Gov. Cuomo: Prisons are NOT jobs!

Andrew Cuomo

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New York Governor Andrew Cuomo makes a groundbreaking remark that Prisons are Not Jobs.  Read more, as he attempts to reconcile the issue of the upstate NY economy being fueled by prison guards.  See also the campaign “Milk Not Jails” which recognizes that revitalizing the dairy industry is a better way than maintaining human cages.

From Cuomo’s Inaugural Address:

“When we think about our current juvenile justice facilities, I believe there are echoes of what we dealt with in Willowbrook. You have juvenile justice facilities today where we have young people who are incarcerated in these state programs who are receiving help assistance program treatment that has already been proven to be ineffective; Recidivism rate in the 90 percentile. The cost to the taxpayer is exorbitant.

For one child over $200,000 per year. The reason we continue to keep these children in these programs that aren’t serving them but are bilking the taxpayers is that we don’t want to lose the state jobs that we would lose if we closed the facilities. I understand, I understand, the importance of keeping jobs. I understand the importance of keeping jobs especially in upstate New York. I also understand that that does not justify the burden on the taxpayer and the violation of civil rights of the young person who is in a program that they don’t need where they’re not being treated hundreds of miles from their home just to save state jobs. An incarceration program is not an employment program. If people need jobs, let’s get people jobs. Don’t put other people in prison to give some people jobs. Don’t put other people in juvenile justice facilities to give some people jobs. That’s not what this state is all about and that has to end this session.”

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January 28th DC Mobilization for Political Prisoners

Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr Cornerstone Mem...

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(In Memory of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.)

THE SHAME AND AGONY OF

AMERICA’S DISAPPEARED

This very important mobilization for justice will begin with jumu’ah (the Muslim Friday prayer service) shortly after 12 noon, at the historic New York Avenue Presbyterian Church, located at 1313 New York Avenue NW, in downtown Washington, DC.  The title of the khutbah (sermon) will be highly relevant for the occasion.

Jumu’ah will be followed by a short organizing/logistical meeting (and refreshments). Between 2:00 – 2:30 we will march in unison from the church to the “Justice Department” for the rally – about a 20 to 30 minute walk at a moderate pace.

Insha’Allah (God willing), we expect a significant number of Muslim families who have been forced to suffer the brutal dispossession of a loved one (i.e. a husband, a father, a brother, a sister, a son, a daughter) – in the name of a “War on Terrorism” – to be present to speak of their loss.

 

We will also hear from a number of grassroots activists (Muslim and non-Muslim) who have been on the frontline trying to PUSH BACK against this unconstitutional madness.

 

This will be the first major demonstration at the “U.S. Department of Justice” for the purpose of focusing long overdue attention on the “preemptive prosecution” of Muslims; the “entrapment” of Muslims; the long-term imprisonment of Muslims under torturous conditions; and the brutal disruption of Muslim families and communities.

 

This human rights mobilization will come after the ERADICATING ISLAMOPHOBIA Conference at  the [Atlanta] Georgia International Convention Center on January 14-15; and it will come one day before theCitizens’ Hearing scheduled for the Dr. Martin Luther King Memorial Library (Washington, DC) on Saturday, January 29th.

 

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For additional information on the Friday, January 28, 2011, Mobilization; or if you would like to endorse, co-sponsor and/or volunteer: (301) 220-0133 or (202) 246-9608; or via E-mail: peacethrujustice@aol.com

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‘A DRONE OVER THE SKIES OF MADINAH …’
(The Final Crusade)

Ask yourself: if the Prophet was with us today,
If he spoke the same words and lived the same way,
If he returned with the same message to relay,
How long would the forces of the world let him stay?

Back then, he taught humankind to: ‘Bow down to none,
No idol, no tyrant, no oppressive nation,
Keep your heart and mind free from their domination,
True power is with God, so don’t fear anyone!’

Quraysh let him be so long as he was benign,
And to his message, they thought that few would incline,
But when he preached openly, would not bend his spine,
The state turned against him, for he had crossed the line;

At first, they rushed to him seeking some compromise,
They’d give him the mic if he just ceased to chastise,
The ills around him they feared he would neutralize,
But he would not clothe his words in any disguise;

And he persisted in making more minds aware,
Of society’s false gods of which to beware,
Of the tyrants of Earth, so the state could not bear,
And his “freedom of speech” vanished into thin air;

Choking him as he prayed, they tried suffocation,
Then imposed three years of economic sanction,
Signed off authorizing his assassination,
He was hunted in his land, forced to migration;

To track down this “radical”, the vast land they’d comb,
Abu Jahl led the pack, his mouth frothing with foam,
Put him on a ‘Wanted’ list in his own home,
Like Jesus Christ before him at the hands of Rome;

And the Romes of today at whose hands we’re abused,
Who preach to us values from which they’re self-excused,
How similar the tools of repression they used,
The tyrants of past and present are ever fused;

Today, he’d see us consumed by the same fires,
With the gods in our hearts these worldly desires,
And the gods of the Earth nations and empires,
Headed by killers and professional liars;

He laid siege to Qaynuqa’ for one woman’s fear,
So what would he say to those who gang-raped ‘Abeer?
Muffled ‘Aafia’s screams as she shed tear after tear?
And occupy Muslim countries year after year?

