get in where you fit in and carry love first of all. The movement
is larger than all of us, none is without error, thus there must always
be room for reconciliation.
I for one beg your mercy In struggle and strength
MIM(Prisons) comments: The BayView article in question was
written by someone, who, despite our disagreements on questions of
Marxism, has done a lot to advocate for people in the California
Security Housing Unit (SHU) system. The anti-SNY attitude is still the
status quo among the lumpen organizations (L.O.s) that were once the
main targets of the SHU. And some supporters of those who spent years
and decades in those torture cells parrot the disparaging attitudes
towards SNY, which peaked at almost one third of the California prison
population before the forced integration began.
We stand with the families who are concerned about the safety of their
loved ones, and who are exposing the state for using the NDPFs as
coercive tools of violence against those who don’t just go along with
the state’s program. Our approach remains one of advocating for and
supporting comrades in these NDPFs who are advocating for the principles
of the United Front for Peace in Prisons(UFPP). While the forced
integration currently serves the state, this is only true as long as
prisoners stay divided. By building the UFPP in the interests of all
imprisoned people, we can turn this tool of oppression into an
opportunity to transform decades-long divisions in the California prison
system. We have a long way to go, but some day these divisions must
fall.
The latest reports from withing the NDPFs are included below.
A California prisoner reports on integration at California
Correctional Institution: In CCI-Tehachapi level III, the prisoners
who challenge the status quo are quickly transferred out to the
so-called Non-Designated Programming Facilities (NDPF). There they will
become targets due to our SNY status. This is how CDCR has been
rehabilitating California’s enslaved population. If we don’t jump when
they tell us to jump, or crawl on our knees and hands, we are considered
program failures.
The same type of racist rehabilitation that George Jackson found in the
1960s, I found it myself in 2018 at CCI-Tehachapi. CDCR is creating
monsters, on purpose. This is why many of us come out hating society and
would rather die off than return to prison.
A prisoner in California Substance Abuse Treatment Facility reports
on 1 May 2019: Here at SATF-D facility these guys’ eyes are wired
shut. We have been receiving a flux of prisoners from Soledad and New
Folsom EOP facility. These individuals are New Afrikan and Chican@, they
come from what are known as mainline soft yards, or 50/50 yards. These
are facilities where there is very little to zero accountability to the
post-George Jackson structure of prison politicking. Where most mainline
facilities there will be paperwork checking (investigations into a
prisoner’s commitment offense by other prisoners to determine the
internal social status of prisoners on new arrival), or orchestrating
the ostracizing of a persyn who co-operated with the police in their
commitment offense. Although 50/50 facilities are considered mainline
facilities, they don’t engage in much of this sort of behavior. Now they
are being introduced to SATF-D facility, which is supposed to be a
Sensitive Needs Yard (SNY).
There have been a few fist fights, but overall the masses don’t even
care where these new arrivals are coming from. The leaderships within
the facility are already on the look out for particular type of
behavior. We ain’t tripping on an individual’s paperwork, one’s sexual
gender, or activity. Even if one transfers in and is a member of an STG,
we are not ostracizing people here. Give it enough time, most guys are
rolling it up and having admin rehouse them, rather than come with the
police tactics. One of the strongest instruments being used is the
United Front for Peace in Prisons statement, the Unity Principle.
I have persynally used the works of Larry Hoover and the “Blueprint from
Gangsters Disciple to Growth and Development” by Ron Erwin to spread the
truth to all G.D.s, and all who have been affiliated, influenced or
associated with and by our movement. From Crips of various subsets like
the Five Deuce, One-O-Seven and Seven Four Hoovers. To the Bloods of
various subsets like the Black P. Stones, Four Deuce Brims, Anthens,
these prison politiks, that are spread by gladiator wars, all have a
root. At this local level we are spreading awareness of the liberation
struggle of freedom fighters like: Leonard Peltier, Mutulu Shakur and
Red Fox Falcon, drawing connections between them and the fathers (and
mothers) of our movements.
The campaign
to get the U.$. military operations of AFRICOM out of Africa has
been popularized in recent months. The Black Alliance for Peace (BAP)
initiated a petition drive, which they extended to 4 April 2019, the
anniversary of the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Comrades
in United Struggle from Within stepped up and made a substantial
contribution to this drive from within the U.$. koncentration kamps.
To add to
the
list(1) of California, Texas, Louisiana and Georgia, USW comrades
came through with petitions from Oregon, Kentucky, Pennsylvania, and
Colorado. California and Texas also produced quite a few more
signatures. And some individuals from Maryland and West Virginia sent
their signatures in as well. A large number of our subscribers are in
long-term isolation and therefore collecting others’ signatures is very
difficult.
BAP submitted about
3500
signatures to the Congressional Black Congress chairperson and
co-chair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus.(2) With the additional
193 signatures we received since our last report we have submitted 423
signatures to the campaign. That is more than 10% of the total
signatures collected! United Struggle from Within made a significant
contribution to this campaign.
Of course, that is a small victory in the large task of ending U.$.
imperialism in Africa. An anti-imperialist message was brought to
sections of Congress, and the streets of Washington D.C., by BAP last
week. In solidarity, USW popularized the message behind the bars of U.$.
koncentration kamps. When doing campaigns like petition drives, the
interactions we have with the masses when collecting the signatures is
even more important than the interactions BAP leaders have with
Congress. Congress will not and can not end U.$. imperialism, only the
oppressed people of the world have the power to do that. And that is why
building unity among the oppressed around these issues is of utmost
importance to our mission.
The torture and abuse enacted on the oppressed nations within U.$.
borders is a product of the same system that is dropping bombs and
unleashing brutal violence in African countries from Somalia, to Libya,
to Nigeria. That is why MIM(Prisons) and United Struggle from Within are
dedicated to the anti-imperialist prison movement in the United $tates.
Without anti-imperialism, the prison movement is limited to treating the
symptoms and not the disease.
The struggle to get AFRICOM out of Africa continues. If you did not get
a campaign pack with info on AFRICOM, write us to get a copy. Discuss
what is going on in the Third World with those around you. Relate it to
the oppression felt here. Write articles for ULK. Our 423
signatures did not shut down AFRICOM, but the oppressed will shut down
AFRICOM some day.
What is a gangster? Simply a word, an idea? No Gangster is a psychology,
a mentality.
Six things, in varying degree, regardless of locale, are always present
in penal institutions: authorities (the badge), prisoners (captives),
oppression, resistance, manipulation and violence. Oppression and
manipulation are the badges’ primary tools for controlling prisons.
Captives have recourse to resistance and violence. The gangster is both
target and aspiration for the badge and captives alike; if only for
different reasons.
The badge sees gangsterism as a necessary evil. The “convict code” is
based on gangsterism. The badge uses this to great effect. For example,
misinformation offered by a “friendly” badge. There is no doubt a badge
can call any captive a snitch, or worse, and be believed. Many reason
that the badge does have access to every captive’s file. What possible
purpose could they have in lying to a gangster?
The badge’s main concern is control. Controlling prisoner populations is
most effective when the system can take advantage of pre-existing
mechanisms, such as gangsterism or convict code. In such cases
oppression seems organic, correct course of action instead of
manipulation. More often than not a gangster learns information,
suspicions emerge, questions asked, investigations follow. At the very
least a captive’s credibility is destroyed; at the extreme are
ostracization and violence. This is not only true for the badge.
