Looking For a Unified Labor Movement? Go to Georgia’s Prisons.

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On December 9, 2010, thousands of Georgia prisoners refused to work, and stopped all other activities to remain in their cells in a peaceful, one-day protest for their human rights. The December 9 Strike is likely the biggest prisoner protest in the history of the United States.

These thousands of men, from Baldwin, Hancock, Hays, Macon, Smith and Telfair State Prisons, among others, state they are striking to press the Georgia Department of Corrections (“DOC”) to stop treating them like animals and slaves and institute programs that address their basic human rights. They have set forth the following demands:

A LIVING WAGE FOR WORK: In violation of the 13th Amendment to the Constitution prohibiting slavery and involuntary servitude, the DOC demands prisoners work for free.

EDUCATIONAL OPPORTUNITIES: For the great majority of prisoners, the DOC denies all opportunities for education beyond the GED, despite the benefit to both prisoners and society.

DECENT HEALTH CARE: In violation of the 8th Amendment prohibition against cruel and unusual punishments, the DOC denies adequate medical care to prisoners, charges excessive fees for the most minimal care and is responsible for extraordinary pain and suffering.

AN END TO CRUEL AND UNUSUAL PUNISHMENTS: In further violation of the 8th Amendment, the DOC is responsible for cruel prisoner punishments for minor infractions of rules.

DECENT LIVING CONDITIONS: Georgia prisoners are confined in over-crowded, substandard conditions, with little heat in winter and oppressive heat in summer.

NUTRITIONAL MEALS: Vegetables and fruit are in short supply in DOC facilities while starches and fatty foods are plentiful.

VOCATIONAL AND SELF-IMPROVEMENT OPPORTUNITIES: The DOC has stripped its facilities of all opportunities for skills training, self-improvement and proper exercise.

ACCESS TO FAMILIES: The DOC has disconnected thousands of prisoners from their families by imposing excessive telephone charges and innumerable barriers to visitation.

JUST PAROLE DECISIONS: The Parole Board capriciously and regularly denies parole to the majority of prisoners despite evidence of eligibility.

Prisoner leaders issued the following call: “No more slavery. Injustice in one place is injustice to all. Inform your family to support our cause. Lock down for liberty!”

The unity of this action should serve as a lesson for all struggling against oppression, and a clear indication of how “race” fades away when more important reasons to unite take precedence.

 

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Free The Cuban 5! on International Human Rights Day

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Delegates from Latin America and Europe who were present at the VI International Colloquium for the Freedom of the 5 Heroes and Against Terrorism, in Holguin, proposed to put in place an immediate plan of action for December 10, International Day of Human Rights.

On that day, from 9AM to 5PM (Eastern Time), and for 5 consecutive days LETS CALL, OR SEND FAXES, OR SEND E-MAILS, OR TELEGRAMS to the WHITE HOUSE to demand President Obama Free the 5 Cuban Patriots imprisoned in the United States for defending their homeland.

The significance of this day is that on December 10, 1948, the UN General Assembly approved the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and established that day as the International Day on Human Rights.

In a report issued on October 13, 2010, Amnesty International asked the US government to review the case of the Cuban 5 and to mitigate any injustice through the process of clemency or any other appropriate means, in case that new legal appeals do not provide a timely remedy.

President Obama has more than enough proof of the innocence of the Cuban 5, he knows that they never were a threat to US National Security, that they carried no guns and that their only objective was to monitor terrorist organizations based in Miami to avoid the death of more innocent people.

On the International Day of Human Rights, and making use of the rights conferred by the US Constitution, we are asking President Obama as a lawyer, as a father, as a son, as a husband, as a decent justice loving person, and as a winner of the Nobel Peace Prize, to END THIS COLOSSAL INJUSTICE AND TO FREE THE 5 NOW!!!

DIFFERENT WAYS TO REACH THE WHITE HOUSE

By phone: 202-456-1111

If calling from outside the United States, dial first the International Area Code + 1 (US country code) followed by 202-456-1111

By Fax: 202-456-2461

If fax is sent from outside the United States, dial first the International Area Code + 1 (US country code) followed by 202-456-2461

To send an electronic message write to: HTTP://WWW.WHITEHOUSE.GOV/CONTACT

To send a telegram

President Barack Obama

The White House

1600 Pennsylvania Ave, NW

Washington, DC 20500 EE.UU.

THIS COLLECTIVE ACTION WILL ONLY BE EFFECTIVE IF PEOPLE FROM THE US, AND ALL OVER THE WORLD, CALL, OR SEND FAX, E-MAILS OR TELEGRAMS, FROM DECEMBER 10 TO DECEMBER 14. IF YOU CAN NOT REACH ANYBODY BY PHONE, PLEASE LEAVE A MESSAGE.

TOGETHER WE CAN DO IT!!!

 

 

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Abu Ghraib Comes to Amerika

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Torture Unit Under Construction at Virginia’s Red Onion State Prison
October 30, 2010

by prisoner Kevin “Rashid” Johnson

Virginia Justifies a Torture Unit

This past summer a Black prisoner was strangled to death on a segregation exercise yard at Virginia’s remote Red Onion State Prison. A white prisoner is alleged to have committed the killing.1 This incident caps a long history of Red Onion officials manipulating and facilitating racial conflict between prisoners.2
But instead of exposing and addressing this fact, this tragedy is being used to justify the secretive construction of a torture unit at the prison. Desires to operate such a unit have long been floated by Red Onion’s Warden Tracy S. Ray, but were not pursued until now because of lack of sufficient funds and plausible justification. With this recent death, however, Ray now has both his selling point and justification. The unit has been approved, funded and is under construction in the prison’s B-3 housing unit.

According to one Red Onion lieutenant, enough money is being spent on the unit’s construction “to build a whole new prison.”  A list of candidates for the unit has already been compiled. I’ve been told repeatedly that my name tops it. The list is almost entirely Black and consists of prisoners who have distinguished
themselves for resisting and speaking out against the notoriously abusive and racist conditions at Red Onion.

Although the unit’s projected design and living conditions have been shrouded in secrecy to avoid outside scrutiny, leaks have come out to local attorneys who have relatives and contacts who work at Red Onion, and from minimum security ‘cadre’ inmates who, for pennies an hour, have been working overtime for over two months so far constructing the unit. Assignments to B-3 will be punitive, brutal, and indefinite and will inflict tortures designed for and used against “enemy combatants” at the Guantánamo Bay and Abu Ghraib detention centers. Ranking Red Onion officials admit its actual purpose will be to apply, study, and
advance methods of mentally breaking those with dissident, oppositional, and otherwise ‘unacceptable’ attitudes. When U. S. intelligence agencies began experiments and studies in torture after World War II,3 allegedly for use against dangerous foreign enemies, they cited the same purposes. The implications are ominous.

Advanced Modern Torture – Amerikan Style
In a 2007 article,4 I showed a general parallel between the torturous conditions of modern U.S. Prisons and the advanced torture techniques (psychological warfare) developed and applied against foreign “enemies” by the CIA and U.S. Military. Red Onion’s torture unit now shows a clear and deliberate link between the two, and that what began as techniques developed for Amerikan “enemies” are now being directed at Amerikan citizens. This will inevitably spread.