He’d come back to remind us to: ‘Bow down to none,
No idol, no tyrant, no oppressive nation,
Keep your heart and mind free from their domination,
True power is with God, so don’t fear anyone!’

In a repeat of that reality uncouth,
Imagine he stood and struggled for the same truth,
And had the same impact on society’s youth,
Would they not once again fight this man nail & tooth?

Of course, they’d first test him to see what he’s about,
Would he stay true like before, or would he sell out?
Would fear of the state instill in his mind some doubt?
No doubt, he’d be a mountain shaking off their clout;

In an era where his inheritors deprave,
The trust of their knowledge so their skins they would save,
He’d be and inspiration for every field slave,
Craving an example of the fearless and brave;

Their think-tanks would scramble to counter his appeal,
Find scholars for dollars with whom to make a deal,
To persuade us: ‘The Prophet is just full of zeal,
Grieving injustices – quote – “perceived” and not real!’

They’d wiretap him as he said: ‘Bow down to none,
No idol, no tyrant, no oppressive nation,
Keep your heart and mind free from their domination,
True power is with God, so don’t fear anyone!’

Then they’d name him on a federal indictment,
American court would charge him with incitement,
Through Surat at-Tawbah – marked ‘Criminal Statement’
Khalid bin al-Walid as his co-defendant;

They’d say he conspired from the North to South Pole,
And seek a life sentence with no chance of parole,
In a bright orange suit on lockdown in the Hole,
Such do they treat those spirits they cannot control;

Like the rest of us who have committed no crime,
But to be a proud Muslim at this point in time,
As the war on his message has reached its full prime,
Giving those who live by it more mountains to climb;

When they saw that in this message he would persist,
They would designate him a global terrorist,
And just like Quraysh, they would pound an angry fist,
Before placing his name on their own target list;

Over the skies of Madinah, they’d send a drone,
Distribute ‘Wanted’ posters with his bearded face shown,
Talk to local tribes, make the reward money known,
For those who capture or kill him and retrieve each bone;

They’d study Badr and Uhud, learn his strategy,
And profile those who pledged to him under the Tree,
Try to identify his ‘Number Two’ and ‘Three,’
Is it Abu Bakr, ‘Umar, ‘Uthman, or ‘Ali?

To the Prophet’s Mosque, they’d send an entire brigade,
To round up the Ansar who had given him aid,
To kick down his family’s door in a night raid,
To make him the target of their final crusade;

Because his message would still be: ‘Bow down to none,
No idol, no tyrant, no oppressive nation,
Keep your heart and mind free from their domination,
True power is with God, so don’t fear anyone!’

Imagine if the Prophet was with us today,
If he spoke the same words and lived the same way,
If he returned with the same message to relay,
They’d reserve him a cell at Guantanamo Bay …

Tarek Mehanna

Monday  9th of Dhu al-Hijjah 1431/
15th of November 2010

Plymouth Correctional Facility, America
Isolation Unit – Cell #108

FOOTNOTES:

1.) Abeer Qasim al-Janabi, a 14-yr old Iraqi girl who was gang-raped, beaten, shot, and burned along with her parents and siblings by American soldiers in March of 2006, south of Baghdad. (May Allah have Mercy on them)
2.) Referring to the hadith: “The scholars are the inheritors of the Prophets.”
3.) Referring to the Pledge of Ridwan given under a tree on the day of Hudaybiyah, as mentioned in Surat al-Fath, v.18.


www.freeshifa.com
www.youtube.com/user/FreeShifa
www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=62107787609&ref=mf
www.ipetitions.com/petition/FreeShifa
www.lettersforshifa.wordpress.com
www.flickr.com/photos/freeshifa

 

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Solidarity With Lucasville Uprising Hunger Strikers!