Captives also manipulate gangsterism. A gangster’s word has merit, more
so than the badge’s. Here too manipulation appears organic. A gangster’s
suspicions sway other captives’ opinions so that character assassination
due to personal enmity is all too familiar. The issue is not the
manipulation but rather the lack of resistance.
Gangster is the pillar of lumpen communities. Eir honor, integrity are
above reproach. Knowing this the badge whispers in the right ears and
later watches captives eating one another like sharks in a small pond.
At present, the rules of gangsterism are at the service of the badge.
Changing the prevailing culture of captive vs. captive violence and
badge collaboration is a serious problem to be resolved in prison today.
Does this mean abandoning gangsterism? Gangsterism is tied up in all
kinds of capitalist principles: machoism, classism, patriarchy, etc.
Yet, it is based in resisting the system: noble seed of revolutions.
Understanding the forces at play is necessary for combating corrupted
gangsterism, because gangsterism can be a stepping stone to
revolutionary mentality.
Every social environment evinces a subjection-manipulation cycle:
subjection to rules, norms, expectations, and manipulation through
rewards and negative consequences. Prisons are no different, neither is
criminal intercourse. Capitalism for general society, gangsterism for
captives. To bring gangsterism back to its revolutionary core we can
turn to the democratic method – unity, criticism, unity.
Gangsterism is at the badge’s service not only because of manipulation
disseminated through gangsters but by lumpen divisions. In prison, far
more than in society, lumpen become isolationists and separatists.
Latinos with Latinos, further segregated by northern or southern
affiliations or otherwise. Identical processes follow for all other
lumpen. These divisions create barriers to communication, distrust and
steady tensions. The badge plays on STG (Security Threat Group, a
Homeland Security terrorist categorization term, also found in FBI
documents referring to Brown Berets and Black Panther Party members or
supporters) affiliations and nation prejudices as much as they do
gangsterism and with the same end in view – greater control. Unity is
the only real response. The badge is unified against us captives in
their efforts. We, on the other hand, are barely unified against each
other. First and foremost, gangsterism should be centered on opposition
and resistance to the badge. Captive vs. badge.
Gangsters must be extra critical with all information received from the
badge. Nine out of ten times the badge doesn’t tell you anything for
your benefit. Information disseminated in the service of penological
interests. Consider how many times the badge has warned you about a
major shake down or offered to hold your contraband? They are always
engaged in exercising more control. Beginning from a united oppositional
front – captives vs. badge – it becomes possible to derail the
subjection-manipulation cycle. Criticism is the second stage in this
process; one must analyze eir motive, endgame and method of
manipulation.
From unity in opposition and criticism of intelligence being gifted us
we turn to unity in response. This last stage of the democratic method
is determined on a case by case basis. Every prison is distinct in
character. Gangsterism is not corrupted everywhere in the exact same
degrees. In some facilities badge collaboration is excessive, in others
captive vs. captive violence is the commanding concern. In progressing
the struggle, captives must be able to unite against the badge. This
means moving beyond nation prejudices and STG allegiances. This
constitutes the hardest step in our struggle.
Peace: means to me and my organization that people have a right
to be ok and have sanity and wellness in their lives and experience no
harm to their persons or families, friends and so forth. I live in a
behavioral health unit @ Pinta and see much suffering and I long to see
reform and the end of senseless suffering.
Unity: I long to see the unification of all races and peoples in
a harmonious and integrated diversity of embrace and brother/sisterhood
and so forth. For too long the nations and people suffer because of bias
and division and needless persecution. It’s time to band together.
Growth: I long for a movement, which I believe MIM and USW are
that movement that will spread like wildfire and join in true revolution
and change.
Internationalism: I believe MIM/USW are a blaze waiting to happen
and proposes a better cause than any I’ve seen in recent years. I
believe it is a crown on the head of movements like NuIndian Uprising
and American Indian Movement and also International/Foreign orgs like
the mentioned. I feel that we, through this cause, can unite divided
nations.
Independence: I believe that true independence is gained through
communal occurrence. I am of Iroquoian descent and Marx and Engels
described the Iroquois gens as communist in nature. I am Seneca-Cayneya
Cherokee and Wyandotte (Wandat-Huron) and I believe once people join
together under a true system and do away with genocidal imperialism, we
will truly know freedom.
I make statement here to my pledge of unity with and to Maoist
International Ministry of Prisons, the United Front and the United
Struggle from Within.
I avow to uphold the 5 principles and contribute to cause and effect and
the true struggle of this great and rising movement.
There is more to say for myself. But, that would be vain. This is not
about me but aiding others and uniting people.
MIM(Prisons) responds: The United Front for Peace in Prisons
welcomes organizers like this comrade into the movement. The
five
principles of the UFPP underscore the basis for our unity and
organizing work.
It is true that Marx and Engels argued that traditional indigenous
hunter-gatherer communities were based on egalitarian social
relationships and common ownership. They called this primitive
communism. But they were clear that we can’t go back in time. As history
marches forward, new contradictions have developed. Class contradictions
developed throughout the world, manifesting first in slave societies,
then in feudalism, and most recently in capitalism.
We now need to overthrow capitalism in order to establish a new form of
communism around the globe. And unfortunately we can’t just get to
communism overnight. Capitalism has corrupted the thinking of many
people with a lifetime of reactionary culture and drive for individual
profit, so we will need a period of dictatorship of the proletariat
under the transitional phase to communism that we call socialism. This
dictatorship will forcibly keep the minority who support exploitation of
the majority out of power.
It will take many years to work through the period of socialism to
establish a true communist society where no group has power over any
other group. As we work to get there, we should take inspiration from
the egalitarian nature of historical humyn societies. Anyone who says
that humyns are just inherently selfish and incapable of creating a
communist system should study this history.
If we were to take the key differences as outlined by Willie Lynch such
as age, skin tone, gender, etc. and replace them with more viable,
up-to-date ones pertaining to the lumpen organization class i.e. nation,
tribe, flag color, hood, set, block, race, etc., we get a slightly
different blueprint but the exact same end results. Results that Lynch
prophesized would be self-generating for generations to come. This
blueprint was the same one implemented by J. Edgar Hoover’s FBI
COINTELPRO which saw the dismantling of our Black Power era vanguard. It
is the same blueprint later utilized by law enforcement agencies such as
L.A.’s crash unit, gang detail, gang surveillance unit and prison
guards: divide and control!
An 11 October 2018 riot at Taylor C.I. saw 15 lumpens, including myself,
from different orgs and tribes, beaten, rounded up, beaten some more and
emergency shipped to Florida State Prison’s (FSP) Control Management
Unit. Arriving here and hearing the lumpen-on-lumpen disrespect and
set-tripping on the tiers and back-windows was defiling to the sacrifice
of blood, sweat and tears that we had made. We had taken one small step
against oppression but it was only one small step in one institution.
Elsewhere, however, nothing had changed. At Taylor it was Bloods, Crips,
Folk, a Stone, a local tribesman and a civilian standing together in
solidarity, at FSP it was only business as usual.
