MIM(Prisons) is a cell of revolutionaries serving the oppressed masses inside U.$. prisons, guided by the communist ideology of Marxism-Leninism-Maoism.
www.prisoncensorship.info is a media institution run by the Maoist Internationalist Ministry of Prisons. Here we collect and publicize reports of conditions behind the bars in U.$. prisons. Information about these incidents rarely makes it out of the prison, and when it does it is extremely rare that the reports are taken seriously and published. This historical record is important for documenting patterns of abuse, and also for informing people on the streets about what goes on behind the bars.
I received the September 9th Organizing Pack and I am humbly and proud to say that with my broken English and strong Boricua accent I spoke (mostly yelled) from behind the door to the whole unit. Out of 85 prisoners in the SHU-CM1, at least half of the unit denied all three food trays that were put on the slots. Even though I was yelled at by guards to shut the fuck up and that i was disrupting their unit, I made my point.
At lunch time the guards had called the captain cuz they didn’t know what the hell was going on and that prisoners were refusing their trays. When the Captain asked me I informed him that it was out of respect for all those brothers that became martyrs in the Attica uprising and all those who have sacrificed their lives for the struggle against oppression. After, I was called a “radical freak.” He told the guards in the unit to not disturb us on that day. Later I found out that the Captain was from NY and has a blood brother doing time at Clinton Correctional Facility in NY.
I am continuing the fight in the struggle. I am recently lied on by the oppressors’ corrupt gang unit here saying I was organizing an unauthorized group activity and that I’m a leader of the White Panther Movement. They also said that I was trying to organize a riot and take over the prison from the guards because I try to unite and educate. They don’t like it. So I am in solitary awaiting to be placed in SHU here in the corrupt Ohio Concentration Camps.
I am filing grievances against the Ohio Department of Rehabilitation & Corrections, because while in SHU we cannot order no books – not even legal books. Then last time I was placed in solitary they lost my legal book “self help litigation manual” and now they won’t allow me to re-order it at my own cost.
So the inspector has put fake tickets saying I threatened him, false. So know I am truly at war here.
Now in solitary they won’t allow no porter to my door to pass me a reading book or nothing. The library lady won’t bring me nothing either. So I’m in it.
“I hold that it is bad as far as we are concerned if a person, a political party, an army, or a school is not attacked by the enemy, for in that case it would definitely mean that we have sunk to the level of the enemy. It is good if we are attacked by the enemy, since it proves that we have drawn a clear line of demarcation between the enemy and ourselves. It is still better if the enemy attacks us wildly and paints us as utterly black and without a single virtue; it demonstrates that we have not only drawn a clear line of demarcation between the enemy and ourselves but achieved a great deal in our work.”
-Mao Tse-tung (1)
Behind the walls of Amerika’s gulags there will come a time when every serious revolutionary (whether ey are organized in a cell or party structure, or in a small collective or political study group with eir comrades) will draw the eyes of the pig surveillance apparatus for eir political activity and organizing. Some, those that are well read and practiced in security and counter-surveillance, will no doubt last longer than others without scrutiny; but with all simple channels of communication under heavy surveillance – from audio equipped security cameras, to monitored, recorded, and archived phone calls, to mail room pigs sticking their hideous snouts into your mail (not to mention those dealing with smart communications/TextBehind/etc.) – the pig administration and rank and file can and will monitor, censor, obstruct, and otherwise engage in their reactionary low intensity warfare against political agitation and those that would dare to educate and unite the oppressed masses against Our common enemy: the state, its lackeys, and all they stand for. So, in a very real sense the gulags of the United $nakes are exactly that: WAR.
As the contradictions between the oppressor class and the oppressed are inherently antagonistic in nature, and playing out in a myriad of ways upon this particular front. This is not to say, however, that these antagonistic contradictions with the enemy are solely resolved in isolation from the larger struggle against imperialism and U.$. hegemony and capitalistic exploitation. Indeed, these struggles are one and the same; inter-related with each other.
Thus, Our efforts to educate, organize, and mobilize the masses toward socialist revolution are viciously repressed by the imperialists and their lackeys. Though, as Mao stated in the above quote, it would be bad if the enemy weren’t making a concerted effort to attack Us. The simple fact that they are engaged in the assault against Us means they are worried if not downright fearful, that We may succeed in realizing Our and Our countless fallen comrades’ lifelong goal and dream that We’ve all been struggling and striving for: the destruction of patriarchal capitalist-imperialist empire through social revolution and the ushering in of communism throughout the world.