Dear family, friends and supporters of the Lucasville uprising prisoners,

>
> I am not aware of all of the factors that went into their decisions, but I
> have been informed that rather than waiting as previously planned, Saddique Abdullah Hasan and Jason Robb have joined the hunger strike. I received a letter from Hasan
> today stating that the warden and deputy warden of OSP were questioning him
> about his plans to go on the hunger strike based on information they had
> gleaned from the internet, and that may have influenced their decisions. I
> think the tremendous outpouring of support from all corners of the globe and
> all across this country has strengthened their resolve. There has also been
> phenomenal media interest with an op-ed piece by Denis O’Hearn in the
> Youngstown Vindicator, interviews of Staughton Lynd by Amy Goodman of
> Democracy Now and by KPFA, and an interview of Denis O’Hearn by WBAI. Both
> Denis and Staughton are frequent visitors of the prisoners. Denis wrote the
> biography of Irish hunger striker Bobby Sands entitled, “Nothing But an
> Unfinished Song.” Staughton wrote the definitive book on the 1993 rebellion
> entitled, “Lucasville: The Untold Story of a Prison Uprising.” He and his
> wife Alice were the attorneys in a class action lawsuit against OSP.
>
> Please keep putting the word out about the rally at the entrance gates to
> OSP in Youngstown at 1:00 on Saturday, Jan.15, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s
> birthday. We are trying to coordinate car pools and a car caravan from
> Cleveland. The 7-person van is filling up fast. We need other people with
> cars who know they are going to this rally and who have space in their car
> to contact us because lots of people need rides.

Contact
lucasvillefreedom@gmail.com or call 216-571-2518. Send the attached flyer
> around to everyone you think might be interested and print it out and post
> it in coffee shops, barber shops, laudromats, libraries, supermarkets, you
> name it. Buy poster board and markers and start making signs. If we have
> enough signs and banners, the prisoners will be able to see us from their
> windows and they will be so thrilled. Carloads of supporters are planning
> to drive in from other states. Let’s show them what Ohio activists can do!
> Let’s mobilize and make it big!
>
> Sharon Danann
> for the Lucasville Uprising Freedom Network
>

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Formerly Incarcerated Man Tries to Reach Back and Help…

A special guest posting from writer and activist Jorge Antonio Renaud, in Austin, TX:

“Why should we let you in?”

I’m at a Sonic Drive-In, speaking with a woman charged with educational/recreational programming for the Del Valle Correctional Complex, a fancy name for a county jail in Austin, Texas.  A guy who recently began venturing into the jail to teach creative writing has asked me to help.  But I have to be vetted, scrutinized by the gatekeepers worried that my status as a former convict will be, I don’t know, upsetting or something to the prisoners with twiddling thumbs and atrophying brains sitting in the county jail.  The fact that I empathize with them, and they with me, and that I may actually present a positive alternative seems to be irrelevant to the administration’s search for motive – why in the hell does this guy want to come back?

I walked Texas prisons for 27 years, published dozens of poems, essays, editorials and a serious non-fiction book while incarcerated.  I’m now a graduate student at the University Of Texas School of Social Work.  I think I may be what the creative writing program needs to reach a hardhead or two, to maybe inculcate in them the idea that there are paths other than those they are on, outcomes other than halfway houses, the streets, or hanging with those homies with hits in their hands and despair in their eyes.

I’m not aching to go back into a jail or prison, to hear the gates closing again, the keys jangling on the hips of the guards mouthing their contempt for any “hug-a-thug” programs instilling respect instead of self-hate.  I know, however, that my return is necessary, and not just to sate that gnawing sense of ”gotta do something” in my gut, but because  nobody appreciates an ex-con walking the halls like another convict.   They know it’s all too easy to just move on, to cleanse the memories of blood and steel and wire and to let go, and they probably expect that.  They wouldn’t think less of me for not putting myself through this inquisition.  But I would.  And to excons, self-image is crucial.  It’s not how others see you, because most will always hold you in suspicion, if not outright contempt.  It’s how you see yourself that keeps you straight.

So here I am, with a woman who didn’t invite me to a restaurant or coffee house, but to a rinky-dink outside patio of a cheap burger joint, the waitstaff clackety clacking around on their skates wondering why we’re not in our cars instead of in the brisk breeze of a Texas December.  She doesn’t beat around the bush, asking me before I can order my fries why they should let me in.

I tell her that they don’t have to invite me in; that it’s not important that Jorge Antonio Renaud get into a prison, but that it’s crucial that an excon be allowed back under the wire.  I tell her it’s essential that the men and women in her jail need to believe – down in the cellular structure where the mystical processes of will and belief are born and nurtured – that there is indeed hope for them, for their lives and for their future.  I tell her that it doesn’t make a difference how many teachers and social workers and counselors tell them those same things, not if they haven’t been to prison and then seen the dismissive judgment that immediately appears in the eyes of employers and apartment managers and realtors, all those well-situated, properly dressed and educated gate-keepers of the American dream assigned to keep us out.

