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Today's Top News
Georgia Prison Strike: A Hidden Labor Force Resists
Last week a diverse group of nonviolent protesters across Georgia stood up for their rights, calling for decent wages, better social services and respect for their civil liberties. It didn't take long for the government to crack down on the demonstrations, however: the protesters were already in prison.
The uprising of Georgia inmates on December 9 defied the stereotype of the chaotic "prison riot" in the public imagination. Yet neither did "Lockdown for Liberty" fit within the conventional model of civil disobedience or industrial action. But when the inmates in at least six different prisons refused to leave their cells to report to work and other activities that day, a strike began. And it effectively paralyzed a small chunk of the bureaucratic monstrosity of America's prison system.
The incarcerated have historically filled the dregs of the American workforce, an emblem of racial subjugation often invisible in the politics of labor and social policy. It was against this hidden legacy of exploitation that the Georgia inmates, with the support of the NAACP and other civil rights advocates, raised issues common to incarcerated people nationwide: abusive treatment, degrading living conditions, a lack of accountability in the administration and parole authorities, and a lack of basic educational and social services (see below).
Pointedly invoking the term "slave" to describe the circumstances under which they toiled, the strikers showed how historically entrenched racial divisions play out today in the black-white disparities throughout the criminal justice system. Still, Georgia protesters included Latinos and whites as well as blacks, in a joint effort to resist and challenge structural injustices.
Their demands were hardly radical, but rather, embodied mainstream standards for reasonable and humane treatment: protection from cruel and unusual punishment by officers, affordable medicine when they're sick, and above all, fair pay for their labor. According to the Atlanta-Journal Constitution, "state law forbids paying inmates except for one limited program."
Final Call quoted reports trickling out from inmates earlier this week:
One brother told me, ‘We will ride until the wheels fall off,' and that's been the sentiment amongst the men when they started this," said Elaine Brown, a spokesperson for the strike... Part of our purpose for doing this is that
Georgia is the only state that does not pay it's inmates at all. Some guys in here work seven days a week and they don't get a dime," said Dondito, one of the strikers, who requested anonymity.
You can almost hear the zero-tolerance conservatives in Washington now: how dare these criminals demand better treatment from the state? The official reaction was to immediately curtail what few resources the inmates possess. According to news reports, prison staff locked down four facilities, attempted to transfer out the leading troublemakers, cut off the hot water, and revoked cell phone privileges (yes, according to Facing South, "Cell phones are contraband in Georgia's prisons, but widely available for sale from correctional officers.")
The strike was called off after six days, following reports of violent crackdowns and rising fears that the situation would escalate. But by then, the inmates had made their mark with one of the largest prison protests in U.S. history. The decision to end the strike, moreover, seems like the beginning of another phase in the inmates' collective action, now that they've caught national political attention. The AJC reported:
an inmate at Smith State Prison in Glenville said in a telephone interview prisoners had agreed to end their "non-violent" protest to allow administrators time to focus on their concerns rather than operating the institutions without inmate labor.
"We've ended the protest," said Mike, a convicted armed robber who was one of the inmates who planned and coordinated the work stoppage. "We needed to come off lock down so we can go to the law library and start ... the paperwork for a [prison conditions] lawsuit.
The proactive militancy of the strike organizers underscores the the fact that the entire action not only proceeded largely without violence, but also spread rapidly through several institutions thanks to careful planning and clandestine technology--messages spread via cell, expanding the traditional jailhouse grapevine.
It may be a while before we see another prisoner strike going viral, as the potential for prison-based activism remains constrained by the criminal-justice power structure. But the Georgia inmates helped change the public face of Americans who've been caught up in the country's incarceration industry. Under the most oppressive of conditions, they used disciplined strike tactics to align their grievances with broader struggles for human rights.
It makes sense. Prison is the everyday reality lived by a huge swath of the population (roughly one in one hundred, according to recent surveys) Meanwhile, the impact of prison labor leaves a hidden imprint on our economy as well. Noah Zatz of UCLA Law School has estimated that:
well over 600,000, and probably close to a million, inmates are working full time in jails and prisons throughout the United States. Perhaps some of them built your desk chair: office furniture, especially in state universities and the federal government, is a major prison labor product. Inmates also take hotel reservations at corporate call centers, make body armor for the U.S. military, and manufacture prison chic fashion accessories, in addition to the iconic task of stamping license plates.
As a captive workforce and disenfranchised populace, the prison system reaches deep into American society, and the distance between the people on the inside and those on the outside is increasingly a matter of luck--whether you're unfortuate enough to have been born the wrong color or in the wrong neighborhood. If the movement launched by the Georgia inmates, and their demands for dignity, look surprisingly familiar, there's a good reason for that: they are us.
