America’s Slave Empire
By Chris Hedges
June 22, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "Truthdig"
-
Three prisoners—Melvin Ray, James Pleasant and Robert Earl
Council—who led work stoppages in Alabama prisons in January 2014 as
part of the
Free Alabama Movement have spent the last 18 months in solitary
confinement. Authorities, unnerved by the protests that engulfed
three prisons in the state, as well as by videos and pictures of
abusive conditions smuggled out by the movement, say the men will
remain
in solitary confinement indefinitely.
The prison strike leaders are denied televisions and reading
material. They spend at least three days a week, sometimes longer,
without leaving their tiny isolation cells. They eat their meals
seated on their steel toilets. They are allowed to shower only once
every two days despite temperatures that routinely rise above 90
degrees.
The men have become symbols of a growing
resistance movement inside American prisons. The prisoners’ work
stoppages and refusal to co-operate with authorities in Alabama are
modeled on actions that
shook the Georgia prison system in December 2010. The strike
leaders argue that this is the only mechanism left to the 2.3
million prisoners across America. By refusing to work—a tactic that
would force prison authorities to hire compensated labor or to
induce the prisoners to return to their jobs by paying a fair
wage—the neoslavery that defines the prison system can be broken.
Prisoners are currently organizing in Arizona, California, Florida,
Illinois, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Mississippi, Texas, Virginia and
Washington.
“We have to shut down the prisons,” Council, known
as Kinetik, one of the founders of the Free Alabama Movement, told
me by phone from the Holman Correctional Facility in Escambia
County, Ala. He has been in prison for 21 years, serving a sentence
of life without parole. “We will not work for free anymore. All the
work in prisons, from cleaning to cutting grass to working in the
kitchen, is done by inmate labor. [Almost no prisoner] in Alabama is
paid. Without us the prisons, which are slave empires, cannot
function. Prisons, at the same time, charge us a variety of fees,
such as for our identification cards or wrist bracelets, and
[impose] numerous fines, especially for possession of contraband.
They charge us high phone and commissary prices. Prisons each year
are taking larger and larger sums of money from the inmates and
their families. The state gets from us millions of dollars in free
labor and then imposes fees and fines. You have brothers that work
in kitchens 12 to 15 hours a day and have done this for years and
have never been paid.”
“We do not believe in the political process,” said
Ray, who spoke from the St. Clair Correctional Facility in
Springville, Ala., and who is serving life without parole. “We are
not looking to politicians to submit reform bills. We aren’t giving
more money to lawyers. We don’t believe in the courts. We will rely
only on protests inside and outside of prisons and on targeting the
corporations that exploit prison labor and finance the
school-to-prison pipeline. We have focused our first boycott on
McDonald’s.
McDonald’s uses prisoners to process beef for patties and
package bread, milk, chicken products. We have called for a national
Stop Campaign against McDonald’s. We have identified this
corporation to expose all the others. There are too many
corporations exploiting prison labor to try and take them all on at
once.”
“We are not going to call for protests outside of
statehouses,” Ray went on. “Legislators are owned by corporations.
To go up there with the achy breaky heart is not going to do any
good. These politicians are in it for the money. If you are fighting
mass incarceration, the people who are incarcerated are not in the
statehouse. They are not in the parks. They are in the prisons. If
you are going to fight for the people in prison, join them at the
prison. The kryptonite to fight the prison system, which is a $500
billion enterprise, is the work strike. And we need people to come
to the prisons to let guys on the inside know they have outside
support to shut the prison down. Once we take our labor back,
prisons will again become places for correction and rehabilitation
rather than centers of corporate profit.”
The three prisoners said that until the
prison-industrial complex was dismantled there would be no prison
reform. They said books such as Stokely Carmichael’s “Ready for
Revolution” and Michelle Alexander’s “The New Jim Crow,” along with
the failure of prison reform movements, convinced them that the only
hope to battle back against a prison system that contains 25 percent
of the world’s prisoners was to organize resistance. And they find
no solace in a black president.
“To say that we have a black president does not
say anything,” Ray said. “The politicians are the ones who
orchestrated this system. They are either directly involved as
businessmen—many are already millionaires or billionaires, or they
are controlled by millionaires and billionaires. We are not
blindsided by titles. We are looking at what is going on behind the
scenes. We see a coordinated effort by the Koch brothers, ALEC [the
American Legislative
Exchange Council] and political action committees that see in
prisons a business opportunity. Their goal is to increase earnings.
And once you look at it like this, it does not matter if we have a
black or white president. That is why the policies have not changed.