Organizing unity at FSP is and has always been a challenge. Although it
is not impossible, it hasn’t happened much. Some of the main setbacks
spawn from accessibility to each other as well as study material due to
censorship. Group building is possible but slow as thoughts would have
to be put on paper and kited from cell to cell risking being knocked off
by C.O.s. Building on the back windows puts you in direct competition
with nihilists, agent provocateurs and otherwise anti-revolutionaries,
but it also puts you at risk of being placed on strip, written up, or
worse for “disorderly conduct” if caught. Censorship is an ongoing
problem for many revolutionary publications because it is said to be
“inflammatory” and “poses a threat to security.” I am not anti-C.O. I
believe that C.O.s have a vital role to play in keeping order in a
potentially hostile environment. I am anti-oppression. My prophecies
arise when certain C.O.s (not all) abuse their authority, overstepping
boundaries. Words written on paper do not incite. Oppressive C.O.s
incite.
Another setback is leadership. Somebody has to step forward and do what
is right. Just because it is right. If nobody starts, then nobody can
follow. As leaders it is our duty to guide the hand of young and less
experienced brothers, especially when one misstep can weaken our chance
of success as a whole. Water has always trickled down-hill so it is the
leaders who must unite in solidarity in order to educate the rest of our
tribes. Unfortunately, while we never lack those who wish to lead, we do
lack those who are qualified to lead leaving room for avarice and chaos
where none were meant to exist. Leaders have to step up and step out of
their comfort zones and their needs to be liked. If something is wrong,
it matters not how many are for it, leaders must stand against it. If a
thing is righteous, it matters not how many don’t like it, leaders must
stand firm in its righteousness. This leads to the biggest setback of
all: history.
The Lynch-like mindsets that have been indoctrinated through our
histories of tribal genocide is a hard, hot bullet to bite when trying
to establish peace with rival tribes with whom we have played live
ammunition tag. This is what makes our hatreds towards each other
perpetual, spanning generations – loved ones lost. The past is of value
only as it aids in understanding the present; and in understanding of
the facts of the problem is the first step to its solution.
Understanding, as well as communication, can go a long way.
Unfortunately, they are luxury not often experienced or allowed in our
lifestyles, making way for petty, ignorant issues that often result in
violence. We have to start somewhere. The breaking down of our walls and
barriers is tantamount to the building up of peace and unity. Even if
the peace process begins 1-on-1, 1-by-1, it is a beginning to something
bigger than us as individuals, separated, the majority of us were
created to override the oppression of our communities and our peoples.
But only together can we begin to turn that ideology into a reality.
MIM(Prisons) adds: Transfers and control units are two useful
tools of the state to prevent positive movements among the prison
population. So we should not blame the masses too much and recognize
that we need leaders to step forward as this comrade does. Each one
teach one.
While transfers are effective to stifle momentum, we must use them as an
opportunity to spread positive ideas to new people. Control units are
also effective tools of repression, and we must continue to focus on the
campaign to end this torturous practice by the United $nakes.
You can put me in the jailhouse But I’ll look at it as a
clubhouse You can give me a violent shove But in the end I’ll
rise above
You can call me an inmate But I still won’t show you hate You
can make me wear this ugly green But when my bid is done and over
I’ll burn it with kerosene
You can show me disrespect But I’ll laugh and still show you
respect You can show me your rage But I will not engage
You can violate my mail But I’ll remember I’m in jail You can
restrain me with your chain But I will stay sane
By a bit of serendipity, I recently ran across the contact info for
MIM(Prisons) and on a whim subscribed to the newsletter without fully
understanding what I was to receive. After reading ULK 66 (the
first response to my initial request) I feel inspired to offer my first
thoughts of the movement in hopes it may aid in future recruiting.
First and foremost, I tend to be distrustful of any organization,
especially those with strong viewpoints. However, this fear was greatly
abated by the statement that members need not agree with all points of
the group so long as they do not actively oppose them. I feel this is an
incredible strength of USW, and inclusion in any individual organization
is a powerful tool for recruitment. It projects confidence by saying “we
don’t have to control your views” and encourages those who are close to,
but not in, alignment with said views to sit and listen to what you have
to say.
Secondly, I was impressed by the article/response format and
self-criticisms. As an extension of the first point, it shows that USW
practices what it preaches by allowing uncensored articles to be
published, and independently it shows that no one, party leaders
included, is above reproof. In my opinion, any organization willing to
hold its members/leaders responsible for their actions is a cut above.
We are all human, and prone to human error. To pretend otherwise is a
discouragement.
My one word of criticism would be the use of jargon which made some
articles obfuscated. I’ve written this article to mirror the way I
normally speak, without regard to what my readers may understand, to
help illustrate this point. While I have no doubt many readers will
understand all my words, I’m sure there will be many who are put off by
my use of uncommon terms. The same is true of any specialized language.
While most words can be looked up in a dictionary (although lumpen still
puzzles me), I think it is best to use simple language in recruitment
material, or be sure to include a quick definition hear the beginning.
I hope these observations will prove helpful to others. May your words
match your deeds, your deeds match your values, and your values match
your beliefs.
MIM(Prisons) responds: This is a good reminder to all writers for
ULK that we should try to write in language that is accessible to
our readers. Sometimes it will be necessary to use a word like “lumpen”
because it is the only word that describes what we are talking about.
But even then we can try to define our words in context. Sometimes we
receive article submissions that are clearly written by well educated
folks, but which seem to be showing off their vocabulary, and making it
much harder to read than necessary. So we agree that writing as you
would speak is a good general guideline.
With that said, we welcome everyone to submit articles to ULK
regardless of your writing skill and political education level. We often
get letters from folks who are hesitant to submit articles until they
get more education. We suggest instead to just write about something you
know. If you see some abuses at your prison, write about that. If you
see some good organizing going on where you’re housed, write about that.
Start from what you know based on your real world observation, and add
political analysis to that as you are comfortable. We can always help
with the analysis, and we are happy to help with your writing too. But
if you write like you talk, chances are it will come across as readable
and make for a good article.
Let us know if you need a copy of our writers guide which gives you some
helpful tips on language and format and topics.
And here’s a definition of First World lumpen, the term we most commonly
use: The class of people in the First World who are excluded from the
productive process. By virtue of living in the First World this class,
on average, receives more material benefits from imperialism than the
global proletariat. As such their interests are not the same as the
exploited classes and we do not include them in the
“lumpen-proletariat.” But their conditions in many ways parallel those
of the lumpen-proletariat standing in stark contrast to the majority of
the First World populations.
The third goal of the expanded newspaper [from the ULK 64“Make
ULK Monthly” article (1)] states, “Broader distribution of
anti-imperialist information.” Furthermore, in the “who should be part
of this expansion?” section of the article MIM(Prisons) states that “we
will continue to publish articles from individuals who share our
anti-imperialist agenda though perhaps are not Maoists.”
I believe that the third goal can be achieved by practicing the above
quote. The ULK subscription rate would increase by allowing
“outsiders” to publish material within the publication (such as
anarchists). This increase in subscribers would also increase the number
of art and article submissions to ULK, as well as donations.
Let us remember that Marx agreed with Proudhon and other anarchists in
regard to the necessity for the proletariat to abolish the state. It is
only by abolishing the state that we can create a class-less society
(since the state is the manifestation of class antagonisms). The
dividing line between communists and anarchists is not the abolition of
the state, but the process in which the state should be abolished.