The CIA/military’s advanced torture methods were exposed in Professor Alfred McCoy’s detailed and thoroughly documented 2006 exposé.5 His book traced the CIA’s efforts to develop and perfect new and less physically evident torture methods over 50 years, which included a research project (from 1950 to 1962) that cost over $1 billion a year that sought to “crack the code of human consciousness.” The Agency tried everything from drugs (including truth serum, mescaline, and LSD), to shock treatment. None of these efforts produced results.
Alongside these more invasive methods, the CIA also funded behavioral studies at top universities like Yale, Princeton, Harvard and McGill. These efforts bore fruit, beginning with McGill.

McGill’s Dr. Donald O. Hebb discovered that he could consistently produce hallucinations and psychotic breakdowns in a person within 48 hours, by cutting them off from environmental stimulation. He did this by having student volunteers lie blindfolded, with soundproof earmuffs and thick mitts on inside a small cubicle for several days. Most of the students quit the
experiment. He also acknowledged that confinement in solitary prison cells produce similar results, only more gradually.6  This was the first breakthrough – “sensory deprivation.”

The CIA’s second advance came from studies of “foreign” torture techniques at Cornell University Medical Center; of the most effective methods discovered was “self-inflicted pain.” This involved making the victim stand for one or two days, which causes the body fluids to drain into the legs which then swell, causing boils that swell and burst, and hallucinations and kidney failure. The victim is told repeatedly during this process, “You’re doing this to yourself. Cooperate with us and you can sit down.”7

The CIA found that combining these two techniques produced revolutionary results while leaving little evidence of abuse. The Agency found its torture model, and in 1963 encoded and distributed it worldwide in its torture handbook, Kubark Counterintelligence Manual.

Under General Geoffrey Miller in 2002, Guantánamo Bay was converted into a torture research lab where the CIA model was advanced even further, adding two key techniques. The two techniques developed at Guantánamo consisted of attacks on cultural sensitivities, such as Arab males’ sensitivity to gender issues and sexual identity, and targeting one’s personal fears and vulnerabilities.
By 2003 the CIA torture model was perfected at Guantánamo, combining this multi-level attack on the human psyche, namely 1) sensory deprivation, 2) self-inflicted pain, and targeting  3) cultural sensitivities, and 4) personal fears and vulnerabilities.

Later in 2003 when resistance to the U.S. invasion of Iraq caught U.S. forces off guard, Miller was sent to Abu Ghraib from Guantánamo to implement his techniques against captured Iraqis. A CD and handbook of his methods were distributed to U.S. military police, intelligence agents, and to General Ricardo Sanchez, Commander of U.S. forces in Iraq, ordered
that Miller’s methods be incorporated into interrogations of Iraqis. It was these practices that came out in the 2004 torture scandals at Abu Ghraib and Guantánamo.

Investigations exposed an entire unit at Guantánamo, housing Arab men who had been reduced under these techniques to the mental level of toddlers. They were found sitting on the floor, playing with toys, crying, soiling themselves, etc. As McCoy exposed, torture experts agree that psychological (or “clean”) torture is far more dangerous, destructive and lasting than physical torture, and is far more cruel. “Victims often need extensive treatment to recover from injury far more crippling than mere physical pain. Perpetrators can suffer a dangerous expansion of ego, leading to escalating cruelty and lasting emotional disorders.”

The B-3 Torture Unit
B-3 will be Red Onion’s second torture unit, informally called “Superseg” (segregation within segregation). The first superseg unit was constructed and opened in October 2003 in Red Onion’s C-4 unit, and distinguished itself for extensive physical abuse by guards with the complicity of medical staff. This abuse saw prisoners routinely beaten by guards while handcuffed behind their backs and legs shackled, often resulting in broken teeth and bones and dislocated joints. A Red Onion sergeant Delmer Tate was given charge of C-4 superseg. As a lieutenant now, Tate is to run the new B-3 superseg.8 I was among the first prisoners assigned to C-4 superseg. The conditions and brutality in C-4 were moderated following my compiling and circulating reports of the abuses to the outside and co-founding prisoner advocacy groups with concerned outside citizens like Fed Up!, which generated public protests.

Following such exposures of physical torture, it is a noted pattern of officials to resort to less physically evident methods of abuse and torture. This is the purpose of the new B-3 superseg unit,9 which is completely compatible with Warden Ray’s overall agenda of protecting Red Onion’s image, while maintaining its oppressive designs. The cells in B-3 are being stripped of all furniture except for a heavily fortified steel bed frame and steel toilet/sink combination. The cell’s writing desks and property storage shelves are being removed. The prisoners will have nowhere to sit and write or to store their belongings (what little they may have). There will be no personal amenities in the cells such as televisions (which are allowed in other units for religious, educational, and very limited entertainment programs).

All bedding (mattress, sheets, blankets, etc.) will be removed from the cells from 6am through 10pm every day, leaving the prisoner to stand or sit on cold bare steel and concrete surfaces for 16 hours. Throughout this time the cell will be constantly illuminated with bright fluorescent lights that he cannot control or dim.10 There is no view to the outside world either from within the cells or on the unit’s outside exercise yard.11

Outside exercise will be permitted three times per week for one hour, which will consist of one’s standing idle inside a small dog cage, enclosed within a two story concrete structure that permits a view only of part of the sky directly overhead. The only clothing permitted to protect against the freezing and sub-freezing cold of winter, are thin khaki pants and shirt, a light jacket, low top cloth deck shoes, one pair of regular socks, t-shirt and boxers. Only one layer of each clothing item may be worn and gloves and long johns are not permitted. No clothing will be permitted inside the cells. Only a coarse, loose-fitting, sleeveless, dresslike garment called a “safety smock” may be worn. Cell temperatures, especially surface temperatures, are constantly very low at Red Onion, leaving prisoners cold even when they have bedding and clothing. Many prisoners remain bundled up and wear winter skullcaps inside their cells year-round – even to bed. The cells are constructed so that verbal communication is made difficult and positioned so prisoners cannot see each other.

Each cell in B-3 will be internally equipped with video and audio monitoring equipment that will record all activities and statements of prisoners inside the cells, including confidential legal activities and discussions. Guards working the unit will wear mobile audio-video equipment that will also monitor and record prisoner contacts and conversations with them and in their presences. This extensive surveillance is admittedly to record and study prisoners’ every action and statement, and their adjustments to and the effects of B-3 on them. Prisoners at Guantánamo were subject to similar controlled studies, but not so thoroughly recorded, in the military’s torture experiments. The unit is clearly structured to inflict the multi-leveled assault on the human psyche developed and perfected by the CIA/military, and to permit extensive observation and study of its effects.
First, sensory deprivation is blatant. There is a total loss of the stimulation of normal social environments and relationships, with the attendant stress and chilling effect of living under constant surveillance. This alone can quickly produce extreme psychological pain and damage. There is otherwise little to nothing to do to occupy or stimulate the senses (visual, audio,
olfactory, manual/musculo-skeletal).

This lack of environmental stimulation will both create an increased need for physical and social stimuli, while in turn denying both. The obvious result will be acute mental breakdowns as observed by Dr. Hebb in his sensory deprivation experiments.12 And this addresses only, one component of torture, namely that of sensory deprivation. I have not as yet discussed the suffering and effects of the other three components of the CIA/military torture paradigm which will also be applied in B-3, namely “self-inflicted” pain, and attacks on cultural sensitivities and personal vulnerabilities.  The resultant ‘behaviors’ caused by this mental torture, will then be cited as confirmation of the disruptive nature of B-3 internees, and the “need” to remain and be in the unit. It is a self-serving and self-fulfilling process that is as predictable as breathing.