You see, in our case, it’s not “been there, done that,” but “left there, had that done to me.” People can hand us pamphlets and give us directions and offer up advice, but if none of those people have actually stood before that judge, awash in guilt and drowning in that socially mandated shame and then found the wherewithal, determination and straight-up guts to make a go of it after release: well, many of us may not believe it can be done.

As we talk, I see her attitude shift somewhat.  She’s maybe not used to well-dressed excons speaking in coherent sentences of polysyllabic words.  I tell her that’s part of the problem: lots of us look and speak that way, but the image of the shaven-headed, tattooed, inarticulate brute dominates, and images color the perceptions, and the expectations, of free Americans.  It’s too complicated and time-consuming, and requires too much actual thought, to parse individual complexities, so we accept the media’s easily understood stereotypes, which stand in for the group.

All cons are addicts.  All cons will misuse your trust.  No cons can be trusted around children.  All excons will eventually return to a criminal lifestyle and then to prison.

Since those stereotypes inform the curriculum of all training taught to volunteers entering any American prison, is it any wonder convicts don’t believe much of what those volunteers say, even if the message is positive and affirming?  I’m not saying the convicts should feel this way: I’m saying almost every message that reaches their ears is negative, pessimistic and overtly disbelieving of their abilities and their possibilities.  Teachers who passionately speak of inclusion and of the dignity inherent in all humans while visibly recoiling from shaking a convict’s hand don’t do much to overcome those messages.

But a message presented by one of their own, of responsibilities accepted; of dignity demanded; of failures mitigated by small successes: those messages resonate with convicts because they don’t preach; they testify.  And testimony driven by the backbeat of a fresh poem is like no other, especially if all involved are writing and reading their own testimony, redefining themselves in images contrary to the dreary pictures they’ve always been limited to.

I don’t know if Del Valle administration will allow me into the prison.  The woman said she’d recommend me, but nothing has happened yet.  I’ll keep trying, because there’s a parallel to something the Narcotics Anonymous literature says, about the incomparable value of one addict helping another – there is nothing so redemptive, so mutually beneficial to convicts as the voice and help of another convict.

Jorge Antonio Renaud is an award winning writer with the Pen American Center, and a “Prison Issues” writing resident of Blue Mountain Center.  He is a member of the Texas After Violence Project, and his book, Behind the Walls: A Guide for Families and Friends of Texas Prison Inmates, is available everywhere.

 

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Will Virginia Restore Voting Rights to 300,000 People?

Check this out from the Washington Post. It appears that the GOP Governor Robert McDonnell is not so concerned about a formerly incarcerated voting bloc that will throw him by the wayside. He is granting most all individual restoration applications as that arrive on his desk, but at what point do they simply change the law??

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Obama Weighs In on Michael Vick

 

 

 

 

 

One way for a formerly incarcerated Black man in America to be dinner table talk at the White House is to be in the running for NFL MVP.  Most Black men who are released from prison, whether after 18 months or 18 years, face layers of disadvantage and discrimination and for every 100 job applications they put in, only 4 will even get an interview.  But then there is Michael Vick.

In the middle of a career which seemed to be tailing away from superstardom, Vick got caught in the middle of a dog-fighting gambling fiasco.  Dogs were killed.  The entire episode turned into a target for animal lovers, but a hint of hypocrisy lurked across a broad public mainstream who also take their children to the zoo and eat meat, seemingly ignorant as to the treatment of those animals.  Vick didn’t seek to excuse or justify his behavior.  He pled guilty and threw away tens of millions of dollars per year… and became Public Enemy #1 (sorry Chuck D).

Vick went to Leavenworth prison, the former Federal Maximum Security (now a Medium) which housed many of the most notorious gangsters in history, including a few Rhode Island ‘Good Fellas’ who told me a story or two.  It was the long-time prison for Leonard Peltier (now in Lewisburg USP), the controversial political prisoner likely framed-up during the FBI’s COINTELPRO operations to destroy the American Indian Movement and other civil rights advances in America.  Peltier is widely considered a highly spiritual man, and a born leader.  If Vick overlapped with Peltier and were able to walk the yard together, one can only imagine the wisdom that can pass between two exiles.