And yet, as Mao correctly warned Us,
“The imperialists and domestic reactionaries will certainly not take their defeat lying down and they will struggle to the last ditch.”(2)
In so doing, they will utilize all available tactics to sabotage Us and Our efforts. Within the gulags in Amerika, the oppressor has a wide range of tactics to quash dissent. Indeed, the U.$. gulag archipelago is itself a tool used currently and hystorically against communists, anarchists, and all those the oppressor sees as a threat to the status quo. Other familiar tactics used against the politically active range from blatant assassination (George Jackson, San Quentin Aug. 21, 1971), assassination by pig proxy (The Aug. 12, 2015 assassination of Hugo “Yogi” Pinell by white supremacist prisoners Jayson Weaver and Waylon Pitchford at New Folsom Prison (3)), (in)definite solitary confinement, snitch-jacketing, targeted mail surveillance and censorship, etcetera, etcetera ad nauseam.
However, these tactics cease being their main focus once they understand (and they obviously do) a key fact; as Steven Biko so succinctly put it, “The most potent weapon in the hands of the oppressor is the mind of the oppressed.” The pigs are fully aware, as are the imperialists, that a docile, unquestioning mass of sheeple is easier to control than an angry, educated, politically-conscious mass of revolutionary militants. To that end, they do everything within their power to reproduce these brainless sheeple in mass quantities: pigs engaging in widespread chemical warfare upon the imprisoned lumpen by introducing and pushing mass quantities of drugs while simultaneously banning publications like MIM(Prisons)’s “Revolutionary 12 Step Program”(4); amassing huge lists of banned books, often for ridiculous reasons, and more often as an extension of political repression; small, if any portions of gulag facility budgets spent on books for the library (and nearly all mind-numbing selections at that); the introduction of tablets for use, along with TV’s, to zone out on and isolate, ignoring the world and the problems around you in sheer ambivalence; and finally (though not conclusively) the lack of truly helpful classes/programs offered, while offering Eurocentric, status-quo affirming programs to get those foolish enough to take them “all ready to head back to ‘minimum security’ (the so-called ‘free world’) to re-acclimate to the oppression and exploitation ey had sadly been content with living under anyway.”
Much to the dismay of the imperialists and their pig lackeys, there are those of Us that see through their attempts to incapacitate Us, Our movements, and Our struggle for a better world. And we are multiplying, regardless of what they throw in Our way, and no matter how many times they try to divide Us. No matter what the oppressor tries, they will be out maneuvered again and again by Our overflowing revolutionary love for the People. All because the oppressor cannot grasp a simple truth that was reiterated again and again by Our beloved comrade Fred Hampton before he was assassinated by Chicago pigs and the FBI on December 1969, that still proves true to this day: “You can kill a revolutionary, but you can never kill the revolution.”
Notes: 1. Mao Tse-tung, “To Be Attacked by the Enemy Is Not a Bad Thing but a Good Thing” (May 26, 1939), First Pocket Edition, pg. 2. 2. Mao Tse-tung, “Opening Address at the First Plenary Session of the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference” (September 21, 1949). 3. Nate Gartrell, 14 September 2023, “Aryan Brotherhood pair charged in fatal stabbing”, San Jose Mercury News. 4. See: Triumphant, November 2022, “TDCJ’s Repression of its Political Prisoners Leads to Devastating Effects Among the Wider Prison Population,” ULK No. 80. and Texas Prisoner, March 2021, “TDCJ: Your Staff are Bringing in the Drugs, and it Must Stop,” ULK No. 73.
I have received a few publications this year. Some from The National
Lawyers Guilde, The Coalition For Prisoners Rights, and two MIM
publications. Of course, there are a tremendous amount of struggles
taking place. How could there not be? We as prisoners are after all
being punished.
Punishment means, according to U.S. interest and interpretation of
the word by the Supreme Court, that states are granted permission to
impose upon their prisoners “harsh conditions”, and that ultimately
prisoners have “no right to comfort”.