Second is self-inflicted pain. I have had prior experience with lengthy confinement in cells with no clothing (except underwear) and no bedding during daytime hours. During 1998 at Virginia’s Greensville Correctional Center, I was kept for seven months on an admittedly illegal status, called “white cell status,” very similar to what’s planned for B-3. The result of such conditions is to suffer constant physical pain and fatigue, and Red Onion officials are spreading the message early on, that those chosen for B-3 will be due to their own behaviors and attitudes, and only by changing them in the unit (i.e. cooperating with the captors), will they have any hope of being moved out of B-3.

Being made to remain in a steel and concrete cell without bedding and clothes will compel one to stand at length on a bare cold concrete floor. Sitting on cold steel or concrete for substantial periods causes rheumatic pain deep in the joints, lower back and any body parts resting on or against these surfaces, also chronic hemorrhoids. Standing at length on these surfaces causes swelling and rheumatic pain in the legs, knees, feet, ankles, etc. much like the torture technique studied at Cornell Medical Center.13 The body becomes increasingly vulnerable and sensitive to this pain and suffering, and begins to deteriorate after weeks and months of constant exposure to these conditions. Arthritis develops in the joints, along with chronic musculo-skeletal aches and pains.

Increasing atmospheric temperatures inside the cells offers no relief, since it is virtually impossible to warm the concrete and steel surfaces within a prison cell, especially during spring, autumn and winter months, when it is cool and cold outside. This is because the surfaces inside the cell are part of the same concrete structure outside the prison building that absorbs outside cold temperatures. The physical and mental pain of B-3 will come in many forms, all of which officials will persist is the fault of the prisoners, rather than that of Red Onion officials who are inflicting it.

Third is attacks on cultural sensitivities. A large cage is to be constructed in the middle of the unit, where prisoners brought from their cells will be strip searched. During these searches he must strip naked and manipulate his genitals and buttocks for scrutiny by male guards. This and the attendant dress-like “safety smocks” worn inside the cells is calculated to offend most
prisoners’, especially urban males’, sensitivity to gender issues.14 Being projected as feminine or sexually submissive, especially before one’s peers, is highly offensive in male prison culture, because such prisoners are deemed weak and are targeted with routine domination, violence and rape.

Anyone can recognize the cultural offense of living under constant audio-video surveillance. Especially having one’s most private activities monitored, such as using the commode, bathing, & engaging in the natural act of masturbating – in an environment where normal sexual relations are denied (another component of sensory deprivation). These monitored activities will also be subject to observation by female employees. There will be no medical, mental-health nor legal privacy, as all contacts with such staff, attorney calls, etc. will be conducted under audio-video monitoring. Then there is the cultural clash between prisoners and staff.24

Fourth, personal vulnerabilities will be targeted in many ways. For example, if one delays or refuses to relinquish his bedding at 6 am, h e will be met with immediate force of one or more teams of riot-armored guards, who will “cell extract” him by means of tear gassing him, rushing into the cell, electrocuting him with one or more 75,000 volt electric weapons, and forcefully restraining him.

They will then take the bedding. In process of the ‘cell extraction,’ the guards will invariably get in sly punches, knees and kicks, grabs at the groin and throat, gouges at the eyes, and bend fingers back. All while yelling, “Stop resisting! Stop resisting!,” for effect.  The cell-extracted prisoner will then be placed into in-cell (ambulatory) restraints for up to 48 hours. This will all emphasize his vulnerability and powerlessness, and the futility of resisting or protesting being abused. At Red Onion violent force and cell extractions are the routine first resort to compelling prisoners’ compliance with arbitrary demands, even when no force is needed.

In B-3 Superseg, prisoners will be unable to flush their own commodes. Guards will flush them from outside the cells.15 With these few, and certainly not exhaustive, examples, one can see clearly the continued torture B-3 will inflict on its inhabitants.  Another aspect of torture in B-3 will be prisoners being confined in continued bright lighting for 16 hours per day. This condition, which is general to Red Onion (except for minimum security cadre inmates, who are able to control their in-cell lighting), has caused or contributed to prisoners’ visual impairment at an unprecedented level at Red Onion.10

Living under constant fluorescent lighting causes chronic eye strain, blurring and watering, and visual degradation.   Another factor that I believe contributes to this high rate of visual impairment is lack of visual stimulation in Red Onion’s segregation, where no view of the outside is permitted. This denies regular stimulation and exercise of long range vision and focusing – yet another feature of sensory deprivation.

The Lies that Justify Red Onion
Before and since Red Onion opened in 1998, and its sister supermax Wallens Ridge State Prison, opened in 1999, Virginia officials fed the public a steady stream of lies to justify the expensive construction and operation of these unneeded prisons. Initially it was claimed that these 2,400 supermax beds were needed to securely contain Virginia’s multitude of chronically violent and dangerous prisons.16 Added to this was the claim that those housed at these prisons would never again see society due to long sentences. Both of these rationales were quickly exposed to be lies.

In a critical 1999 investigative report, Human Rights Watch (HRW) found that before Red Onion even opened, the DOC had a review conducted of its prisoner population by James Austin, a national expert on prison classification systems. Austin’s review found that Virginia had one of the nation’s most docile prisoner populations, that “few engage in institutional violence and escapes.”17 But what HRW’s report did find was a high level of violence and racism inflicted on Red Onion’s predominantly Black prisoner population by its near exclusively white staff.18 It also revealed that most of the prisoners were eligible for release, or otherwise did not meet the DOC’s own criteria for supermax housing. Officials repeatedly changed their own security level criteria to justify unqualified prisoners being housed at these supermaxes. As HRW found, Virginia officials kept “adjusting supermax housing criteria not to reflect genuine security and management needs, but simply to fill what would otherwise be half empty – but very expensive – facilities.”19

With these exposures and attendant media criticism, Virginia officials transferred many prisoners away from the supermaxes, and intensified changes in their supermax classification criteria in efforts to qualify more prisoners for supermax housing. Still unable to create substantial numbers of supermax prisoners, they began, at an unprecedented level, contracting to house out-of-state prisoners at the prisons. Prisoners from Washington, D.C., Connecticut, Wyoming, the Virgin Islands, Maryland, and other states were brought in. The DOC secured many of these contracts by boasting of their proven success rates in controlling Virginia’s own violent and dangerous prisoners at the supermaxes. But they failed to mention that Virginia never had a substantial number of violent or dangerous prisoners to bring under control, to begin with.

Immediately upon assignment to the supermaxes, the out-of-state prisoners experienced the same extreme brutality and racism as did the Virginia prisoners. However, unlike Virginia’s prisoners, they had a strong outside support and advocacy system in their home states that immediately went to bat for them. Resulting protests and lawsuits led to the withdrawal of these prisoners from Red Onion and Wallens Ridge – starting with Connecticut,20 New Mexico, and the District of Columbia.

In the face these protests DOC Director Ronald Angelone resigned on May 9, 2002 and a token Black warden, Daniel Braxton, was assigned to Red Onion as window dressing. As my 2004 exposé21 on abuse at Red Onion revealed, abuses continued. In fact, under Braxton abuse and racism escalated at Red Onion, and the first Superseg unit opened in 2003 under his watch.