Because there are many similarities between communist and anarchist
ideologies both ULK and its readers would benefit greatly from
the inclusion of anarchist commentary (besides, MIM(Prisons) can always
comment on an anarchist article to correct it if necessary.)
MIM(Prisons) responds: MIM(Prisons) welcomes anarchist writers to
submit to ULK. This writer is correct that our areas of
disagreement are limited to the strategy to getting to classless
society, and we agree on our ultimate goal of society with no groups of
people having power over other groups. There is also a lot to agree on
in the struggle along the way.
The new newsletter in the works will still be a Maoist newsletter,
meaning that all writings will pass through a Maoist editorial staff
that will either edit or respond to any writings that disagree with the
basic tenets of Maoism depending on the position of the author. We do
think our readers benefit from seeing debates, and we want to focus on
debates that push our movement and our unity forward. We share this
comrade’s idea that expanding the contributors to this publication will
also expand our distribution. We invite potential contributors to get in
touch.
I strongly disagree with the exclusion of whites from the ranks of the
lumpen within the United $tates. (see the tenth paragraph of Wiawimawo’s
article
“Sakai’s
Investigation of the Lumpen in Revolution” in ULK 64)
Although most whites in the United $tates. enjoy “white privilege” there
are also whole communities of disenfranchised, impoverished whites.
These communities are heavily reliant on government support systems to
survive (i.e. food stamps, SSI, welfare, section 8 housing, etc.) They
are also rife with crime, drugs, and street gangs.
For example, take the lumpen organizations (L.O.s) from Chicago
(i.e. the Gaylords and the Simon City Royals). Both of these
organizations were started by disenfranchised, impoverished communities
consisting of mostly whites. They were originally founded to protect
their communities from outside forces.
By stating that only oppressed “minorities” can be considered lumpen,
Wiawimawo is engaging in paternalist politics that causes divisions
within the movement. The truth is that any people that fit the
political, social, and economic profile are lumpen. Disenfranchisement
is not unique, nor immune, to any nationality. In solidarity!
Wiawimawo of MIM(Prisons) responds: We are sending you a copy of
“Who is the Lumpen in the United $tates?” so you can better understand
our position on this question. First let’s look at the quote from my
article that you are responding to:
“This is why, in our work on the First World lumpen in the United
$tates, we excluded white people from the model by default. We did this
despite knowing many white lumpen individuals who are comrades and don’t
fit the model.”
Note i say that we know “many white lumpen individuals who are
comrades,” meaning we agree with you that there are white lumpen, we
just excluded them from the model presented in the paper cited. So why
did we do this? Well, it is mostly based in our assessment of the
principal contradiction in the United $tates being between the white
oppressor nation and the oppressed nations. In the paper we do write:
“White men [who are currently/formerly incarcerated lumpen] number about
1.3 million, but are much more likely to find employment and join the
labor aristocracy after release from prison. While in prison white men
do fall into the lumpen class but lack the oppressed nation outlook and
so often join white supremacist groups rather than supporting
revolutionary organizing. This is just one factor contributing to a
national outlook that leads us to exclude whites overall when discussing
the revolutionary potential of the First World lumpen.”
We also point out that historically the settler nation made up of
Europeans has always been a petty bourgeois nation, while the oppressed
nations have histories that are largely proletarian, but also
lumpen-proletarian. History affects our national and class
consciousness, so we can’t just look at a snapshot in time. But the
point of the paper was to show the size of the First World lumpen in the
oppressed nations of the United $tates and a snapshot of how their
conditions differ significantly from the white nation.
We’d say the examples you provide are exceptions that prove the rule. It
takes some digging to come up with them, but certainly they exist. And
in the context of the topic of this issue of Under Lock & Key
we can certainly agree with you that they should not be ignored.
Most often, in U.$. prisons, when we talk about white L.O.s we are
talking about white nationalist groups of some type. In our study, white
supremacist organizations that are promoting fascism in this country
today are made up of three main groups: former military, members of
lumpen organizations/prisoners, and alienated petty bourgeois youth
gathering around racist subcultures on the internet. The first two are
the more dangerous groups, though the third gives the movement more of a
feeling of a mass base of popularity. In our work it is with the second
group that we can have the most impact. And we’ve had a number of former
hardcore white supremacists become leaders within United Struggle from
Within, and many more have participated in progressive battles for
prisoner rights. It is in such alliances with the oppressed nations
around the common interests of the imprisoned lumpen that we can really
win over potential recruits who were initially drawn to fascism.
We welcome reports on examples of white lumpen organizing in the
interests of ending oppression, and further analysis of the white lumpen
as a base for progressive organizing.
This is the first article I have written for ULK. I was
especially interested in writing about the topic above because, all too
often, I have witnessed how the ‘gangster’ type are eager to dictate to
others how their mission is to bring unity, yet their actions and
attitudes are completely misplaced. For instance, if we are to fight
oppression within the prison system, how is extorting other prisoners,
assaulting others, et cetera, a means to that end?
I am not, nor would I ever become, gang-affiliated. In my opinion, if a
person joins a gang, it is because they are too weak to stand up for
themselves. Prison has become a daycare. Whites sell out whites, blacks
team up with whites and babies have babies. What the hell? I’ve met
pedophiles who are ranking gang officials, and snitches are free to roam
as they please. Nothing makes any sense anymore and, just for the
record, any gang which encourages a prisoner to extend their sentences
or which demand that parents of children perform acts which result in
them not being able to see them, that crap is no better than the lowest
of the lowly.
The things gangs in Missouri do and continue to do are stupid and their
actions bring upon us all the oppression. Gang members in Missouri,
though they continuously spout the B.S. about solidarity, unity and
integrity are, in turn, the cause and continuing justification for our
being oppressed.
Instead of fighting for our right to not be abused by ‘the system,’
Missouri gangs are the tinder with which the fire under oppression is
fueled. For every instance of stupidity by Missouri gang members, we, as
a whole, lose an integral part of the overall voice with which we need
to be able to defend ourselves from the wrongs of the system.
MIM(Prisons) responds: This author asserts that “if a person
joins a gang, it is because they are too weak to stand up for
themselves.” We ask in return: why is it wrong to seek out others to
help you defend yourself? Lumpen organizations arose, on the streets and
in prisons, in response to very real threats to the safety of oppressed
nation people. It is not realistic to think that, in the face of
institutional violence and attacks, or organized violence from other
groups of people, one should stand alone. And seeking this help and
unity is not a sign of weakness.
However, we do agree with this writer that organizations that require
their members to engage in anti-people activity, or which engage in
actions that harm the general prisoner population, are not friends of
the fight against the criminal injustice system. There are many
different types of lumpen organizations and conditions vary in different
areas. In some situations staying away from L.O.s might be the best
practice for anti-imperialists. But at this stage, to organize the
lumpen masses, we need to be building unity between lumpen organizations
where possible, not perpetuating the fighting that the prison
administration encourages. We regularly print articles in ULK
from comrades in lumpen orgs doing just this sort of building behind
bars. This is the leadership we need to highlight and learn from as most
of our readers in prison are in or have been in lumpen organizations..
As Venezuela commemorates Hugo Chavez’s socialist revolution of 20 years
ago, bourgeois reactionary elements from within, with imperialism
support, work to sabotage Venezuela’s self-determination. Another case
of u.s. imperialist aggression, and on a continent most dominated by it:
South America.