Vick was possibly also incarcerated with Michael “Second To” Nunn, the former Middleweight world champion and 1988 KO magazine “Fighter of the Year.”  Nunn (now in Bastrop, TX, a Minimum Security) received a classic Drug War sentence for paying an FBI agent for a kilo of cocaine.  While Vick was being drafted into the League, Nunn was on his way to a 24 year sentence.  In the Feds, that means 20 years and 8 months to serve.  The rationale for the sentence was Nunn’s steady but petty criminal history, which never landed him in prison.  Now our society has dedicated about $1 million to punish Michael Nunn.  At any rate, Vick could have found a trainer in Nunn on par with Apollo Creed in Rocky III.

Why bring up Peltier and Nunn, or reference other prisoners during Vick’s prison time?  Because people, including Obama, bring up the topic of Vick “turning his life around,” his “rehabilitation,” and the like.  According to Eagles owner Jeff Lurie, “[Obama] said, ‘So many people who serve time never get a fair second chance.  He was … passionate about it.  He said it’s never a level playing field for prisoners when they get out of jail. And he was happy that we did something on such a national stage that showed our faith in giving someone a second chance after such a major downfall.”

Fortunately, most people have never served time in prison.  Unfortunately, most (if not all) public commentary on Michael Vick is coming from folks who never served time in prison.  They have little conception about how the man could have developed his new “maturity.”  As someone who has been there, done that… a lot happens while staring at a concrete wall, reading books in silence, writing letters to loved ones, and walking the yard with a guy for hours and weeks and months.

I must admit that when Michael Vick returned last year, I thought he could be an All-Pro wide receiver, perhaps a talented cornerback.  I just couldn’t imagine taking a few years off from calling plays.  Vick’s speed and toughness masked the fact that he was an impatient QB, never checking down to the third, fourth, and fifth options.  Unlike a Drew Bledsoe, who would be sacked, Vick would hit the turbo and take off.  That style has never proven to deliver NFL championships, with famous “runners” Randall Cunningham and Steve Young honing their arms and minds before finding success.

Having given up on McNabb, the City of Brotherly Love had a young gunslinger, Kevin Kolb, who reminds me of Drew Brees.  If not for Kolb’s injury, would we be singing the Michael Vick song?  If Vick were having a decent year for the abysmal Carolina Panthers, in a small television market, would we Obama’s daughters ask their dad what he thinks about the resurgent QB?  Tonight against the Vikings…Michael Vick, two years removed from a prison cell, is poised to set career highs in touchdowns, and has far exceeded himself in completion percentage and QB rating.  The Eagles, with a win, will have a chance at the #2 seed in the NFC, and possibly need to go through Atlanta (Vick’s former team) to get in the Super Bowl.  Talk about storybook.

But what of the deeper societal questions?  Do we as a general public feel, like President Obama says, “think that individuals who have paid for their crimes should have an opportunity to contribute to society again.”?  My experience in advocating for the restoration of felons’ voting rights tells me “yes,” when they get a first hand opportunity to   People from all walks of life still believe in this concept.  We knocked on doors, we did presentations, and we won the votes- overwhelmingly, where we focused our efforts.

Now as many statewide advocates turn to job discrimination, will Michael Vick or President Obama weigh in?  That little “box” for applicants to check, when they have been convicted of felonies, are commonplace on entry level job applications and the leading cause of applications hitting the trash before getting an interview.  “Ban the Box” has passed in dozens of cities dealing with the front-line issue of employing the formerly incarcerated.  Minnesota set a new standard two years ago, followed by New Mexico, New York, Massachusetts, and Connecticut in passing legislation to give applicants a chance to explain themselves at the interview.

I’ve been part of advocating Ban the Box in Rhode Island.  Representative Scott Slater proposed the first bill last year, and is set to go back at it in a few weeks time.  When speaking with people, be they church folk, law enforcement, or business people, most ascribe to the concept that “you’ve done the time, you paid for your crime.”  And those with experiences, tend to recall that the formerly incarcerated were the “hardest working” they’ve had, and “appreciated the job.”  Eagles Coach Andy Reid might say the same of Vick.

Michael Vick left prison in Bankruptcy.  Expensive things, including taking care of family members, require maintenance money.  Lawyers and the Tax Man have a way of eating up funds quite quickly.  He needed the NFL paycheck to get out of the hole.  President Obama, by all accounts, never took a step back in his life.  It shows good choices, but also reflects on growing up with privilege rather than the ‘hood.  Sometimes one’s friends and family mean well, but get stuck in not doing well.  The tragedy of young Vick is that there were not strong men in his crew saying, “Listen man, you gotta get outta here.  This is for people who ain’t got nothin’ else.”