Despite losing their appeal for out-of-state contracts, and having lost all credible claims for operating even one – let alone two – supermaxes, Virginia officials were still determined to justify the continued operation of these expensive and unneeded prisons. So in 2005 they reduced Wallens Ridge’s security level from supermax to regular maximum security. Subsequently, they cut Red Onion’s prisoner population in half, created unauthorized housing statuses like “Progressive Housing,” brought in scores of minimum security ‘cadre’ inmates ostensibly as workers (but in actuality to fill beds), and were finally forced to eliminate Red Onion’s supermax classification as well. Red Onion was then classified as a segregation prison, and the DOC officially terminated the level 6 (Supermax) security level altogether in February, 2007.

Outside protests continued, much of it generated by my own written reports of abuses at Red Onion. In latter 2004 Warden Braxton was replaced By Tracy S. Ray. Ray came on board with an explicit agenda to repair Red Onion’s image, to curb outside protests and negative media, and emphasized using psychological coercion (especially behavioral incentives) against prisoners as control mechanisms over brutal violence. Although it persists in many forms, physical abuse was greatly reduced under Ray’s watch, and more determined efforts have been made to cover up those abuses that continue. Ray and his appointed investigator Tony Adams actually took the time and initiative to personally monitor my communications to those on the outside, read most of my writings and reports, and implemented ‘counterintelligence’ efforts to isolate me, cut my ties to the outside, frustrate my communication lines, undermine my relationships, attack my character and credibility, and censor my writings.22

Under their designs, I was also targeted with some sixteen indicted criminal charges over a three-year period. This was to consume my limited resources and time defending myself against these charges, since they knew I would not permit any attorneys to represent me. In every case the charges were dismissed or dropped with me representing myself. They also devised to get rid of prisoners’ television sets that had radio units. This is because a local radio station aired a program that allowed live call-ins to prisoners at Red Onion and Wallens Ridge, and gave the prisoners both a voice to the outside that was exposing the prisons’
conditions and efforts to challenge them, and was winning us local empathy.23
With all prior justifications for the claimed need of Red Onion and Wallens Ridge discredited, DOC officials, with Ray and Adams at the forefront, this time sought to validate Red Onion’s use as a segregation prison by ‘manufacturing’ a problem with gang activity. Prior to 2004 Virginia prisons had almost no known gang members or activity. First they created ‘gang pods’ at Red Onion and Wallens Ridge beginning in latter 2004, where suspected rival gang members were forcibly housed together, with hopes of provoking and facilitating violent conflicts between them. Red Onion officials had already long used white supremacist inmates against Black prisoners whom they disliked.2
Red Onion’s white staff members have neither genuine experience with nor exposure to the culture of urban people of color.24 As a result, they actively slap gang profiles on black and brown prisoners for little more than expressing their own cultures in their manners of speech, dress, body, language, writing styles, etc. Most of those gang profiled adamantly deny gang involvement.

Many have been forced to join gangs because of false profiles by officials leading to conflicts with actual members. Adams who was promoted under Ray from working in the prison’s dog kennel to the position of investigator (and suddenly became a self-professed gang specialist), has been instrumental in the whole gang witch-hunt and facilitating racial and gang violence at Red Onion. Adams and his colleagues have not only orchestrated or tried to provoke violent conflicts by deliberately housing “documented” rivals in cells and units together and operating gang pods, but they profile and publicize prisoners as gang members upon the flimsiest evidence and often out of spite.

Adams also classifies, and thereby represses, information related to black civil rights groups and leaders as gangs and gang related. The recent prisoner death at Red Onion occurred under these circumstances. Indeed, it should be placed squarely on Adams’ shoulders, where the prisoner accused of the killing is a self-admitted member of a white gang, while the black prisoner who was killed was a “documented” member of a black street gang. Yet they were housed by Adams in the same unit together, facilitating the fatality.  However, instead of addressing the problem at the root – namely Red Onion officials inciting and facilitating racial and gang violence between prisoners – this tragedy is being used by them to justify Red Onion’s continued existence and the construction a torture unit, which will in no way resolve the causes of what occurred.

Lies and evasions are typical features of DOC public relations, and have been the basis of the justifications given over the years for the expensive construction and continued operations of Red Onion and Wallens Ridge, the real purposes of which have been to create and sustain a lucrative investment climate for various wealthy corporate interests, and to revitalize the sagging local economy in impoverished rural Southwestern Virginia. With blacks and browns mad the victims of the abusive conditions in these prisons. This is why every justification for their existence has been discredited in turn, only to be opportunistically replaced by yet another manufactured one, while attempts to expose and redress abuses and the brutal conditions in the prisons are met with the same – lies, evasions, and cover-ups.

Red Onion: A Fief unto Itself

Under Virginia laws the Virginia Board of Corrections (BOC) is the DOC’s chief oversight authority. It sets out standards and goals which the DOC must apply, and the Board is to monitor the DOC to ensure its compliance.25 Red Onion, however, has always operated completely outside and free of oversight of the BOC and any other authority. The conditions and status to be implemented in B-3 are but one example of this. Under the BOC’s written standards, there exist only three “Special Housing” statuses, namely General Detention, Isolation and Segregation.26 There is no authority for the creation or existence of any other special housing statuses. Only on isolation, a designated temporary
punitive status imposed only for rules violations, may a prisoner’s bedding be removed during daylight hours.27 Prisoners are at all times to be able to flush their own commodes.15 They are to have enclosable storage space inside the cell.28 Cells are to have natural lighting.29 Red Onion officials created the unauthorized two-phase progressive housing status to create bases for keeping prisoners at Red Onion who actually do not qualify for continued segregation
confinement, and to forestall having to transfer those qualified for housing at lower security prisons. Actually, Progressive Housing embodies the conditions and privileges that prisoners are supposed to enjoy on segregation status. As HRW found over a decade ago, segregation status at Red Onion is actually punitive and extremely harsh. Indeed, its conditions impose sensory
deprivation.30

The BOC, which conducts public meetings monthly in Richmond, Virginia, is responsible for and empowered to conduct hearings and summon witnesses, in exercising and enforcing its monitoring and oversight duties within the DOC. Despite the obvious deviations of Red Onion from BOC standards, and over a decade of incessant abuse and racism, this DOC prison has yet to be a subject of such investigative hearings and oversight. In essences Red Onion operates as a fief unto itself, with those who are required by law to monitor its operations and ensure its compliance with the law, refusing to do so. Then the prison is operated by a closed system of blood relatives and friends. Nepotism and cronyism run rampant. There are so many Mullinses and Flemings in the prison, one cannot count them all. From the Major, to Captains, Lieutenants sergeants and corporal guards, to administrative staff, counselors, commissary, maintenance staff etc., the Mullinses and Flemings pervade the prison. Then on both alternate shifts, two McCoy brothers are in charge of security. The prison staff is a closed society of families, friends and lovers, all of whom come from local racially segregated white communities, where racism is a general feature of local culture. There is but one black male guard at the whole prison, and he admittedly keeps his distance from the others.

Blacks who have visited loved ones at the prison and have stayed at local hotels, used local restaurants and shopped at local stores, unanimously comment on the open hostility and unwelcome attitudes they have experienced from local whites.31 These are the people who run Red Onion.