While the self-declared president of Venezuela, Juan Guaidó, has been
receiving support from the united tates, actual elected President,
Nicolas Maduro, has been the target of u.s. imperialism for some time
now. Are we truly to believe that Venezuela’s recent issues are entirely
the fault of the Maduro regime? It should not be overlooked that the
problems in Venezuela, declared in the news as a humanitarian crisis,
seem to have occurred around the same time economic/trade sanctions were
imposed.
The United States and its South American followers, through the
Organization of American States(OAS), an organization formed at the
behest of the united states over 50 years ago in order to consolidate
geo-political influence and quash revolutionary movements and
too-far-left regimes that were spreading throughout Latin America at
that time) have largely created Venezuela’s most pressing issues with
their refusals to do fair business in the form of trade and diplomatic
cooperation which has left Venezuelans lacking many necessities.
The United States and OAS have been making it very difficult for the
Maduro administration to help the people to properly live, let alone
develop. So outside looking in, to the unaware, it may seem as if Maduro
is “the bad guy” and this Guaidó character is “the good guy” and that
u.s. support for him looks righteous, even humanely necessary, to oust
this “corrupt socialist dictator” and “rescue the Venezuelan people.”
But understand that the Venezuelan situation is a product of u.s.
imperialism. The same u.s. imperialism that caused the people of Cuba to
suffer for over 50 years by the trade embargo and dictation that the OAS
cronies turn their backs on Cuba as well or suffer the same fate. This
all because Cuba fought to break the chains of neo-colonial dependency.
Helping to frame the narrative of Maduro being a “brutal dictator who
refuses to treat the Venezuelan people humanely” is the reactionary
propaganda machine: u.s. news media. Daily they broadcast images of
shipments of supplies going into, and remaining at the border of,
Colombia, where u.s. politicians and reporters give interviews in front
of the supplies they call “aid” that “Maduro refuses to allow to enter
into Venezuela.” Maduro said that he will not accept this “aid” because
it is “tainted;” he understands that this “aid” is not aid, it is
imperialist bribery of the Venezuelan people.
Now footage of deadly clashes with police at the border, along with
reports of Venezuelan police and soldiers defecting, are being shown on
a loop, further destroying Maduro’s legitimacy and portraying the united
states as “the good guys just trying to help while Maduro continues to
brutalize the people.” If you ruin peoples lives and then offer some
handouts, that doesn’t make you a hero.
This type of economic imperialism being so effective is a consequence of
the interdependency of economies (especially those of the
undeveloped/developing nations battling with neo-colonialism) due to the
globalization of capitalism and consolidation of a world market. Now an
empire like the U.S. can destabilize an entire nation’s internal
economy, causing mass chaos, without invading and plundering it. Mere
trade imbalances (unequal exchange) and economic sanctions can have the
imperialist-desired effect of social upheaval, causing the targeted
nation to look at the leadership as the cause, and welcome foreign
intervention to come and save them from a situation created by
imperialist aggression.
We can’t know for certain what the reasons for this aggression are, but
we can make informed speculation based off of historical analysis. Could
it be that Maduro has instituted too many socialist-like policies, like
nationalizing much of Venezuela’s oil production? Or because Venezuela
does too much business with Russia, China, and Cuba? Does the united
states want to own oil firms there and is upset that Maduro won’t allow
that? Past u.s imperialist endeavors point to the latter as the primary
motivation for its efforts toward regime change in Venezuela.
These efforts to destabilize and destroy a regime’s credibility and
ultimately to overthrow it is nothing new, especially in this
hemisphere. Panama, Guatemala, Nicaragua, Dominican Republic, Chile,
just to name a few of the more known and overt examples of u.s.
imperialism in the Americas. If these actions prove to be successful
then a puppet government of the united states, via Juan Guaidó, will
most certainly be the outcome. But if these current actions don’t
produce the desired effect of regime change, then, as per usual, a
military invasion seems to be next.
It doesn’t help Venezuela’s cause that no one seems willing to come out
against this aggression and show solidarity with the president elected
by the people. It is these times when we most lament the fall of the
Socialist Bloc and its global influence and support for oppressed
peoples. Cuba, only 90 miles from the united states, was only able to
withstand imperialist aggression and resist capitulation to demands
because it had socialist solidarity coming from China and the Soviet
Union. But who will support Venezuela??
It shouldn’t come down to a military invasion (as it did in Iraq and
Vietnam) to raise people’s consciousness and get them to mobilize to
demand an end to imperialist aggression. It should be called out and
reacted against now. We must articulate to the people the real forces at
play here, because they won’t learn it from the news. Support has to be
mustered to oppose these types of actions from the united states. The
unconsciousness of people in the world, and the united states in
particular, that allows these things to go unchecked, is support for
imperialism itself. As Fidel Castro put it: “to cease solidarity with
the revolutionary movement does not mean to deny a pretext but actually
to show solidarity with yankee imperialism and its policy of domination
and enslavement of the world.”
Venezuela’s cause may not be a revolutionary one, but it is a victim of
imperialism from an empire incessantly working to consolidate its
influence and turn every nation that it can benefit from into a
neo-colony, which requires us to raise this truth as a common cause
worthy of the most support. Defend Venezuela’s self-determination!
Facts: Oil revenue is about 90% of Venezuela’s revenue. The United
States is the #1 buyer of Venezuelan oil at over 400,000 barrels, per
day.
MIM(Prisons) responds: Our
recent
article on Venezuela very much agrees with this writer’s analysis.
While Venezuela was never a socialist country in the Marxist sense,
Maduro implemented many reforms in the interests of the people, and is
staunchly fighting neo-colonialism. This government represents the
national bourgeoisie and continues to operate within the capitalist
system. It is an ally of the oppressed in this fight against
imperialism. The imperialists are the real murderers and destroyers of
planet Earth that we must stand against. And we stand with the
Venezuelan people and their elected government against the U.$. coup
efforts.
Here in Colorado there has been a push for solidarity amongst prisoners,
particularly in units at Sterling Correctional Facility and Colorado
State Penitentiary. I’ve been in prison for 5 years here in Colorado and
have seen very little of this solidarity until now. Unfortunately, we
here still have a long way to go.
Staff, who fear the trend of unity, have begun to sow seeds of unrest
amongst certain groups. To do this, staff have resorted to spreading
false rumors of sexual harassment, coupled with promises of “packs” and
sexual favors for assaults on their intended targets. Staff’s goal is to
start a race war in place of the quelled tribal wars that have plagued
this state for years. Unfortunately some prisoners have bought into this
line of thinking, hook, line, and sinker.
In ULK 64 an article touched on this type of “damsel in distress”
thinking in Colorado prisons. This type of thinking is grounded solidly
in our own informal subculture that ultra aggressive, chauvinistic
behaviors promote ones own reputation for toughness and overall
appearance of being a convict. The reality is that we as convicts are
entirely in control of what standards define “toughness” and “convicts.”
While I fully agree that some recourse should be taken against those who
commit sexual crimes against children, women, and others in general, I’m
not sure that violent action is the best solution in most cases. And
taking violent action against another prisoner based upon
unsubstantiated allegations of a prison guard (who, rather than use
prison disciplinary methods, sought retribution by bribing prisoners)
seems entirely anti-convict to me.
