Author Archives: Editor

Protests Planned In Over 20 States To Expose ‘Slave-Like’ Conditions In U.S. Prisons

ThinkProgress.org

Protests Planned In Over 20 States To Expose ‘Slave-Like’ Conditions In U.S. Prisons

Credit: Dylan Petrohilos/ThinkProgress

Thousands of inmates in state and federal prisons in up to 24 states are planning an organized strike and protest on Friday — potentially the largest prison strike in U.S. history. Planned for the anniversary of the Attica Prison riot, the protest aims to bring widespread attention to inhumane living conditions, “slave-like” labor, and daily injustices that plague the shadowy cell-blocks of the justice system.

Across the country, it’s common practice for American inmates to be forced to work in “slave-like” conditions, doing long hours of hard labor with little or no compensation, and they’ve had enough. Though the strike on Friday, as planned, is the largest yet, the national prison work stoppage comes after a long, largely unreported build-up in collective action among America’s prisoners protesting these conditions.

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IWOC Sep 9 News Release

The Industrial Workers of the World (IWW)

Incarcerated Workers Organizing Committee (IWOC)

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Contact Information:
Phillip A. Ruiz
Incarcerated Worker Organizing Committee
TEL:(816) 866-3808 or (323) 691-0557
wobista@protonmail.com

International Prison Strike Slated to Begin September 9th

IWW General Headquarters, Chicago, IL. Sept.9th, 2016

The Incarcerated Workers Organizing Committee (IWOC) announces that the first internationally coordinated prison strike in history is scheduled to begin today, with the support of the IWW and the participation of over eight hundred incarcerated IWW members. The prisoners who began organizing the strike had originally sent out this request: “To every prisoner…we call on you to stop being a slave, to let the crops rot in the plantation fields, to go on strike and cease reproducing the institutions of your confinement.” September 9th was chosen as the date to begin the strike because it is the 45th anniversary of the Attica Uprising in New York state, the most notorious prison rebellion in US history. Continue reading

US prisoners are going on strike to protest a massive forced labor system

From qz.com

US prisoners are going on strike to protest a massive forced labor system

5 hours ago

On Friday (Sept. 9) prison inmates across the US will participate in what organizers are touting as the “largest prison strike in history,” stopping work in protest of what many call a modern version of slavery.

The protest, organized across 24 states, is spearheaded by the inmate-led Free Alabama Movement (FAM) and coordinated by the Incarcerated Workers Organizing Committee (IWOC), a branch of an international labor union. Its manifesto, published online by “prisoners across the United States,” reads:

This is a call to end slavery in America…To every prisoner in every state and federal institution across this land, we call on you to stop being a slave, to let the crops rot in the plantation fields, to go on strike and cease reproducing the institutions of your confinement.

The strike will be held on the 45th anniversary of the Attica prison revolt, when prisoners took control of a maximum-security correctional facility near Buffalo, New York, demanding better conditions and an end to their brutal treatment.

‘It’s Just Dressed Up Slavery’: America’s Shadow Workforce Rises Up Against Prison Labor

From ThinkProgress.org

 

‘It’s Just Dressed Up Slavery’: America’s Shadow Workforce Rises Up Against Prison Labor

Dismantling the myths that drive an exploitative multi-million-dollar industry.

Louisiana Department of Corrections Sgt. Boo McKey watches a work crew head to the fields at the Louisiana State Penitentiary in Angola, La. CREDIT: AP Photo/Bill Haber/Dylan Petrohilos/ThinkProgress

As soon as Stewart Anderson stepped foot inside the Lorton Reformatory, a Virginia prison, he knew he’d have to work for negligible pay in order to endure his 20-year sentence. At Lorton, prison labor was voluntary. But prison food was difficult to swallow, and Anderson wanted to supplement his diet with commissary items: peanut butter, noodles, dried fruit, and Kipper Snapper, a brand of fish in a can.

“It was more of a volunteer thing than it was forced labor, but it was tantamount to the same thing,” the D.C. native, who was convicted for assaulting a police officer, told ThinkProgress. “The system systematically forces you to work without ‘forcing you to work.’ Poor quality of food drives you to take on a prison job that pays you an average of 32 cents an hour, and you worked an average of five, six hours a day.”

Because he was able to read and write well, Anderson was always assigned to clerical work — answering phones and keeping inventory of products made by fellow prisoners. He was hellbent on avoiding the grunt work that most people have to do behind bars: scrubbing floors, cooking, sewing clothes, manufacturing license plates for the general public. He was equally determined to develop and hone skills he could use to employ himself when he got out. All the while, he was under no illusion that the purpose of the work was to train people like himself for the day they re-entered society.

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Black Liberation and the Abolition of the Prison Industrial Complex

From TrueLeapPress.com

Black Liberation and the Abolition of the Prison Industrial Complex

An Interview with Rachel Herzing

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Rachel Herzing lives and works in Oakland, CA, where she fights the violence of policing and imprisonment. She is a co-founder of Critical Resistance, a national grassroots organization dedicated to abolishing the prison industrial complex and the Co-Director of the StoryTelling & Organizing Project, a community resource sharing stories of interventions to interpersonal harm that do not rely on policing, imprisonment, or traditional social services. The following interview was conducted by the True Leap Publishing Collective.


 

True Leap Press (TLP): Hi Rachel, thank you so much for taking the time to do this interview. We are excited to have you as a contributor in this inaugural edition of Propter Nos. Our publishing collective thinks the specific timing of this issue is important to highlight, as it is set to be released in the closing days of Black August. Could you possibly explain what Black August is for our readers, and why it is so important for people to recognize today?

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Support the Resistance: Subscribe to the Incarcerated Worker or Sponsor a Union Membership!

From IWOC.NOGBLOGS.ORG

Prisoners are going on strike against prison slavery on September 9, 2016. Help support their organizing, and hear their story. Subscribe to the Incarcerated Worker, a mini-magazine written and edited by prisoners. Subscriptions  are $20/year, and all proceeds go to supporting prisoner organizing.

CLICK HERE TO SUBSCRIBE!

 

Can you swing a bit more for prisoner resistance?

Sponsor union membership for a prisoner for $5/month or $60/year.

CLICK HERE TO SPONSOR A UNION MEMBERSHIP!

We encourage union locals and community groups to sponsor membership for incarcerated workers in prisons in your area. If you’re interested in finding ways to support the resistance against prison slavery, get in touch!

Hundreds of inmates riot at Florida prison

September 8, 2016 1:34 PM

Hundreds of inmates riot at Florida prison

Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/news/state/florida/article100618707.html#storylink=cpy