It is no surprise that a black prisoner died at the hands of a white one under supervision of Red Onion staff. What is surprising is that it took so long to happen. The secrecy, lack of oversight, and corruption that pervade Red Onion is nothing new.

Actually it is but a continuation of DOC practices found by the Courts almost 40 years ago. As one Virginia Federal Court found in a landmark case, Virginia prison officials refuse to recognize:
“… that a prison administration is not a fief unto itself. Coupled with this antiquated notion that a prison unit is not even peripherally a part of the community is the practice over the years, that has been shown to the court in this and other prison cases, to envelop the system with a massive veil of secrecy. More concern seems to have been given to the image of the prison’s administration than to granting to its inmates not only such constitutional rights as they are entitled to in spite of their incarceration, but also the basic tenets of conduct which simple fairness, interpreted by even the most uneducated be accorded them as well. These cases are permeated by an apparent lack of understanding on the part of some of the [prison administration] defendants as well as on the part of at least some of their subordinates that the retribution required by law to be inflicted upon a convict has already, within the limits of the legislatively set boundaries, been pronounced by a trial court.”32

In 2006, the Commission of Safety and Abuse in America’s Prisons issued a detailed report, which exposed the conditions of abuse, mismanagement and suffering pervading U.S. prisons.33  Members of the commission consisted of attorneys, former judges, psychiatrists, former wardens, former mayors, etc. Among the commission’s findings were that extended segregated confinement, such as exists at Red Onion in general (which is now an explicitly long-term segregation prison), amount to mental torture and inflict both physical and psychological damage. As this article emphasized, these conditions will be greatly intensified in B-3 Superseg. With the exception of overcrowding, all the abusive conditions found by the Commission in prisons across the country, exist with especial intensity at Red Onion, including the tendency towards secrecy.34 In the report’s conclusion the Commission strongly recommended public oversight of U.S. prisons, which is what I have advocated and actively pursued over the years here at Red Onion.

But my efforts have been persecuted, censored, and I villain-ized and repressed by Red Onion officials. This is because they clearly have much to hide. Anyone secure in their power does not fear exposure or criticism.

After World War II, Germans who lived in communities near Nazi concentration camps were taken on tours of them. Many were shocked and appalled to discover the brutalities and tortures that were taking place in their own back yards, and swore they’d have opposed it if only they’d have known. This is what Red Onion officials fear. Exposure. Their experience with protest on behalf of prisoners from other states taught them that public opinion matters – a lot. Exposure is even more important in this case where advanced methods of torture are now being consciously directed at U.S. citizens. It’s not intended to end with Red Onion, nor with prisoners, which is why such extensive and expensive measures are being taken at Red Onion to monitor and record the effects of the B-3 torture unit on its victims.

As Professor McCoy observed:
“Torture is an extraordinarily dangerous thing. It taps
into the deepest recesses of human consciousness, where
creation and destruction coexist, where the infinite human
capacity for kindness and the infinite human capacity for
cruelty coexist, and it has a powerful perverse appeal.
Once it starts, and both the perpetrators and the powerful
who command them let it spread, it spreads out of control.
I think when the Bush administration gave those orders for
techniques tantamount to torture at the start of the war on
terror, I think it was probably their intention that these be
limited to top al-Qaeda suspects. But within months, U.S.
personnel were torturing hundreds of Afghanis at Bagrahb
near Kabul, and a few months later in 2003, through these
techniques, soldiers were torturing literally thousands of
Iraqis. And you can see in those photos how once it starts,
it becomes this Dante-esque hell, this kind of play palace
of the worst recesses of human consciousness. That’s why
it’s necessary to maintain an absolute prohibition on torture.
There is no such thing as a little bit of torture. The whole
myth of scientific surgical torture, which academic torture
advocates in this country came up with, that’s impossible.
That cannot operate. It will inevitably spread.”35

And it’s already started. From Abu Ghraib to Red Onion.
All Power to the People!

~ Kevin “Rashid” Johnson

Notes and Supplementary Commentary
1 The killing is alleged to have been committed by a white prisoner who is an admitted member of a white exclusivist gang. Many Red Onion prisoners believe the murder to have been racially motivated and facilitated by
guards.
2 On numerous occasions I have documented, in the words of the white prisoners themselves, how Red Onion officials often use racist white inmates to antagonize and assault Black prisoners. Especially by allowing them to carry weapons and bags of fermented feces onto the segregation exercise yards, with which to attack Blacks confined in locked, fenced-in cages beside them. See, e.g. the sworn affidavit of Troy Estep which is on record in the Wise County Circuit Court, filed as Exhibit B in support of a Motion to Transfer Venue, filed on January 22, 2009 in case styled Commonwealth of Virginia v. Kevin Johnson, Case No. CR08F00688-00. In his affidavit Estep candidly admits dislike of Blacks and having developed this attitude from growing up in southwestern Virginia where anti-Black racism “is just part of the culture and how everyone is generally raised ….” He reveals knowing many of the staff at Red Onion from society, having grown up and gone to school with many of them, and states “most of the guards and nurses and other whites who work at ROSP and WRSP feel the same as I do towards Blacks. Some are not in the open about it, like me, but most conceal it when around Blacks or others whom they feel
will not comfortably accept this attitude.” He went on to describe how guards at Red Onion deliberately manipulate racial violence between prisoners. In his own words he described how in segregation guards punish prisoners for
throwing substances on them but do not punish them for doing it to each other. He states how guards who search him before going to exercise allow him to carry bags of feces out to throw on Blacks, and how he’d “been documented over 20 times as having thrown feces on Black inmates in segregation,” but was never punished. He went on to admit Red Onion officials put him in the cell next to me with intentions of provoking and facilitating him throwing feces on me. Not coincidentally, the same white prisoner who is accused of the recent killing at Red Onion was put in the cell next to me, and we went out to exercise numerous times together, during April 2010. Guards remarked repeatedly that they expected him to “kill” another prisoner, and repeatedly referred to me in his presence as a “Black gang leader.” He and I both felt guards were attempting to instigate a conflict between us and he gave me his permission
to expose this.
3 As I pointed out in a prior article, see note 4, below:
“After World War II western governments established an aversion to physical torture, which they embodied in the charter and treaties of their newly established United Nations. This was brought on by the embarrassment and guilt of the Allied Western nations who had stood by passively while the
German Nazis tortured and conducted gruesome experiments on Jews and other Germans (disabled people, dissidents) as well as Slavs, Poles, and Gypsies. On account of this, the newly established CIA became very interested in developing less physically evident methods of mentally breaking and brainwashing enemies.”

