Massachusetts bans prisoners from voting Illinois Department of Corrections misuses public funds Show 27 2001 Massachusetts bans prisoners from voting On November 7, by a 2-to-1 margin, Massachusetts voters stripped prisoners of the right to vote with a constitutional amendment.(1) In Amerika, only Maine and Vermont now allow prisoners to vote. This country that leads the "free world," standing as a pillar of democracy for all others to emulate is made up of 47 states that prohibit prisoners from voting, 29 states that also disenfranchise people on probation, and 32 states that strip those on parole of this right. Fourteen states prohibit those with felony convictions from voting for life. MIM has nothing against the principle of disenfranchisement to steer societal development. We wrote in MIM Notes 126 that communists have always known "while there are violent contradictions in society, there must be dictatorship. ... [T]hose who organize to kill others through starvation, war, toxic pollution, withholding medicine, clothes or shelter must be put down by force, including the use of prison .... When we get to that day when the profit system and its kin are as nearly universally loathed as the slave system is today, then we can all live without dictatorship. "We at MIM point with pride to the months and years after the U.S. Civil War when some Southern slaveowners lost their rights to vote and run for office. Republicans at the time understood that the slaveowners would come back to power if they were left to organize for what they wanted. Today, we benefit from that act of organized force against slaveowners and only a small portion of the world would think of supporting slavery. That is progress. The next step will be to do the same thing for those who profit from murder."(6) Prisons are a form of organized violence, a form of dictatorship, used by one class to suppress another. Where MIM would like to use prisons as part of the dictatorship of the international proletariat, the Amerikan prison system is part of the dictatorship of the imperialist bourgeoisie. In particular, Amerikan prisons are a tool of national oppression. Voting restrictions further stigmatize and exclude prisoners and ex-prisoners from participation in social life. Amerika's criminal injustice system has grown exponentially in response to and prevention of national liberation movements of the internal semi- colonies. Whites are still the substantial majority of u.$. citizens. But they are less than half this country's prisoner population as the lockdown takes large numbers oppressed nation men off of the streets. For the Black nation, the bourgeois disenfranchisement laws mean that while 2% of all u.$. adult residents are banned by a felony conviction from voting, 13.1% of Black men are so disenfranchised. In Alabama and Florida the rate is even higher, over 31% of Black adult men can not vote.(2) MIM was not able to find numbers for the Latino or First Nations. The Massachusetts constitutional amendment concludes a three-year effort by Governor Cellucci to retaliate against prisoners who formed a Political Action Committee. In July 1998, the Massachusetts government discovered that Norfolk County prisoners had formed a political action committee (PAC) to organize prisoners to vote and to lobby against the transfer of prisoners from Massachusetts to Texas and for other reforms in the prison system.(5) Governor responded with Executive Order 399, prohibiting formation of the PAC and making possession of PAC materials punishable. Guards tossed organizers' cells for PAC materials.(5) The ban passed the state legislature twice with high margins and then was sent to the voters. Cellucci cannot have been worried about the prisoner PAC's level of direct influence. In 1999, the AFSCME union spent $2.8 million in "soft money" on Democrats and Philip Morris gave $2.9 million to Republicans.(3) The total raised by the Massachusetts prisoner PAC? $243.(4) The problem for Cellucci was the dangerous example of prisoners organizing to fight for their interests. As MIM Notes readers know from reading Under Lock & Key and MIM coverage, prisons in Amerika operate in frequent violation of their own rules and with regular disregard for their supposed mission of correction or rehabilitation. So any activism for their own rights that attracts the attention from the outside world is a threat to the state's authority within the prisons. MIM agrees with the PAC founder that prisoners should be as integrated with the outside as possible. Prisoners in Maoist China were encouraged first to study and understand how their crimes had affected the people. On successful study they were given productive work both to occupy their time and to develop an understanding that they could contribute to building socialism in a positive way. Ultimately reforming their thinking included tours around factories and communes to understand how a socialist economy relies principally on the energetic contributions of its people. Such interaction prepared prisoners to participate in society when their sentences had been completed. MIM supports use of such a prison system under the dictatorship of the proletariat as a means of uniting even former militarists and bankers in the work of developing a society that recognizes all people's right to live. But Governor Cellucci and his prison system have no interest in helping prisoners return to society, or in building a society that treats all people equally within the law. So while we agree with the PAC founders on the importance of involving prisoners in politics, we lead prisoners in revolutionary politics, and away from the politics of the bourgeoisie. The armed might of Amerikan imperialism supports the theft of superprofits from the Third World and locks u.$. borders tightly to secure that booty. This is a systemic problem, not something we're going to be changing at the Amerikan ballot box. [break] Mumia Abu Jamal is a former Black Panther on death row. He was framed for the righteous killing of a police officer engaged in an act of police brutality. He was sentenced to death in 1982 after a bogus trial. His appeals are now in the much quicker federal courts and an execution could happen very soon. Prior to his arrest, Mumia was a radio journalist who exposed police brutality. From within the walls through books, articles and radio commentaries, Mumia continues to be an outspoken leader of the oppressed. With Mumia's access the media limited, we recorded one of his essays to bring it to a wider audience. See for yourself the real reason why the state of Pennsylvania wants to kill Mumia Abu Jamal. [MAJ essays, vol 2 Track 1: folly of calling the fbi. 6:13] Illinois Department of Corrections misuses public funds Recently in the u.$.a. today there was an article that spoke of the misusage of funds by Director Snyder, his using jets, cars, money, etc. for his and his staff's personal use. Yet Governor Ryan still commended him on a job well done! Now Governor Ryan has incorporated into his scheme of things medical co-payment (effective immediately) whereas inmates have to pay $2.00 for non-emergency medical treatment. We are already being house in unsanitary conditions and given the lowest quality of medicine and medical treatment (this is capitalism in one of its rawest forms). So where is all the money going? Heating and ventilation are worse than an abandoned building. [The way] Menard and Springfield tell it, every cell house is run accordingly and prisoners' grievances concerning treatment, heating, medical assistance and care not forgetting sanitation are frivolous and without merit. We need to come together and unite to combat this plot to exploit money and free labor from us. If we don't stand as one we definitely will fall together. -- an Illinois prisoner, 7 December 2000.