It remains to be seen if Michael Vick can be part of helping prisoners, or other formerly incarcerated people assert their civil rights and reclaim their dignity.  A national group of such people are convening in Alabama, February 23rd – 26th, and will be seeking funds to do so.  Meanwhile, is Obama paying lip service to an issue affecting his sport-loving conscience… or will he provide a respite to 30 years of Incarceration Nation?  Michael Vick can’t even vote for Obama in his home state of Virginia, until he gets an executive pardon in another.  Does Obama know that?  And will he support the Democracy Restoration Act to intervene?

Reagan and Bush were clear about their policies, and colluded with nefarious conservatives to clearly lie and manufacture myths regarding crack cocaine.  Clinton played both sides, with lip service to civil liberties and the plight of poor folks, while overseeing the total immersion into the Prison Industrial Complex.  Bush, who executed more people than any Governor in history, apparently realized that people can not only make money off prisons, but also on the “rehabilitation” of former prisoners.  His Second Chance Act did a lot of good, but it is legitimate to question the motives.

Obama has reduced the Crack/Cocaine disparity from 100-1 to 19-1, but in these tough economic times it is clear that they aren’t tough on prisons and police.  Will he mold the Drug War into a “harm reduction” model, or remain behind the times?  Perhaps the gleam of a Michael Vick Super Bowl ring will hypnotize the President, while Vick quarterbacks a team of policy analysts and advocates into the Oval Office.

With all that said… Go Steelers!  Our own QB seems to be on a similar trajectory following his own legal turmoil and punishment.  The NFL in 2010 is the Year of Redemption.  The lesson is we all want to get it together; we all want to get it right.  But sometimes we need somebody to give us a chance to do just that.

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Ohio Prisoners to Begin Hunger Strike!

 

Siddique Abdullah Hasan, Bomani Shakur (Keith LaMar), Jason Robb and Namir Mateen (James Were) will start a hunger strike on Monday Jan. 3 to protest their 23-hour a day lock down for nearly 18 years.  These four death-sentenced prisoners have been single-celled (in solitary) in conditions of confinement significantly more severe than the conditions experienced by the approximately 125 other death-sentenced prisoners at the supermax prison, Ohio State Penitentiary in Youngstown.  They are completely isolated from any direct human contact, even during “recreation”. They are restricted from certain kinds of good ordering including gold weather items for the almost unbearably cold condtions in the cells.  They are denied access to computer databases they need in order to prepare their appeals.  It has been made clear to them that the outcome of their annual “security level reviews” is pretermined, as one reads, “…regardless of your behavior while confined at OSP.”  Prisoners whose death sentences were for heinous crimes are able to win privileges based on good behavior, but not the death-sentenced Lucasville Uprising prisoners.
Meanwhile out in the world, the U.S. Supreme Court has granted additional due process rights to some of the Gauantanamo prisoners, some death-sentenced prisoners have been exonerated or had their sentences commuted, an evidentiary hearing was ordered for Troy Anthony Davis, and prisoners in Georgia are engaging in a non-violent strike for improvements in a wide range of conditions.  So the four death-sentenced Lucasville uprising prinsoners have decided that being punished by the worst conditions allowable under the law has gone far enough, especially since their convictions were based on perjured testimony.  They are innocent!  They were wrongfully convicted!  They are political prisoners.  This farce has gone on far too long and their executions loom in the not too distant future.  These brave men are ready to take another stand.  We ask that you get ready to support them.
The hunger strike will proceed in an organized manner, with one prisoner, probably Bomani Shakur starting on Jan.3.  The hunger strike becomes official after he has refused 9 meals.  Therefore the plan is that 3 days later, Siddiquie Abdullah Hasan will start his hunger strike and 3 days later, Jason Robb will follow.  Namir Mateen has a great willingness to participate and plans to take part to the extent that his diabetes will allow.
On the birthday of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., Saturday, Jan. 15, we will be holding a press conference about the hunger strike and other issues pertaining to Ohio State Penitentiary.  Details of time and location are being worked out.  There will very likely be a brief rally near the gates of OSP, as we have in previous years to honor Dr. King, to protest the death penalty and to protest the farce of the Lucasville uprising convictions.  There will probably be one or more vans and/or a car caravan to OSP for the event.  Stay tuned for more information.

 

 

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God Speaketh: “Thou Shalt Legalize It!”

The 700 Club

Image via Wikipedia

The 700 Club, a Christian talk show program hosted by staunch conservative Pat Robertson, is not the place you’d expect to find sympathy for the marijuana-legalization movement. But that’s exactly what happened this week when Robertson started talking about the need for more faith-based prison rehabilitation.

“I’m not exactly for the use of drugs, don’t get me wrong, but I just believe that criminalizing marijuana, criminalizing the possession of a few ounces of pot, that kinda thing it’s just, it’s costing us a fortune and it’s ruining young people,” Robertson said. “Young people go into prisons, they go in as youths and come out as hardened criminals. That’s not a good thing.”