4 Kevin “Rashid” Johnson, Amerikan Prisons Are Government Sponsored Torture, Socialism and Democracy, Vol. 21, no. 1 (March 2007).
5 Alfred W. McCoy, A Question of Torture: CIA Interrogation, From the Cold War to the War on Terror (New York: Henry Holt, 2006).
6 As CIA researcher Dr. Albert Biderman discovered “the effect of isolation on the brain function of the prisoner is much like that which occurs if he is beaten, starved or deprived of sleep.” Op. cit. note 4. As I stated in my previous article:
“The Amerikan reformers who first devised the penitentiary believed that criminals could be ‘reformed’ through solitary confinement, labor and religious indoctrination. The use of solitary confinement and isolation – sensory deprivation – began at Philadelphia’s Eastern State Penitentiary in the 1820s. But what was actually discovered was that conditions of sensory deprivation in
isolation caused mental deterioration and psychosis. Leading writers like Charles Dickens and Charles Darwin upon touring the penitentiary spoke out against its conditions of daily tampering with the mysteries of the brain to be immeasurably worse than any torture of the body. The U.S. Supreme Court ultimately ruled such solitary confinement mentally destructive and outlawed it “… It stated: ‘A considerable number of prisoners fell, after even a short confinement, into a semi-fatuous condition, from which it was next to impossible to remove them, and others became “Abu Ghraib Comes to America” 13 by Kevin “Rashid” Johnson October 30, 2010 violently insane; others still committed suicide, while those who stood the ordeal better were
generally not reformed and in most cases did not recover sufficient mental activity to be of subsequent service to the community.’ In Re Medley, 134 U.S. 160, 168 (1890). “Many modern courts have found the same conditions and injuries to prisoners from confinement in modern control units as did the high court of 1890 in the Medley case …. See, e.g. Madrid v. Gomez, 889 F. Supp. 1146 (1995): ‘[M]any, if not most, inmates in SHU [Special Housing Unit]
experience some degree of psychological trauma in relation to their extreme social isolation and the severely restricted environmental stimulation in SHU.’ This court concluded that confinement under such conditions ‘may press the outer bounds of what humans can psychologically tolerate … The psychological consequences of living in these units for long periods of time are predictably
destructive, and the potential for these psychological stressors to precipitate various forms of psychopathology is clear cut.’ Another court found that ‘isolating human beings from other human beings year after year or even month after month can cause substantial psychological damage, even if the isolation is not total.’ Davenport v. DeRoberts, 884 F. zd1310, 1313, 1316 (1989).
7 “Self-inflicted pain” may be applied in a variety of ways, e.g. compelling one to stand at length, kneel or sit on hard surfaces at length, remain in cramped and painful positions, etc. These are called “stress positions.” The key is that the body is used as a weapon against itself, without an external device, thus giving the impression that the victim is causing his/her own suffering. As the 1983 Honduran tortures manual, modeled after the CIA’s 1963 torture handbook, teaches “pain which he [the subject] feels he is inflicting upon himself is more likely to sap his resistance.” Op. cit. Note 5, p. 136.

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The American Prisoner and the International Human Rights Day Dilemma

Eleanor Roosevelt and United Nations Universal...

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Direct Action for Rights and Equality (DARE) will call attention to International Human Rights Day, by sending cards to hundreds of prisoners at the Adult Correctional Institutions and around the country.  On Thursday, December 2nd, the Behind the Walls Prison Committee will meet at DARE, 340 Lockwood St., Providence, RI to personalize and address the cards.  They are being timed to arrive in the cellblocks on December 10th, Human Rights Day.

December 10, 1948 the United Nations adopted the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR), a full century after another civil rights declaration was made in Seneca Falls regarding women’s rights in America.  Forty-eight nations adopted UDHR, while eight abstained (6 defunct Soviet nations, apartheid South Africa, and Saudi Arabia).  If it were to be considered a “Treaty,” it would be considered the “supreme law of the land” due to provisions of the United States Constitution.

Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch are two of the organizations to have truly seized on the UDHR as a moral high ground, particularly as relates to political prisoners.  This pertains to (primarily) political dissidents around the globe.  It might be surprising as to how much campaign work they do in America, as they did for Troy Davis, who sits on Georgia’s Death Row even though no physical evidence connects him to the crime and the only major witness not to recant has been accused as the actual killer.  Davis’ appeal was denied around the same time as stories insinuating two innocent men have been put to death in Texas.  Amnesty International is conducting a “Write for Rights” campaign, December 4-12.

The United States is ground zero for repressive penal policies.  Founded in part as a penal colony, the first prisons were for runaway slaves and servants.  Being the last Western nation to abolish institutional slavery, America continues to utilize prison labor as an exemption from slavery in the Thirteenth Amendment.  America, while projecting “Freedom” through global media and government funded operations (including the Peace Corps and the military), simultaneously leads the world in prisons, prisoners, prison guards, and money spent to imprison Americans.  It has gotten so repressive and misaligned with global norms, a conservative Congress has been forced to pass the National Criminal Justice Commission Act.  The House acted quicker than the Senate, where the issue was originated by Senator Jim Webb (VA), and has 39 co-sponsors, including Rhode Island’s former top federal law enforcement officer, Sheldon Whitehouse.

American prisons are where one can find the first human rights struggle dominated by “guilty” people.  Among the 2.3 million prisoners there are thousands of people motivated by conscientious objection to the laws and policies of our government, which (in other countries) we would label “political prisoners.”  Some have websites and resources in support, and have been affiliated with known political groups and causes over the past half century.  Some are likely to have been framed for crimes due to their political activity, such as Leonard Peltier or Mumia Abu Jamal.  But most are entirely anonymous, wearing khaki or gray or orange- whatever suits the local penitentiary.

The Innocence Project has famously taken on a very narrow portion of innocent people among the 2.3 million: DNA evidence in capital cases.  This fails to cover the vast majority of cases that hinge upon the testimony of one person- often a drug addicted and/or paid informant for the authorities.  Conservative estimates range from 1-10% of American prisons are filled with innocent people, or 23,000 to 230,000 people.

The most commonly defied laws in America are the drug prohibitions which bar the individual liberty to ingest certain plant products and derivatives.  This includes the outlawing of naturally growing plants.  Such laws fly in the face of many liberals, conservatives, libertarians, herbalists, and a host of ideologies.  These laws are flaunted by close to half of the American population, in one form or another (including, by admission, the past three presidents of the United States).  Such mass defiance can only be viewed as political opposition, rather than isolated criminal activity, and such laws should be reviewed.  4.5 million registered voters in California urged the legalization and regulation of marijuana last month, in perhaps the largest political protest of criminal justice policy in history.

With four times more mentally ill people in prison than in mental hospitals, it is clear that there is a lack of health-based modes of treatment, particularly for the poor and working class- and we have relegated mental illness, and the “acting out” that accompanies lack of treatment, into a crime.  We have set aside resources to hide this ailment in our prisons, along with addiction.

Immigration Detention policy has developed a for-profit gulag maintained in the shadows of human rights by corporations traded on Wall Street. Corrections Corporation of America, Halliburton, and others have earned billions from the taxpayers based on the myths about immigrants being inherently evil.  New laws like Arizona’s SB1070 only further the federal norm, where people without pristine documentation of themselves will spend an average of one year in the gulag before being deported or released.  Those who make a claim of human rights abuse, while in the gulag, merely get deported prior to the hearing.  Residents of Rhode Island can recall the tampering of evidence regarding Luis Mendonca, victim of a videotaped police beating.  Some in authority wanted Mendonca badly deported, even though he was not eligible to be cast away.  Instead he sat in the gulag for six months.

When something is so blatant and calculated, one must entertain the possibility that it is working precisely how it was designed… regardless of the criticism.  Prison sentences have tripled in length, across the board, in the past few decades.  Each year there are new crimes, while hardly ever is there a repeal.  The result is more prison construction, an entirely state-subsidized industry, and a rising percentage of people in prison.  One could argue this is a good thing, having nothing to do with crime and safety, and I believe such proponents are fearful of making their case.  So they lie.  They make it about “public safety.”