For more information, follow the Black Agenda Report's ongoing coverage of the Georgia prison activists.
The strikers' demands, which they continue to press with state officials, are as follows:
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 Eighth 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 Eighth 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.
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10 Comments so far
Show AllIf it weren't for the decimation of the US working class, many of these men would be workers and maybe union organizers.
The repressive US "Justice" system and its econmic oligarchy ensures that rebellious men in poor communities will end up in jail, rather than onn the picket line.
I agree, dreamjoehill. Rebellious men in poor communities, unlucky men in poor communities, mentally ill or uneducated men in poor communities, impulsive men in poor communities, foolish young men in poor communities end up in prison.
Whereas had they been born into better life circumstances, their rebellious natures would be seen as energy, intelligence and pride. All the men would have had opportunities, legal representation, treatment, tutors, and people excusing them, or mildly correcting them, or coming to bat for them.
I am happy that these men are peacefully uniting to address their slave labor conditions rather than fighting with each other or the guards. I hope that some of the guards understand and respect this action.
Joe
Yes, and our oligarchic system is rapidly expanding the ranks of the poor.
I agree that many end up in jail for many different reasons.
My experience is that some of the best working class organizers might have ended up in jail if they were young people today.
The widening Chasm between rich and poor guarantees that more poor young men end up in jail, many of them with lost potential as teachers, organizers, and even lawyers, goddess help them.
The drug laws and particularly the pot laws have damaged many potential and actual leftist organizers.
"The strikers' demands, which they continue to press with state officials, are as follows:"
Really, guys? I know free men that don't get all that.
Even out of prison, many men and women here are not really FREE. Not in the sense that FDR explained like freedom from hunger, freedom from fear. But at least outside of prison you have family, friends, a chance to work and get paid for it.
Joe
And it is just such arguments where the race to the bottom begins.
We can be proud that we don't torture them...yet.
Its an industry, it has to grow, grow, grow.
The Perpetual Prisoner Machine by Joel Dyer, 2000, Excerpts
The corporations involved in the dispensing of justice operate in the best interest of their shareholders and the prison population grows naturally as a result of this pursuit. The shareholder’s best interest – regardless of a corporation’s function – is to maximize the return on investment. Any business plan designed to maximize shareholder profits must include strategies that will guarantee the company is able to maintain growth over the long haul. Such an emphasis on growth and profit may be acceptable in the computer, furniture, or automobile industries; however, this is a wholly destructive force when applied to the administration of justice.
Wall Street analysts now watch the crime figures reported by the FBI and the Justice Department in the same way the monitor unemployment rate or quarterly earnings reports. These crime-rate figures have become leading indicators for private-prison stocks. Wackenhut and CCA already control over half the entire prison market, which makes the concept of free-market competition as much a myth in the prison business as it is within the military-industrial complex.
It seems the old adage “Crime doesn’t pay” has been rendered obsolete.
http://theformofmoney.blogharbor.com/blog/_archives/2009/5/3/4173222.html
Excellent article by Michelle Chen. Our form of government rose out of glorification of the idea(l)s of a French Revolution whereupon they later "stormed the Bastille" freeing, literally, seven people locked up.
How many are locked up today in the United States of America? (Not to mention all the children who then, in turn, get locked up in the foster care system.)
After they drove all the immigrants out of Colorado, they replaced their farm labor by turning the entire state's agricultural harvesting over to the prison system, whereupon they paid prisoners .60/DAY for the same work formerly done by "illegal" immigrants. (And in California, btw, 90% of the agricultural work force is "illegal.")
Prisons are a "modern" form of slavery, if you can call slavery in any way, "modern."
On another note here, there's no reason for anyone in today's America to have to pay for phone calls. My cell phone plan basically allows me to call anywhere in the U.S. for "free," after the monthly service charge. So how are the prisons rationalizing this. Landlines themselves are virtually obsolete.
A point I didn't notice being addressed is that a captive force of laborers, paid either nothing or a miniscule percentage of minimum wage and with working conditions not governed by national minimum standards, is used very effectively to bring down the value and wages of workers on the outside. Many state prisons are contracted by corporations to make goods for miniscule wages and with no benefits. Others are similarly cheaply put to work for the state, as in making license plates, mailbags and so on.
If you'd like to show your solidarity with the prisoners, please sign this letter to them - http://criminaljustice.change.org/petitions/view/voice_your_support_to_striking_prisoners_in_georgia
And this is a letter to the GA Dep't of Corrections Commissioner asking that he demonstrate that he is taking the demands of the prisoners seriously - http://criminaljustice.change.org/petitions/view/tell_the_georgia_department_of_corrections_that_you_stand_with_protesting_prisoners