7x9 Performance Against Solitary Confinement
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7x9 Performance Against Solitary Confinement
A Clean, Well Lighted Place for the Banality of Evil
Special to OLAASM by a comrade
“I’m sleepy now. I never get into bed before three o’clock. He should have killed himself last week.”
- Ernest Hemingway, 'A Clean, Well Lighted Place’
There is a photo of a four-year-old me swaddled in a puffy, winter coat - a repurposed jump-rope cinched tightly around my waist securing an over-sized couch cushion to my butt. In it, I am standing upright-yet-unsteady on borrowed roller skates - but the picture clearly conveys that I am teetering on the brink of imminent catastrophe.
My sisters didn't teach me how to roller skate that day, but that isn't really important to me now. What matters is how much care went into helping me try. Solidarity - the sense that my struggle was inseparable from my sisters' and yet could only be achieved through my effort alone - that's what I remember when I look at that old photograph.
I am reminded of learning to skate because I felt much the same way then as I did when I surrendered at LA County's imposing central jail to serve a 30 day sentence dispensed, despite many serious-sounding proclamations by my prosecutor and judge to the contrary, solely due to my involvement in "Occupy." For whatever reason - mostly, I'm convinced, a combination of dumb luck and my own white skin - I had managed to live 33 years without seriously running afoul of the law. Or at least without encountering the consequences of being caught for it. Occupy changed that.
In truth, I hadn't even had so much as a speeding ticket in the fifteen years before I became involved in that now-fashionably-maligned-but-always-hearteningly-earnest gasp for social justice. I had chosen instead to quietly lead my own unremarkable life, wallowing in an entirely individualized and mostly-private melancholy I was convinced I was fated to endure alone.
While I believed deeply that things were generally wrong in the world, I was unable or unwilling to muster what it takes to openly defy the forces that wanted things to stay that way. I accepted the bribes those forces offered me to keep quiet.
I grumbled here and there about politicians, sure. I groaned at the media circus that so often seemed so easily misdirected. I opened a Twitter account for the occasional rant, but was seldom compelled to use it. I did what most white people I knew did: I got by as best I could, day-by-day, making as little trouble as I knew how.
I finally found myself living vicariously through other revolutions - white-knuckling what felt like real anxiety as I watched live footage streaming out of Tahrir or Syntagma Squares. People were doing far more with far less against far more brazen injustices than I could fathom in North Africa, the Middle East, and even Europe. People were resisting in Greece and Spain, too. They didn't see it as hopeless. They weren't resigned to the sad, solitary fate I saw for myself.
It wasn't long before I was angrily indicting my own government's clear culpability in the repressive wrath each of these uprisings inevitably met. This was the "peace dividend" we had bequeathed to the world! I couldn't overlook that each tear gas canister I saw fired into a peaceful crowd bore the same, familiar stamp: "Made in the USA." Someone here was getting rich every time a crowd was violently dispersed and, in all likelihood, that person looks and acts a lot like me.
PUSH to publish EMERGENCY CALL! JOIN US IN STOPPING TORTURE IN U.S. PRISONS!
THIS IS AN EMERGENCY. It’s day 44 of the California prisoners’ hunger strike to end the torture of solitary confinement and other abuses. Never have so many prisoners participated (30,000) and never have so many (nearly 100) maintained a hunger strike so long. Now California is preparing to force-feed these hunger strikers. Guantanamo all over again - further torturing those protesting torture. This must be stopped!
So please sign the Emergency Call to Stop Torture. Make a generous contribution so it can be published. ($6,400 is needed for half-page ad, $13,000 for full-page.) Talk to others about doing likewise.
Publishing this ad in the LA Times will inform 100's of thousands who know little or nothing about the hunger strike; it will counter authorities' lies and vilification of the prisoners, and it will show California that growing numbers see their actions as unconscionable and illegitimate!