The amount of jobs available in America has been a shrinking percentage of the population since the 1970s.  As wages have decreased, so have the opportunities.  One way to obfuscate the truth is to talk about “Unemployment” rates.  This merely measures the amount of people who are officially seeking work, rather than taking into account all the people who do not have jobs.  The prison population reduces Unemployment numbers by a full 1% alone.  Consider next that almost another 1% has been released from prison within the past year, and is more likely to be working Off the Books than standing in the Unemployment Line.  As our Third World economy rises in this country, far fewer will be eligible for unemployment benefits or any other form of social safety net.  Meanwhile, the enforcement of this underclass is a booming a largesse of paramilitaries; no different than the Crackers and slave catchers of yesteryear.

On International Human Rights Day, prison activists all over the world will re-commit to the efforts to stop the use of humans as an industry, and some prisoners will be able to share with others the fact that they are still human, still loved, and not forgotten.

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National Anti-Prison Groups Call to Action: December 10th

Timeline of total number of inmates in U.S. pr...

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December 10, 2010 marks the next International Human Rights Day. We have
seen the State systematically expand the Prison-Industrial Complex (PIC)
as part of its larger efforts to further enrich the elite at the expense
of communities and individuals both within the empire and throughout the
world. Building on the momentum we created at the United States Social
Forum
last June, we are committed to 2010 marking a renewed, coordinated
campaign to challenge and dismantle the oppressive penal system that
destroys our communities, families and lives.

This International Human Rights Day, connect your local struggle to
struggles throughout the United States! Organize an action for on or
around December 10, any action at all–a demonstration, a film
screening, a skill share, a letter writing night, a direct action, a
fundraiser for political prisoners/prisoners of war, a free meal,
anything you want. Plan it well, make it big, show your friends and
neighbors the strength we have when we join together to take on this system!

Then show the rest of the movement how successful you have been! We have
launched a new website to help unite our struggles and document our
strengths, successes, challenges and hard-learned lessons from the
frontlines of the battle against the PIC: https://unprison.wordpress.com.
Help us build this website by sending us your photos, videos and
narratives of your action!

Check out the website for more info about this new group, how you and
your organization can join up and how you can post your action to the
website for everyone to see. We hold regular conference calls so that
everyone can be a part of our work.

Our next national conference call is on:

Monday, November 29
6pm EST/3pm PST
Phone Number: 605.477.2100
Access Code: 164607#

In solidarity,

Organizers from the US Social Forum Anti-Prison People’s Movement Assembly

* About us:

We formed through the Prison Justice People’s Movement Assembly (PMA) at
the 2010 US Social Forum in Detroit. Organizers from around the country
joined together to host the PMA and take some steps towards building a
more unified resistance to the Prison-Industrial Complex and its effects
on our communities and lives. Since the Forum, we have been working to
create an infrastructure through which we can continue strengthening our
individual organizing while benefiting from the skills we can share with
each other and the ways in which our work intersects. In all our work,
we are dedicated to creating solutions and organizing campaigns that are
directed by the people most affected by the PIC, such as poor people,
people of color, queer and trans people, women, political prisoners
(PPs) and prisoners of war (POWs), and formerly incarcerated people. We
call on all individuals and organizations engaged in this struggle to
fight against systemic oppression within their own communities and
relationships in addition to countering the PIC. The fight against
oppression begins within, and we cannot free our prisoners if we are
oppressing each other and aiding the State in its efforts to oppress and
destroy our communities.

* This call to action endorsed by:

EWOK! (Earth Warriors are OK!), Resistance in Brooklyn, the RNC 8
Defense Committee, the Scott & Carrie Support Committee (SCSC), the Wild
Poppies Collective, Direct Action for Rights and Equality, Justice for Shifa

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Another Innocent Man Put to Death in Texas

The Texas Observer uncovers the unanswered plea for DNA testing by the Texas court system and the Governor Bush administration.  Turns out, the one piece of evidence (a hair) does not match Claude Jones, executed in 2000.

This follows the heels of  revelations regarding Cameron Todd Willingham, executed in 2004 by Gov. Rick Perry, for his children dying in a fire which was never an arson.  See the incisive Frontline documentary, “Death by Fire,” here.

Posted in Innocence | Tagged , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Tell Senator Whitehouse: “Just Say No” on DEA Appointee

During tomorrow’s Senate Judiciary Committee, Senator Sheldon Whitehouse will have the opportunity to weigh in, and block, Obama’s appointment of Michele Leonhart as Director of the Drug Enforcement Agency.  Leonhart has served as interim director and is particularly known for her refusal to respect states’ Medical Marijuana laws.

Considering Rhode Island is among 15 states that have legalized marijuana for medical purposes, Senator Whitehouse has a duty to protect his constituents from federal interference.  Latest RI medical marijuana news can be found here. He can ask Ms. Leonhart:

Why the DEA refuses to heed the American Medical Association’s call to reschedulemarijuana from the top category (along with heroin and cocaine);

Why the DEA has ignored the 2009 Dept. of Justice memo calling on the feds to respect the rights of medical marijuana growers;

Why, regarding tens of thousand dead at the Border she said: “Our view is that the violence we have been seeing is a signpost of the success our very courageous Mexican counterparts are having,”Leonhart said. The cartels are acting out like caged animals, because they are caged animals.”  Is she implying that even more violence in America would be a sign of success in the drug war?

Call Senator Whitehouse today, and let him know that we need a forward thinking director of the DEA, not an old guard militant, because if we ever propose real solutions we want people in place who can handle it.

401-453-5294

202-224-2921 (D.C.)

 

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9th Circuit Calls for Proof: Is Prison System Racist?

The 9th Circuit Federal Court of Appeals court has reversed course and upheld Washington state’s ban on voting by prison inmates.  The ruling came last week in a case that challenged the ban under the Voting Rights Act, claiming it disproportionately disenfranchised minority voters.
In January, a three-judge panel of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals caused a stir by ruling that Washington’s inmates should be able to vote. But an 11-judge panel reconsidered the case at a hearing in San Francisco last month and came to a different conclusion.
The judges said that to challenge a ban on felons from voting, plaintiffs must at least show that “the criminal justice system is infected by intentional discrimination or that the felon disenfranchisement law was enacted with such intent.”

It remains to be seen what the plaintiffs will do.  The lead attorneys are NAACP Legal Defense Fund which, incidentally, has also looked into the issue of prison-based gerrymandering (which I have written extensively about).  Although the federal district court in this case looked at statistical evidence and stated, yes, “there is discrimination in Washington’s prison system on account of race,” will folks belabor to prove the results are intentional?

I suggest the LDF recruit scholars of the Reconstruction era.  The intent of a given law or amendment is sometimes clear in the official “Notes” on the record, but would be much more concise given the letters and diaries of the lawmakers.  One might argue that any overt racial discrimination then has little bearing on the facts of now.  But I counter by asking, when was the last time we had a structural overhaul about prisons and what they are doing to America?  What was the intent of those who brought (or allowed) major supplies of opiates and cocaine into this country?  What was the intent of centralizing low-income housing and the intent of policing those areas like concentration camps?
There is a unique opportunity in the 9th Circuit, under the umbrella of voting rights, to truly analyze the intent and results of our prison systems.  There would be scholarly analysis on both sides overseen by the hopefully unbiased wisdom of our judiciary.
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Love the Warrior. Hate the War!