Robertson’s position is not as unusual as you might think. Support for legalizing marijuana has been growing amongst conservatives, who cite legalization as an answer to the “narcoterroism” in Mexico and the overburdened jail system. In October, Newsweek looked at the GOP’s relationship to marijuana, saying that although only 25 percent of Republicans favor legalizing marijuana (as compared to 55 percent of Democrats), the number has jumped seven points since 2005. The article credits the influence of the anti-government-intervention Tea Party.  Considering President Obama and A.G. Eric Holder have maintained a Democrat policy of ramping up law enforcement (and prisons), could the GOP outflank the Dems on Civil Liberties?  Perhaps Robertson is putting his toes in the water to report on the temperature.

It’s becoming increasingly hard for conservative candidates and lawmakers to square libertarian Tea Party catchphrases like “fiscal responsibility” and “limited government” with the government’s war on drugs, especially when their constituents might prefer to see a war on joblessness.  When they begin aligning with the Drug Policy Alliance and Law Enforcement Against Prohibition, the only ones left will be the direct profiteers.

 

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Community Coalition Enters Georgia Prison!

Our friends at Black Agenda Report are the first to break the amazing story of community members meeting with Georgia’s Corrections officials and being given access to the Inside of a prison.

As one Unprison activist clearly states:

“We understand where we are and how we got here,” explained Rev. Kenny Glasgow of The Ordinary Peoples Society (TOPS) after his visit to Macon State. A former prisoner himself who spent fourteen years behind the walls, Glasgow runs a series of re-entry programs for former inmates in Georgia and Alabama. “We only got to sit down with correctional officials, we only gained access to the prisons because of the courageous stand of those behind the walls. It was their willingness to work together across different lines and to sacrifice the very limited freedom and safety they have that got us to this point. The prisoners have done all they can do now. It’s up to us to build a movement out here that can make the changes which have to be made.”

Continue to rise, join thousands of others, and sign the Petition of Solidarity today!

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Sign the Petition of Solidarity with Georgia Prisoners

A Moment for Movement-Building: Statement of Solidarity with Georgia Prisoner Strike

Sign the Petition Now!

On December 9, 2010, thousands of prisoners in at least six Georgia state prisons initiated the largest prisoner strike in U.S. history, uniting across racial boundaries to demand an immediate end to the cruel and dehumanizing conditions that damage prisoners, their families, and the communities they return to.

Prisoners are demanding a living wage for work, increased educational opportunities, decent health care, an end to cruel and unusual punishment, decent living conditions, nutritional meals, vocational and self-improvement opportunities, access to families, and just parole decisions. These demands are not only fair and just, but mandatory under international human rights law and the U.S. Constitution.

And it is not just Georgia where these conditions exist. Prisoners throughout this country are subject to routine dehumanization, violence, denial of basic medical care, separated from their families, exposed to illnesses, and obstructed from accessing the court. Jails and prisons throughout the U.S. are routinely in violation of the United Nations Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman and Degrading Treatment, the Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners, and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.

It is imperative that members of the legal community, human rights advocates, social justice activists, faith communities, and concerned members of the general public mobilize in support of prisoners and their families in this urgent moment. Georgia prison authorities have reportedly reacted to the peaceful strike with violence. The threat of retaliation will remain for the foreseeable future, and we must rise to the occasion with increased vigilance and action.

We are especially asking that members of the legal community recognize their unique role and serious responsibility in working to support prisoners and communities targeted by policies of mass incarceration.

We must also seize this opportunity to support and strengthen those forces fighting against race and class-based policies of mass incarceration. Under the cover of a cynical drug war, the U.S. has constructed the largest prison economy in the history of the planet, incarcerating more of its own people than any other nation in the world. And when evidence of the pervasive targeting of communities of color at every level of the criminal legal system is recognized for what it is, there is only one conclusion to arrive at: mass incarceration is the new Jim Crow.
Like the old Jim Crow, this system serves to perpetuate institutionalized racism, economic inequality, and political disenfranchisement. It seeks to pit poor whites and people of color against each other in order to keep working and middle class communities subordinate to a political and economic order that prioritizes profit at the expense of our communities and our democracy.

The transcending of the politics of racial antagonism by the prisoners in Georgia striking for their human rights and human dignity is a profound call for the renewal of visionary mass movements for social justice and freedom in this country. Our communities outside of these walls are in dire need of human rights as well: health care, educational opportunities, jobs, food, housing, peace, and a livable planet.