Join: Viggo Mortensen; Noam Chomsky, professor, (Ret.), MIT; Oscar Grant Foundation; Legal Services for Prisoners with Children; Prison Watch Network; Witness Against Torture; San Francisco Bay View Newspaper; Cornel West, author, educator, voice of conscience; Luis Valdez, Founding Artistic Director, El Teatro Campesino; Gbenga Akinnagbe, actor and director; Arturo O'Farrill, Afro Latin Jazz Alliance; Cindy Sheehan, anti-war activist; Fr. Gregory J. Boyle, Homeboy Industries; Marjorie Cohn, Professor, Thomas Jefferson School of Law and editor, "The United States and Torture: Interrogation, Incarceration, and Abuse"; Wayne Kramer, Jail Guitar Doors USA; Chuck D, Public Enemy*; Rev. George F. Regas, Interfaith Communities United for Justice and Peace*; Cynthia McKinney, former Congresswoman & 2008 Presidential Candidate for the Green Party; Standish Willis, National Conference of Black Lawyers, Gerry Condon, Board of Directors, Veterans For Peace and hundreds more.
EMERGENCY CALL! JOIN US IN STOPPING TORTURE IN U.S. PRISONS!
Tens of thousands of people imprisoned in the US are being subjected to torturous, inhumane conditions. Many are: • Held in long term solitary confinement; locked in tiny, windowless, sometimes sound proof, cells; cut off from fresh air and sunlight for 22-24 hours every day and given small portions of food that lack basic nutritional requirements. • Denied human contact and violently taken from their cells for petty violations. • Put in solitary arbitrarily, often because of accusations for being members of prison gangs based on dubious evidence, with no way to challenge the decisions of prison authorities to place them in solitary.
Many are forced to endure these conditions for months, years and even decades! Mental anguish and trauma often results from being confined under these conditions. Locking people down like this amounts to trying to strip them of their humanity. These conditions fit the international definition of torture! This is unjust, illegitimate and profoundly immoral. WE MUST JOIN IN AN EFFORT TO STOP IT, NOW!
People imprisoned at Pelican Bay and other prisons in California launched a nationwide Hunger Strike on July 8, 2013. Prisoners at Pelican Bay also issued a call for unity among people from different racial groups, inside and outside the prisons. People who are locked down in segregation units of this society’s prisons, condemned as the “worst of the worst,” are standing up against injustice, asserting their humanity in the process. We must have the humanity to hear their call, and answer it with powerful support!
A nationwide and worldwide struggle needs to be built NOW to bring an end to this widespread torture and to support the prisoners who have put their lives on the line.
To the Government: We Demand an Immediate End to the Torture and Inhumanity of Prison House America – Immediately Disband All Torture Chambers. Meet the Demands of Those You Have Locked Down In Your Prisons!
To People in this Country and Around the World: We Cannot Accept, and We Should Not Tolerate This Torture. Join the Struggle to End Torture in Prisons Now!
To Those Standing Up in Resistance Inside The Prisons: WE SUPPORT YOUR CALL FOR UNITY IN THIS FIGHT, AND WE WILL HAVE YOUR BACKS!
More signatories: Robin D.G. Kelley, Distinguished Professor of History, UCLA; Rev. Stephen Phelps, The Riverside Church, NYC; Peter Schey, President, Center for Human Rights and Constitutional Law*; William Ayers; Laura Markle Downton, NRCAT Director of U.S. Prisons Policy & Program; Colin Dayan, Professor of the Humanities, Vanderbilt University; Larry Aubry, Advocates for Black Strategic Alternatives; Rev. Dr. Dorsey O. Blake, Presiding Minister, The Church for the Fellowship of All Peoples, S.F. CA; Blase Bonpane, Ph.D., Director, OFFICE OF THE AMERICAS; CAL Football* Players Alejandro Crosthwaite, Khairi Fort, and Richard Rodgers; Carl Dix, Revolutionary Communist Party; Glen Ford, Black Agenda Report; James Lafferty, Executive Director, National Lawyers Guild / Los Angeles; Dr. Antonio Martinez, Institute for Survivors of Human Rights Abuses* and co-founder of the Marjorie Kovler Center for the Treatment of Survivors of Torture*; Marilyn McMahon, California Prison Focus*; Rev. Dr. Karen Oliveto, Pastor, Glide Memorial Church*, Belinda Ramos, son serving life in a California State Prison; Helen Schietinger, Torture Abolition and Survivors Support Coalition (TASSC, International); Jim Vrettos, professor, John Jay College; Ron Ahnen, California Prison Focus; Dorsey Nunn, All Of Us Or None; Rev. Richard Meri Ka Ra Byrd, KRST Unity Center; John