Maybe it’s time for us as prisoners in Colorado to re-evaluate what it
is to be a convict in this state. I know in many states, prisoners who
do the pigs’ bidding, even the violent or illegal acts, would be
considered stool pigeons for the man to control them.
MIM(Prisons) responds: We’ve heard about this awakening within
Colorado prisons from a few folks behind bars, and also of
the
repression that pigs are using to try to quell that unity.(1) This
comrade raises the important point that building unity requires a
rethinking of how people interact with one another. We have to start by
defining who are our enemies and who are our friends. The C.O.s are not
our friends. As this comrade points out, their goal ultimately is to sow
division. We also can’t trust the state to tell us which prisoners are
our friends. We need to look at their actions. Even those claiming to be
revolutionaries may not be friends of the revolution if they are acting
counter to the unity of the oppressed. Re-evaluating what it is to be a
convict in Colorado is building on the budding lumpen unity in that
state.
Just writing in to say great job to everyone who participated with the
latest ULK
[ULK 64]. That
said, I also want to give my input on various articles that sparked my
interest:
In the second paragraph of this article, the author states that Sex
Offenders(S.O.s) constitute a more dangerous element than murderers
“because S.O.s often have more victims, and many of those victims become
sexual predators, creating one long line of victimization.”
As to your first point that S.O.s constitute a more dangerous element in
comparison to murderers, I think your reasoning here is purely
subjective as well as characteristic of the lumpen mindset both inside
and outside of prisons, which the criminal lumpen vies to minimize their
own parasitic and anti-people behavior. This way the lumpen can say “I
may be a thief, but at least I’m not a pedophile.” “I may be a gang
member, but at least I’m not a rapist, etc.” It is a notion that’s
caught up in all kinds of hypocritical bourgeois standards of honor,
integrity and other nonsense. It’s bourgeois moralization.
In the second paragraph the author states: “Contrarily, sexual
predators affect the entire societal composition. They perpetuate crimes
against the males and females, provoking deep burrowing psychological
problems and turn many victims into victimizers…The difference is not in
the severity of the anti-proletariat crime, but in the after effects.”
And murderers and other criminals don’t have the same or worse effects
on society? All victims of crime and violence will develop Post
Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) to varying degrees. The psychological
and emotional trauma that a victim of a robbery and the survivor of a
sexual assault suffer can be very similar. The same goes for the friends
and family of murder victims. And while it is true that some (I don’t
know about many) survivors of sexual abuse do turn into perpetrators of
those same crimes, the same can be said of victims and survivors of
other crimes, i.e. domestic violence, verbal abuse, and yes, murder!
Just look at the factors that go into perpetuating gang violence.
That said, there is one huge difference when it comes to murder, sexual
abuse, and their after effects. Whenever there is sexual abuse and
violence victims are able to move forward and heal from their physical,
emotional and psychological wounds if they receive the proper care and
attention. When someone is killed, however, there is no rectifying the
act. There is no coming back.
In the fifth paragraph you state: “…murder is more of a one-two
punch knock out, where sexual deprivation is twelve rounds of abuse…Most
murderers are not serial killers…”
According to Webster’s New World Dictionary, serial is defined as
“appearing in a series of continuous parts at regular intervals.” By
this definition, then, and in conjunction with your reasoning, many gang
members can be defined as serial killers.
In the eighth paragraph, you state that: “…rehabilitating sexual
predators can be made on an individual basis by revolutionaries who are
able to see past the label prejudice though their efforts, if conducted
scientifically, a systematic method can emerge for once the
revolutionary is successful…sex crimes will be a problem for capitalism,
socialism, or communism. Revolutionaries will have to address the
problem sooner or later.”
On this we agree, revolutionaries will have to address this problem
sooner or later so why not get past the idealist rhetoric, which you
inadvertently espouse, and begin dealing with it now by moving beyond
lumpen rationalizations on the matter. Comrades should learn to
understand that under the current power structure, all sex is rape and
that sex criminals cannot be rehabilitated only revolutionized. This
means that you cannot rehabilitate someone into a system that has gender
oppression and rape built right into it. Therefore, comrades should
learn all about gender oppression and the patriarchy and how the
patriarchy not only informs what gender oppression is, but defines it.
RE:
“Sakai
On Lumpen In Revolution”
I only wanted to comment that the ghettos and barrios are not only being
dispensed but shifted. The Antelope Valley, High Dessert and other
under-developed regions in Southern California are good examples of this
trend. Over the past 10-15 years, there has been a slow but steady
trickling out of Chican@s and New Afrikans from the wider Los Angeles
area and into places like Lancaster, Palmdale, Mojave, California City
due to gentrification.
Also, in relation to your article on Sakai’s book, what’s the status of
the MIM(Prisons) Lumpen Handbook?
In Struggle!
MIM(Prisons) responds: We published what was intended to be one
chapter of a book on the First World lumpen as
Who
is the Lumpen in the United $tates. Prior to that we put efforts
into the book
Chican@ Power
and the Struggle for Aztlán. Current research efforts are aimed at
summing up the final results of our updated survey on prison labor in
the United $tates. We will be publishing this final report along with a
larger collection of writings on the economics of prisons in the United
$tates. So that’s something to look out for in 2019.
The Lumpen Handbook was envisioned to address more topics related to
organizing the lumpen class in a revolutionary way in the United $tates
today. We have not had the capacity to carry out that project to the
scope originally envisioned, but this issue of
ULK (68) is an
example of our efforts to continue to tackle that topic.
We also have notes to develop into a Selected Works of the Maoist
Internationalist Movement (1983-2008) book; another project we would
like to see to fruition if we can garner more support for our existing
work in the coming years.
The year 2019 marks not only a new beginning, but a goal for unification
for us all. As of January 2019, Governor Jerry Brown of California steps
down, leaving $150 million of debt for the cost of death row, and more
than 740 men and women seeking clemency. As well, the state of Georgia,
which houses the largest prisoner population in segregation, looks to
include another generation to their 5,000 offenders on lockdown.
In order to understand the problem of mass incarceration, and develop a
solution, we first have to understand the facts from the myths. First,
contrary to popular beliefs, the states actually lose money on the
overall cost of prisons. States like Pennsylvania, for example, are
undergoing critical budget crises in which it costs more to house you
than it costs to send you to college. Almost $1 trillion annually is the
cost of incarceration. So if it costs so much to house us, why not just
let us go?
Second, releasing offenders from prison will not fix the debt of
operating prisons, because prisons operate on a fixed scale, which
doesn’t really change with the number of residents. It’s roughly $21,000
to house a prisoner, but the state doesn’t save that if you’re released.
Third, incarcerating individuals doesn’t reduce crime. Between 2010 and
2014 the total state prisoner population dropped 4%, with California
contributing to 62% of the total for the country. This dropped overall
crime rate by 1%. However, the now-increasing rate of incarceration has
more than doubled the crime rate.
This being known, the United States still incarcerates more people per
capita than any other country, at a cost of more than $50 billion. Yet
there has been little decline in the total amount of people incarcerated
or amount of prisons. If we hope to fix this problem, we must first
create a solution. The solution is to stop the incentive of
incarceration! Even though the states lose money with prisons, the
employees enjoy the financial gain. Many lobbyists are proposing to
close prisons, but are opening prisons? Since most debt is subsidized to
the state, the prison’s main source of revenue is us! By funding the
prisons we are keeping ourselves locked up. If we refuse to spend money
in the prison, we can expect the prison to change.