In building an integrated, mass movement for human rights inside and outside the prisons we are also working to undermine the conditions of social, economic, and political inequalities that fuel crime and violence.

We are asking that others sign onto this statement of solidarity and make a commitment to take action in support of the prisoners in Georgia, to take action in support of prisoners’ rights, and to help build a historic mass movement against mass incarceration and for universal human rights and dignity.

Solidarity and Struggle, 

Center for Constitutional Rights
Noam Chomsky
Professor Michelle Alexander, Ohio State University
Professor Jules Lobel, University of Pittsburgh Law School
Professor Marjorie Cohn, Thomas Jefferson School of Law
Rosa Clemente, 2008 Green Party Vice President Candidate
California Coalition for Women Prisoners
Nkechi Taifa, Esq., Director, Legacy Justice Institute
Justice Now (www.jnow.org)
Drug Policy Alliance
Ethan Nadelmann, Executive Director, Drug Policy Alliance
Human Rights Coalition-Chester
Human Rights Coalition-Philadelphia
Human Rights Coalition-Fed Up! Pittsburgh
Vania Gulston,  HYPERLINK “http://www.ontheblockradio.org” www.ontheblockradio.org
Jordan Flaherty, Louisiana Justice Institute
Paradise Gray, Executive Director One Hood
Van Jones, author, The Green Collar Economy
International Concerned Family and Friends of Mumia Abu-Jamal
Free Mumia Abu-Jamal Coalition
MOVE Organization
Prison Radio –  HYPERLINK “http://www.prisonradio.org” www.prisonradio.org
Redwood Justice Fund
Noelle Hanrahan
Pam Africa
Suzanne Ross, Co-Chair, Free Mumia Abu-Jamal Coalition (NYC) Spokesperson
Steven Gotzler, National Lawyers Guild National Vice President
Heidi Boghosian, National Lawyers Guild Executive Director
James Rucker, Executive Director, ColorOfChange.org
Annie Paradise, student, Anthropology Dept., California Institute of Integral Studies
Paul Wright, Editor, Prison Legal News –  HYPERLINK “http://www.prisonlegalnews.org” www.prisonlegalnews.org
Deirdre Wilson, Program Coordinator for California Coalition for Women Prisoners,  and proud member of All of Us or None
Bruce Reilly, Behind the Walls Committee-Direct Action for Rights and Equality, Providence, Rhode Island
Kirwan Institute for the Study of Race and Ethnicity
Andrew Grant-Thomas, Deputy Director, Kirwan Institute for the Study of Race and Ethnicity
California Prison Moratorium Project
Communities United for Restorative Youth Justice
Lois Ahrens, The Real Cost of Prisons Project
North Star Fund
Women Who Never Give Up (www.wwng.org)
International Jewish Anti-Zionist Network – United States
Michael Letwin, Co-Convener, New York City Labor Against the War; Former President, Association of Legal Aid Attorneys/UAW Local 2325
Andy Switzer
Anthony Papa, author of 15 to Life
Dominique Reed
Pam Nath, Community Organizer, Mennonite Central Committee—New Orleans
Thousand Kites –  HYPERLINK “http://www.kitescampaigns.org” www.kitescampaigns.org
Amanda Rosenblum
Laura Erickson-Schroth
Ali Brooks, Madison, Wisconsin, Groundwork Anti-Racist Collective
Bret Grote
Dr. Rachel Luft
Claude Marks, Director, Freedom Archives
Jamie Kalven, Invisible Institute
National Lawyers Guild – University of Pittsburgh Law School Chapter
Matthew Shelton
Emily Zeanah Shelton
Marlon Peterson
Jeff Hitchcock, Executive Director, Center for the Study of White American Culture, Inc.
Sarah Lomax-Reese, President, WURD Radio
Tema Okun, Dismantling Racism Works, Durham, North Carolina
Mollie Crittenden
Gary Johnson
Lisa Albrecht, University of Minnesota, Social Justice Program
Survivors Village, New Orleans
Russ Vernon-Jones, Alliance of White Anti-Racists (Hampshire Co., MA)
Serena Alfieri, Associate Director of Policy, Correctional Association of NY
Laurie Bezold, Baltimore, Maryland
Christian Peele
Amanda Johnson
Geri Silva, Facts Education Fund: Families to Amend California’s Three Strikes
Prisoners are People Too, Buffalo, NY
Camy Matthay, Wisconsin Books to Prisoners, Brooklyn, WI
Wendy Ake, Graduate Research Associate, Global Justice Program, The Kirwan Institute for the Study of Race and Ethnicity, Ohio State University

Alan Eladio Gomez, Ph.D. State
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