Burris, Civil Rights Attorney; Josh Fattal, Author; Rev. Frank Wulf, United University Church, LA, CA; Charles Carbone Esq., Prison Rights Attorney; Alex Sanchez, Executive Director, Homies Unidos; Rev. Frederick Trost, President, Wisconsin Conference, United Church of Christ (Ret.); Fr. Bob Bossie SCJ; Ron Jacobs, writer; King Downing, Human Rights Racial Justice Center; Rael Nidess M.D.; Khalil Gibran Muhammad, Director, Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture*; Peadar King, Irish Filmaker, Presenter/ Producer of the Irish documentary series “What in the World?”; J. Tony Serra, Lawyer; John Galbraith Simmons, medical writer and author, Corey Weinstein M.D., SF, CA, Lisa Guenther, Vanderbilt Philosophy Professor, Author of Solitary Confinement: Social Death and its Afterlives more Complete list of signatories
Solidarity from New York to California, our banner made it to Los Angeles!
How I Do
Just did a radio interview to talk about the prisoners on day 15 of their hunger strike. The interviewer asked me how I got into "this work".
I do work to abolish the Prison Industrial Complex. I do this work because after being involved in LG"BTQ" organizing I wanted to do work that actually impacted all of my communities (Black, Queer/Trans*, Poor, female-assigned) and it's very clear to me that all of those groups are targeted & impacted by the PIC. I've thrown myself into this work because of the sense of urgency I feel not only in relation to these attacks, but because of the clear connections between the work and people I love.
I do this work because I don't expect to be saved. Because I don't believe in prayer (even though I still find myself doing it sometimes). Because I know that "maintaining the status quo" means allowing people to be surveilled, policed, caged, tortured & killed for the sake of someone else's comfort. I do this work because for all of us to move beyond surviving and genuinely begin to thrive we need to look to each other, not those that continue to exploit, dehumanize, and kill us. Because handcuffs and batons don't help people get jobs, better education, more quality food, healthier interpersonal relationships, healthcare, or anything else that would truly respond to the social and economic conditions that have ravaged communities across the globe.
I do this work because I dream of one day having my whole family in one place, without fighting, without fear, without shade. Because every person that crosses my path & becomes my family makes my heart beat just a little stronger, makes me want to be a little bit bolder. I do this out of fear of the world my niece is stepping into, and anger for all of the trauma brought to bare in my lifetime that I know was of no direct fault of those I used to blame. I do this because we are stronger than we think, and we have survived so much already.
COMMUNITY SPOTLIGHT: #CAHungerStrike #PelicanBay Awareness
POCZP Donor and Resistance Behind Bars author Victoria Law (who also edits Tenacious zine) will be on the "Melissa Harris-Perry" show this Saturday, July 13 (show starts at 10am ET), to talk about what is happening at #PelicanBay and other prisons in California. Vikki will be discussing her recent article about the Pelican Bay hunger strikes and the families organizing in support of their demands.
Follow #nerdland on Twitter to view the related conversation during the show.
WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT #CAHungerStrike
Right now 30,000 prisoners in California are on hunger strike. According to Amnesty International, that is the largest hunger strike in the state’s history, encompassing roughly two-thirds of the state’s inmates.
For additional context on why the strike is happening, check out some of the shocking facts in the infographic below on the conditions of indefinite isolation in California, where more than 3,000 prisoners are held in these high security isolation units known as Security Housing Units (SHUS).
Additionally, The Sacramento Bee reports that the Center for Investigative Reporting found that the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation sterilized nearly 150 female inmates from 2006 to 2010 without required state approvals.
[DESCRIPTION: This single page infographic by Amnesty International is best viewed in full screen mode to zoom in on sections]
Follow #CAHungerStrike on Twitter to stay informed.
MORE INFO FROM HOMIES UNIDOS
The California Prisoner's Hunger Strike started once again on July 8, 2013. The protesters have said that they will not stop until demands are addressed even if that means giving their lives.