This year marks the beginning of “Greatness Nation United” (GNU). We are
the voice of the tired, the angry and defeated. I am inviting all youth
to join the Greatness Movement, where we refuse to fund the prison’s
commissary, prison packages, or any JPay service. If you can’t go
completely without commissary, then once a month spending the lowest
possible amount would impact as well. How is it possible we can
sacrifice our freedom for imprisonment but won’t sacrifice “a few store
goods” for your freedom? Change comes in numbers. I challenge all of you
to being greater than your circumstances this year. Greater than your
situation.
To everyone reading, we are greater than incarceration, only together
can we achieve.
MIM(Prisons) responds: This writer sums up some important facts
about the economics of incarceration. The facts about prison
expenditures above can be found with background information in our
article on
the
U.$ Prison Economy(1), published last year. And as this writer
explains, releasing individual prisoners doesn’t have much of an impact
on the overall cost of incarceration as long as the entire prison is
being maintained. The main cost is the prison itself and the staff
running it. And when prisoners are released the number of staff are not
generally reduced unless the entire prison is shut down.
This comrade suggests a plan for action that will impact the prison
financially. The idea of boycotting prison spending is one of the few
areas where prisoners have some potential power. To spend or not to
spend is discretionary. Of course the prisons can try to starve people
to force them to buy supplemental food for survival. But it is still an
area of power for the prisoner.
Given the $1 trillion in overall burden of prison costs, or just the
$261 billion in direct criminal injustice system expenses, how much
impact can prisoners have with a boycott? Have others found this
effective at forcing change in the past? When we organize actions
against the criminal injustice system, but it’s always good to think
critically about our potential impact as we build new and better tactics
in this battle.
While expressing full unity with MIM(Prisons), I feel compelled to also
urge those who say they are engaging in the fight against imperialism to
expand their reach. We are living within a time where the public is
realizing that prisons and other oppressive methods are doing more harm
than good. Campaigns are being launched throughout the world on behalf
of the rights of prisoners and the oppressed in general.
MIM(Prisons) encourages those struggling against imperialism to be
united no matter the group one may claim as long as it’s against
imperialism. We have a justice system that perpetuates the institution
of racism in this country through its targeting of the most marginalized
communities: people of color, women and the LGBT community. As one we
are more than they are and it’s time we realize this truth and act on it
NOW!
The public generally associates torture with physical violence; they
sometimes have a hard time accepting that there are equally brutal forms
of mental torture. It’s interesting, though. Back in the 1940s and 1950s
when stories came out about communist regimes holding prisoners in
isolation for very long periods of time, we had no problem calling that
torture.
We all have family and friends who can be our voice as well as a way and
means to destroy the system from within. If our family and friends were
employees at these prisons they would expose the ill treatment we are
receiving, and misconduct of the other prison officials. Shutting down
prisons should be a prisoner’s main focus. We must stop funding our
imprisonment by buying things from these prisons.
If the state has to pay they will soon run out of money as they are
doing in Louisiana, and now Louisiana is forced to release prisoners due
to lack of funds and the feds refuse to give them any more money.
Many may not share my views but one can not disagree that picking up the
torch after someone else or starting one’s own movement will be
rewarding. As I think about all of the movements and campaigns that have
been launched on behalf of prisoners or other oppressed people, I wonder
why these groups have not thought to get prison jobs in order to expose
the system. If they are fired or harassed because of it they can bring
suit over it. We must encourage this. ULK 51 ran an article about
a
Louisiana
correctional officer who exposed Winn Correctional Center.(1)
Changes were made and the private prison group lost its contract with
the state. So what I am suggesting works.
We must keep our minds on decarcerating our states by educating
ourselves and others of the root cause for incarceration and working
with others to create the ideal community. Create opportunities for this
place, get family, friends, and the community to participate and play
the role of developers. Its been proven over and again that when we
invest in ourselves, plan and build for ourselves, people thrive with
virtually no crime. If we are true champions of human rights and mean to
fulfill our constitutional guarantees of a more perfect union, then we
have a moral obligation to end prison slavery, overhaul our criminal
justice system and decarcerate by fighting the system from within the
system.
MIM(Prisons) responds: We want to expand on this comrade’s
comment about educating on the root cause for incarceration. This is a
critical point to understand. It’s definitely not profitable to lock up
so many people. In reality prisons in the United $tates are a tool of
social control, used mostly to keep oppressed nation lumpen in check. We
can win some critical battles against the criminal injustice system, but
we aren’t likely to end the mass incarceration until we take down
imperialism as a whole. The prison system is too tied up in U.$.
imperialist domestic policies.
This comrade brings up the interesting situation in Louisiana where
prison and state officials were threatening to release a third of the
prison population (10,000 prisoners) if the 2018 budget cuts were
implemented. Although there was a lot of news about this potential
“crisis” at the time, since then we found no follow up. Presumably the
state found the money to keep people locked up. In 2017 Louisiana
officials made similar threats, though on a smaller scale. Obviously
funding is necessary to keep prisoners locked up, but it seems that
Louisiana keeps finding enough money to keep their prison infrastructure
intact. We fully support prisoner boycotts and other financial attacks
on the system. But, as we explored in detail in ULK 60most
of the funding is already coming from the state budget so we need to
approach these battles with a clear understanding of the potential
impact.(2)
We agree with this comrade’s evaluation that people can thrive with no
crime. It is the capitalist patriarchal system that creates the current
culture of crime, and puts the biggest criminals in charge of murder,
rape and large scale theft around the world in the name of the
government. And so we would extend our moral obligation beyond ending
the criminal injustice system and to ending the imperialist system.
Finally, we want to comment on the “communist regimes holding prisoners
in isolation.” This is common anti-communist propaganda but we’re not
sure exactly what the author is talking about here. In the 1940s and 50s
over a third of the world’s people embarked on the socialist road. And
there is no doubt the Amerikan propaganda machine told lots of stories
about those countries’ evil behavior. In hindsight a lot of these
stories have been proven false.
In the case of China, the prisons were actually an example of a true
system of reeducation and rehabilitation. In fact, the entire country
undertook a reeducation campaign to remould individuals and the society
as a whole to serve the interests of the people rather than the
interests of profit. One example is shown in the book Prisoners of
Liberation by Allyn and Adele Rickett, where we see that their
conditions of confinement were different from conditions in U.$. prisons
in significant ways. They were housed with other prisoners, and not
isolated. They were provided with literature and newspapers, not cut off
from society. They were encouraged to expand their perspectives and grow
together, not to just watch TV and withdraw into themselves. And
ultimately they came out of prison praising the communist government in
China.
We are caught in a system of competitiveness, manipulation, one against
the other, brother against brother, family against family, people
against people, gangs against gangs, ethnic groups against ethnic
groups, color against color, class against class, instead of minority or
lower class against the ruling class.
We focus too much on meaningless self-imposed politics that were
manipulated into our minds growing up. Like ditch school, destroy your
own neighborhoods, sell drugs to your own people, we gang bang, we fight
our own over colors and sides only. The only way you can make it is by
rapping about killing your own people or selling drugs to your own. As a
Chicano I grew up not only hearing this from my peers but that’s also
what the music I was told to like and listen to said. The television
also told me my people are only on TV as gang bangers, drug dealers,
etc.
