Prison Strikes in California
http://rt.com/usa/california-prisoners-hunger-strike-852/
30,000 inmates across 11 facilities are protesting to demand "that the state retire its current solitary confinement policies and allow inmates accused of prison gang involvement to spend a maximum of only five years in isolation. Currently there is no limit on how long inmates thought to be connected to internal gangs can spend in Segregated Housing Units (SHUs). According to the LA Times, 4,527 inmates at four state prisons are now living in such units - including 1,180 at Pelican Bay State Prison in northern California, where the demonstration was hatched."
In solidarity with this, but can only hope they get some real progress out of this movement.
This is also interesting: "The state does not officially recognize a hunger strike until participants have refused nine consecutive meals. On Monday, corrections spokeswoman Terry Thornton told the LA Times that 30,000 prisoners skipped breakfast and lunch, putting them on course to launch an actual strike by the middle of the week."
A lot of these folks are subdued to terrible treatment in their facilities, and currently over "10,000 prisoners" are being held in solitary confinement.