The laws, such as mandatory minimum [sentences], were put in place
by big business so they would have access to cheap labor. The
anti-terrorism laws were enacted to close the doors on the access to
justice so people would be in prison longer. Big business finances
campaigns. Big business writes the laws and legislation. And Obama
takes money from these people. He is as vested in this system as
they are.”
In Alabama prisons, as in nearly all such state
facilities across the United States, prisoners do nearly every job,
including cooking, cleaning, maintenance, laundry and staffing the
prison barbershop. In the St. Clair prison there is also a chemical
plant, a furniture company and a repair shop for state vehicles.
Other Alabama prisons run printing companies and recycling plants,
stamp license plates, make metal bed frames, operate sand pits and
tend fish farms. Only a few hundred of Alabama’s 26,200
prisoners—the system is designed to hold only 13,130 people—are paid
to work; they get 17 to 71 cents an hour. The rest are slaves.
The men bemoaned a lack of recreational and
educational programs and basic hygiene supplies, the poor
ventilation that sends temperatures in the cells and dormitories to
over 100 degrees, crumbling infrastructures, infestations of
cockroaches and rats, and corrupt prison guards who routinely beat
prisoners and sell contraband, including drugs and cell phones.
These conditions, coupled with the overcrowding, are, they warned,
creating a tinderbox, especially as temperatures soar. There was a
riot in St. Clair in April. There has been a rash of stabbings and
fights in the prison. Prisoners have assaulted 10 guards in St.
Clair during the last four weeks.
“The
worst thing is the water,” said James Pleasant, a St. Clair
prisoner who has served 13 years of a 43-year sentence. “It is
contaminated. It causes kidney, renal failure and cancer. The food
causes stomach diseases. We have had three to four outbreaks of food
poisoning in the last four months.”
He said that the prolonged caging of prisoners and
the closing of rehabilitation programs, including education
programs, guarantee recidivism, something sought by the corporations
that profit from prisons. An estimated 80 percent of prisoners
entering the Alabama prison system are functionally illiterate.
“Sleeping on a concrete slab is not going to teach
you how to read or write,” Pleasant said. “Sleeping on a concrete
slab will not solve mental health issues. But the system does not
change. It does what it is designed to do. It makes sure people are
driven back into the system to work without pay.”
“For years we were called niggers to indicate we
had no value or worth and that anything could be done to us,” Ray
said. “Then the word ‘nigger’ became politically incorrect. So they
began calling us criminals. When you say a person is a criminal it
means that what happens to them does not matter. It means he or she
is a nigger. It means they deserve what they get.”
Prisons, the men said, have increasingly placed
larger and larger financial burdens on families, with the poorest
families suffering the most. Prisoners, too, suffer as a result.
“If you don’t get money from your family, your
poverty blocks you out from buying items at the commissary or making
phone calls,” Council said. “You can’t communicate with your family.
If you don’t have someone to send you money you can’t even buy
stamps to write home. They [authorities] are supposed to give us two
free stamps a week, but I have never seen them do it in my 16 years
of incarceration. We pay a $4 medical co-pay if we make a sick call.
Every additional medication we receive is $4. If you have a cold and
you get something for sinuses, pain meds and something for
congestion, that becomes a $16 visit. And if you get $20 from a
family member, the state will take $16 off the top to pay for the
visit. You end up with $4 to spend at a jacked-up canteen. There are
a lot of brothers walking around in debt. ...”
“It takes brutality and force to make a person
work for free and live in the type of conditions we live in and not
do anything about it,” Ray said. “The only way they made slavery
work was to use force. It is no different in the slave empire of
prisons. They use brutality to hold it together. And this brutality
will not go away until the system goes away.”
The men described numerous horrific beatings by
guards.
Pleasant said, “They stood me up against the wall
[with my hands cuffed behind me]. There were about 10 officers. They
started swinging, punching and hitting me with sticks. They knocked
my legs out from under me. My face hit the floor. They stomped on my
face. They sent me to the infirmary to hide what they did, for 30
days. When I looked in the mirror I could not recognize my facial
features. This was the fourth time I was beaten like this.”
I asked the three men, speaking to me on a
conference call, what prison conditions said about America. They
laughed.
“It says America is what it has always been,
America,” said Ray. “It says if you are poor and black you will be
exploited, brutalized and murdered. It says most of American
society, especially white society, is indifferent. It says nothing
has really changed for us since slavery.”
Chris Hedges spent nearly two decades as a foreign
correspondent in Central America, the Middle East, Africa and the
Balkans. He has reported from more than 50 countries and has worked
for The Christian Science Monitor, National Public Radio, The Dallas
Morning News and The New York Times, for which he was a foreign
correspondent for 15 years.© 2015
Truthdig, LLC.