As I grew older I started to realize something is wrong here, where did
I go wrong? What have I done for myself? For my family? For my people?
Nothing but self-imposed distraction. I am soaking in my own blood and
that of my people. I got a hunger for knowledge. Why is it things are
the way they are?
The more I studied, the more I realized this is not new but a very old
cycle set up by a system to manipulate my mind. A system that went after
Martin L. King, a peaceful man, a pastor on his quest for civil rights.
The government unlawfully wired his phones, tried to break up his
family, tried to unlawfully disrupt his movement by all means to an end.
We’ve learned how the CIA was helping Pablo Escobar flood our streets
with drugs. How they dismantled and unlawfully disrupted the Brown
Berets and Black Panthers because they were trying to teach and uplift
the people; telling them there is a system in place to oppress you, know
and understand your rights, bear arms to protect your neighborhoods from
pig brutality. After both Brown Berets and Panthers fell our children
were open to assault by this system, poor schools, no jobs, drugs. Then
record labels signed groups who furthered the system’s wishes singing
and rapping, “kill your own,” “sell drugs,” “it’s cool to go to prison.”
Regardless of tribe, set, race, if you are classified as Security Threat
Group (STG) you are on the same boat as me. STG is a Homeland Security
term for a domestic terrorist. First rule in war, identify your enemy.
We have been identified and classified as enemies of the state. What
else is there to be said? Are we to continue letting our self-imposed
politics disrupt reality? Such insignificant things and views like
colors and sides or race hinder our lives? They can stop one arrow not a
hundred. There’s nothing wrong with being part of groups, families, etc.
But it is wrong when those groups lose focus of the message and cause.
It is not okay to soak in the blood of your own people, period.
Learn from our oppressor, they are some cold operators, they understand
the power of knowledge and education. The ruling class in the United
States is composed of men and their families who use ivy league
universities and elite law schools as private schools for their
offspring and as training grounds for their corporate livelihoods. They
rule us with iron precision through the military, the CIA, the FBI,
private foundations and financial institutions. Their control of all the
media of education and communication comprises an extremely effective
system of thought control.
We must learn from someone who defeated this system. Ho Chi Minh
understood the power of education. His mandated policy for his warriors
and cadres was spot on. Fighting and violence is easy. You must have
balance. You must be able to read and write, be able to teach others and
most importantly fully understand and be educated in your political
paradigm and why you are fighting.
Chicanos in Colorado are currently in a struggle for our true history.
We hunger for knowledge because that knowledge has ended all violence
between tribes, shown us our common interests, not the blind mentality
of colors and sides. We are currently under assault by Colorado
Department of Corrections, not allowing us to receive our real
education, stopping all education or history on the concept of Aztlán,
Chicano unity, Mexica movement, claiming it’s STG. Since when is history
and education a crime? Well for us, always.
If there is to be a movement, then there must be leaders. Those leaders
must be judged by their ability to give not take. Leadership must convey
confidence, not egotism, one who sacrifices, not one who is an
opportunist. Leadership is the act of using power to free people, not to
control them. It is not the strongest of the species that survive, nor
the most intelligent, but the one most responsive to change.
MIM(Prisons) responds: The destruction of the Black Panther
Party, the flooding of cities with drugs, and the rejection of
literature on Chican@ history in prison are all manifestations of the
same system. This system seeks to peacefully control oppressed nations
by keeping them from learning about the history of this oppression and
the many examples of resistance. And when that fails it locks up the
oppressed, or even targets activists for death.
What can we do about this system with so much more power and resources
than we have as activists and anti-imperialists? The truth is our side
has more power; we have 80% of the world’s population, which is
exploited and oppressed by imperialism, on our side. The imperialists
are paper tigers, that appear fearsome, but in reality are propped up on
a fairly fragile structure of power.
That said, dismantling that structure will take a lot of organization,
trial and error. As this comrade points out, we need to focus on
education and fight to get true history into the hands of the oppressed.
And then we need leaders to step up and organize and educate others.
There is no special qualification for this leadership. Anyone who sees
the problems in the world around them can take up organizing others to
fight back. United Struggle from Within is an organization for these
leaders, and MIM(Prisons) supports USW organizers with literature and
resources. Get in touch today to get started with a local study group or
campaign against repression in your prison or elsewhere in the world.
Toda la materia está en movimiento y con ese movimiento continuaremos
encontrando nuevas formas de aplicar la respuesta adecuada a nuevas
ideas, y por supuesto nuevas acciones crearán nuevas reacciones. Cada
uno de nosotros tiene que encontrar la fuerza y la oportunidad dentro de
cualquier área de nuestras vidas. En este desarrollo tenemos más
capacidad de ayudar a otros en los mismos problemas. La nación del
Chican@ de hoy está en una encrucijada. La población de la Raza está
creciendo más rápidamente que cualquier otra. En un par de décadas
seremos la población más grande de los Estados Unidos. Tenemos que
entender que cualquier cambio que experimentemos genera oportunidades.
En otras palabras, eventos externos con frecuencia ocurren como medios
para facilitar los cambios internos y la consciencia. Una vez que la
conexión interna es captada, toda creencia teórica en la necesidad
permanente de las condiciones existentes se rompe antes del colapso en
la práctica.
Creo que en la independencia de cada nación hay una unidad que ayudará a
movilizar las grandes masas, entonces comenzamos a entender la
importancia de ventanas de oportunidad. El poder chicano no es
simplemente estar a cargo. No queremos imitar al capitalismo, pero
simplemente ejercer un poder económico y sociopolítico, donde las
relaciones sociales de producción reemplacen al capitalismo. Sin la
influencia del imperialismo, sabemos que el imperialismo define crímenes
y empuja a las naciones oprimidas a cometer crímenes. Sabiendo que la
mayoría de las minorías no tienen nada que perder, y están bien armadas,
cuando se revolucionan pueden servir como los peleadores más feroces.
No fuimos creados por las mismas fuerzas sociales y materiales que
gobiernan la vida Mexicana, pero por la aventura imperialista de la
incorporación de las Américas. Nuestra existencia por lo tanto, no está
definida por el realismo de las fronteras, sino por las fuerzas sociales
y materiales que han influenciado la manera en que nos desarrollamos
desde antes y después de su imposición. Aztlán representa la tierra que
fue invadida, ocupada y robada del pueblo mexicano. El suroeste es casa
de muchos Chican@s, y naciones indígenas no mexicanas, cada una con
derechos universales de gobernarse a sí mismas y existir como un pueblo
autónomo y soberano. Así, la era del imperialismo es la era de la Nueva
Democracia donde la mayor pelea democrática debe ser librada y liderada
por las masas de las clases populares en una unidad donde la meta
principal es la liberación nacional.
Este mes de Agosto conmemoramos el Plan de San Diego, que fue un plan
para la Nueva Democracia por las semi-colonias internas que ocuparon la
Isla Tortuga. Es tiempo de estudiar la historia Chican@ y aplicar el
internacionalismo. Escribe a Movimiento Internaionalista Maoista de
Prisiones para folletos informativos de las campañas y enviar su propio
ensayo y arte.