Sign the petition: The Petition
Statewide Rally at Corcoran State Prison
Saturday, July 13, 3:00 PM
Bus and carpool leaves from Los Angeles at 8:30 AM,
From: Chuco's Justice Center,1137 E. Redondo, Inglewood
THE FIVE DEMANDS
The inhumane conditions inside CA dungeons, particularly in isolation - a form of torture -, brought prisoners together across racial, geographic, and political lines. They united to end hostilities and fight for changes in SHU conditions. These men have suffered injustice and torture for decades. Governors, wardens, courts, and media have disregarded all previous attempts to change conditions. As a result, the hunger-strikers have placed their lives on the line and developed five core demands: Link for Flier
End Group Punishment & Administrative Abuse: Hold people accountable for their individualactions,rather than punishing everyone. Collective punishment is a fascist practice!
Abolish the Debriefing Policy, and Modify Active/Inactive Gang Status Criteria: The 'debriefing' policy is known as "snitch or die" - since the only way out of the SHU is to debrief (inform on another prisoner). In some cases, people have been in the SHUs since the '60s or '70s for political beliefs or jailhouse lawyering.
End Long-Term Solitary Confinement. Comply with 2006 US Commission on Safety and Abuse in America's Prisons. International human rights organizations recognize sensory deprivation is psychological torture.
Provide Adequate and Nutritious Food, adequate medical care, and access to natural light.
Expand and Provide Constructive Programming and Privileges for Indefinite SHU Status Inmates. People in SHUs aren't released, since there's no constructive program available with which to qualify for parole.
Join the Hunger Strike Solidarity Coalition and bring in your school, union, community or coreligionists. Hunger Strike Solidarity So Cal Coalition (in formation) includes families, ex-prisoners & others. To get involved, 213-858-3486 or [email protected]
For more information about the Five Core Demands, please visitprisonerhungerstrikesolidarity.wordpress.com
Facebook Invite: https://www.facebook.com/events/672950029398476/
In October 2012 incarcerated people in the hunger strike came to an agreement to end all hostilities against each other, the agreement can be found here:
http://prisonerhungerstrikesolidarity.wordpress.com/2012/09/11/short-corridor-collective-calls-for-statewide-end-to-hostilities/
ADDITIONAL MEDIA COVERAGE
Photos of Protesters Against Solitary Confinement - LA Daily News Media
http://photos.dailynews.com/2013/07/photos-protesters-against-solitary-confinement/?utm_source=buffer&utm_campaign=Buffer&utm_content=buffere54e5&utm_medium=twitter#3
Los Angeles Times:
http://www.latimes.com/news/local/political/la-me-pc-ff-california-prison-officials-acknowledge-hunger-strike-20130708,0,3234974.story
Spanish Interviews:
Maria and Jesus Aguirre speak of their struggles with their loves in prison and the hunger strike. starts at 47 minutes.
http://archive.kpfk.org/mp3/kpfk_130709_213030vocesdelibertad.MP3
Spanish interview on Telemundo with Delia Rodriguez on the Hunger Strike:
https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?v=4476878340187&set=o.520666777981595&type=2&theater
Spanish coverage of the Hunger Strike:
https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?v=4476560252235&set=o.520666777981595&type=2&theater
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SUPPORT POC ZINE PROJECT
If everyone in our community gave $1, we would more than meet our fundraising goal for 2013. If you have it to spare, we appreciate your support. All funds go to our 2013 tour, the Legacy Series and the poverty zine series.
DONATE link via PayPal: http://bit.ly/SHdmyh
Support the hunger strikers!! Organize to help win their demands & end state sanctioned torture! Join the Statewide Mobilization to Support Prisoner Hunger Strike - Saturday, July 13. For more info: - http://prisonerhungerstrikesolidarity.wordpress.com/ Spread the word: - Prisoner Hunger Strike Solidarity FB page:http://bit.ly/PrisonerHungerStrikeSolidarity - https://twitter.com/CAHungerStrike - Tweet & follow hashtags: #CAhungerstrike, #PBhungerstrike