Last year I brought attention to the number of vets fighting substance abuse issues and filling prisons at rates far surpassing the Vietnam Vet era.  America still hasn’t seemed to grasped the collateral damage we are doing to our warriors and those around them.  Soldier suicides are an all time high, the VA can’t keep up with the medical needs (i.e. Walter Reed scandal), and veterans are faced with a civilian economy that is as dismal as any of them have experienced.  And yet still, one is attacked as un-American when wanting the Iraq and Afghanistan occupations to cease immediately.  Michael Reagan called for killing activists.   Protests are  rarely seen as “support” for the warriors- the spin doctors and warmongers pitch this as an insult to the warriors.  Fortunately, HBO marks this Vets Day with a documentary, WarTorn, on the history of PTSD.

Cultural awareness around post-war Vietnam’s legacy came through songs like Born in the USADisposable Heroes, and movies such as Born on the 4th of July and Rambo.  (Coincidentally, one of the most highly anticipated MTV videos ever was “One,” an anti-war song by Metallica.)  With a new 1980s epidemic on our hands known as “addiction,” the launching of a war on addicts put many a vet in the cross-hairs.  Was it the Homeless Vet on the side of the intersection that finally pierced the pop culture?  At any rate, we are still ultimately blinded by flags and fly-overs during sporting events.  We pay billions on military recruitment, billions more on winning our own “hearts and minds,” and even sponsor several NASCAR teams under the military banner.  And it seems like we only talk about the good, dead, soldier.  Not the new vets, whose unemployment rates are higher than average, rising from 7% in 2008 to 12.5% today.

Of the vets I know quite well, I got to know former Marine Joe D on a far deeper level than my own brother, himself a 101st Airborne Sergeant.  I knew Joe beyond the bio.  I knew what made him tick, his humanity, and could understand his conscience without him communicating specifics.  In fact, I reference him on the very first page of my book NewJack’s Guide to the Big House.  We spent the better part of a decade in the same cellblock in prison- both Maximum and Medium Securities.

Joe and my brother were always very aware of the conflict between fighting for the country and supporting questionable foreign policy.  Between them, they had served in every skirmish the Reagan, Bush, and Clinton Pentagons devised.  They had a slightly different awareness of Timothy McVeigh and “The Sniper,” just as any of us who have experiences that provide for a bit more experience than the general public.  Whether fighting for control of foreign markets, oil, or drug cartels, the average soldier knows when they are being used… yet cannot give up the honor of protecting their country.  And once they’ve been there, the cat doesn’t get back in the bag.

I don’t know Joe D for what got him into prison.  I know the aftermath.  Joe was as solid a Con as his USMC tattoo, and a role model for staying in shape.  “Use it or lose it, Bruha.  Just like your mind, you gotta keep it going.”  Known for his dips, pull-ups, and pushups, Joe’s calisthenics kept him possibly the fittest guy in the System.  Like Michael Jordan and Karl Malone, a shaved head kept the hairline from betraying their age.  Joe was always positive and encouraging.  Time and again he would say that my mind and heart would take me big places.  As for him, he just wanted to get out someday.

A few days ago, former Marine Joe D finally got out of prison.  He got out in a box, as we say, after 19 years inside.  I still haven’t gotten details from the prison.  Rumor has it he just keeled over from a brain aneurysm or some similar mysterious ailment that only people with health care could ever catch.  And just like that, Joe is erased from the Department of Corrections database.  He is no longer a number.  No longer part of this expensive equation of Crime and Punishment that never adds up to much.  Just another guy whose Life sentence turned into death.

How many Joe D’s will go into prison from the legacy of Iraq and Afghanistan? Naturally, people short-circuit who were not in combat nor regimented by the military, nor ever sat in the paradox of killing and murder and when violence is an acceptable response and when it is not.  A Bureau of Justice report indicates that Vets go into prison at lower rates than the general population, but their crimes are far likelier to be for violent actions.  This makes rational sense.  On the one hand, conditioned to obey; on the other, when things go wrong they go really wrong.

What does not make rational sense is a culture which categorizes War as “patriotic” and Peace as “treasonous.”  A true democracy celebrates differences of opinion and can weigh different strategies to obtain results.  One could realistically presume that a country with such zeal for war holds an overall goal of “Global Domination.” This is a rational goal, and many board games encourage it.  But I don’t recall this conversation happening, nor this conclusion being drawn.

Somehow the United States of America has never gone a single yearwithout combat.  Somehow it has continuously extracted money from its citizenry to fund what is now a ring of military bases spanning the globe.  Rather than tax cuts for the rich we get war.  Rather than an education movement we get war.  Rather than a renewable energy car, cities on wind power, and a laundry list of goodies for every pet project… we get war.  If history is any indicator: there will never be a Peace Dividend for the American people.

With every WikiLeak that does not inspire outrage and resistance from the people, the desensitization deepens.  With that said, I believe it is harder to be “The Man.”  It is more expensive to manufacture consent.  With each new media format comes another avenue that needs suppression.  As people’s education comes more from the links they hype on Facebook, comes the need for a new information gatekeeper.  In an age of Google Images, it seems like 20 years ago George W. Bush was banning photographs of flag-draped coffins at Dover AFB.  Can they really put up a veneer that nobody is dying?  It requires so much effort, and so many commentators calling all dissenters’ patriotism into question.  Stay tuned: the fight for Net Neutrality, and those who would like to control the flow of information are circling the wagons.

If the wars become totally privatized, and all of the troops wearBlackwater XE armbands rather than American flags, would we call them “vets?”  It is only a matter of time before Blackwater mercenaries, a.k.a. “contractors,” are filing for VA benefits.  Before they are forming their own contingents during Veterans’ Day parades.  Those mercenaries, who have come together from around the world, are being paid up to ten times what the American soldier is paid… from the same U.S. Treasury.  So what’s the difference?  Quite a bit.

The Occupation of Iraq did not end when some soldiers were replaced with mercenaries.  The Occupation of Afghanistan has a faux-ending that constantly is pushed back.  Will it fade into some “normal” situation like Northern Ireland or Palestine?  Post-invasion occupations on this scale have not happened since World War II.  Since that time, North Korea was expelled from South.  America was expelled from Vietnam.  Both before the “battle” phase had been completed.  The “Godless” Soviets did not unleash the sort of firepower upon the Afghani people as the U.S. has.  Their decade of occupation still came to an end.  What is our end?

I’m happy that my brother did not take the Blackwater money.  I love him, and consider him to be a highly trained valuable asset that can protect his community if there were ever a true disaster.  If a Katrina happened in his hometown, he would be out there with a rope and a buck knife saving folks in myriad ways.  I wish he hadn’t been exposed to all that Depleted Uranium and injections and whatever else gave him the “Gulf War Syndrome,” but he lives on.  And I’m happy he never melted down like Joe D.  We all have our baggage.  I for one think we need to stop forcing the Vets to need U-Hauls for all that weight.  Love the Warrior.  Hate the War.

 

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International Human Rights Day 2010

On December 10th, people from around the world will be taking a look at the need to imprison people and strip them of their rights. America is the global leader of incarceration, with certain corporations earning billions of dollars from the suffering.
What will YOU do on December 10th, 2010?

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