Texas has definitely taken advantage of the fact that they are
granted permission to punish prisoners. I know this for a fact because I
am a prisoner in Texas prison. I can not speak for any other state. I
have only personally experienced, and still am experiencing, life inside
a Texas prison compound. I have been confined/hostage for going on 10
years. I have been in TDCJ-CID for about 7 1/2 years.
Yes, there are a lot of things I have witnessed and because of that a
lot I can report about and or discuss. The majority of this information
has actually already been brought to the attention of some outside the
prison. Consequently, most people in the free world could care less. The
imprisoned lumpen are a hated class and the public has been conditioned
to believe that prisoners deserve their punishment and harsh living
conditions.
I disagree with those who think we deserve punishment. Harsh
conditions in Texas involves being enslaved, pinned against your
cellmate, exposed to the elements, exposed to insects and vermin, mental
anguish, denial of mail etc.. It truly goes on! How could any conscious
human be deserving of punishment, that by design, is intended to defeat
you, break you down, and cause long-term fundamental changes within you.
Long-term changes that are not for the betterment of yourself or
humanity.
TEXAS’ MURDEROUS HEAT
The harsh condition that I am going to now write about is one that I
have not seen in any of the ‘prisoners struggle’ publications this year:
extreme heat within Texas prisons. This is a real problem, a problem
that not only imposes harsh conditions and punishes prisoners, but as
history has shown, sometimes even executes the prisoner!
Under information and belief and from what I have heard on F.M. radio
news, prisoners, forced into this Texas punishment compound, have
actually been executed this year by being forcefully exposed to the
harsh condition of extreme heat in Texas. Many more, including me, have
been physically assaulted by this tortuous and murderous heat. Heat that
causes physical illness and or Death!
Sadly, those who have been conditioned to hate prisoners most likely
take extraordinary pride in the fact that their state, Texas, punishes
its prisoners literally to Death. As the saying goes: DON’T MESS WITH
TEXAS!
Well, I have recently filed a §1983 over this deadly and dangerous
heat here at the McConnell Unit. See Civil Action No. 2:23-cv-00201
filed in U.S. Dist. Court Southern Dist. Texas Corpus Christi Div. Will
I prevail? Most likely not because T.X. claims to have in place adequate
heat mitigation measures, and T.X. prisoncrats do an exceptionally well
job at covering up illegal conduct.
RETALIATION
As of right now, I am being retaliated against by TDCJ Prison guards
on the McConnell Unit. I seen this coming because there is a gang of
‘punishers’ who are employed at the McConnell Unit. Sometimes you know
who they are by the Patch that they wear on their vests. This Patch is a
picture of the comic book character Punisher’s emblem that is
superimposed on to either a Texas Flag or an American Flag.
Since filing grievances, when I attempt to get a officers name, I am
rudely denied and often threatened with a case. Even though officers are
required to give their names upon request, rank does not enforce this
upon their subordinates at all!
On July 30, 2023, I requested names from several officers, all in the
presence of a sergeant, I was refused their names then written a
fraudulent major case by the sergeant Samantha Ramirez. This was the
second fraudulent case that was written on me since filing grievances
about the heat.
In addition to the fraudulent major case, a hearing was ran on me
without me knowing about it or having a chance to confront the accuser.
I found out that a case was ran on me when prison classification changed
my custody level from g3 to g4 status requiring me to live in a more
restrictive housing assignment and forfeiting any of my immediate
chances at getting moved to a prison closer to my C.O.P.D. dying Mother.
Due Process does not exist for me at this ‘Government Blacksite’
Even more, I have had my life threatened by these vigilantes, denied
medical, denied showers, denied recreation, denied dayroom, denied
access to phone calls, denied my diet food trays, etc, and I am sure it.
It is not over with.
This shit is really going on! I will continue to keep in contact with
MIM. Good bye for now!
Greetings, To all the “Warriors”, “Soldiers”, and “Comrades”, a new day is at hand. Those that have been subjected to “colonial rule” are rising up and ousting the “puppet regimes” installed by the enemy.
The brothers and sisters over in Afrika are saying “enough is enough!”. Those Afrikans over in France are also rising up! It’s only a matter of time before the Black, Brown, Red. and Yellow souljahs here on these shores say “Down with the imperialists and their flunkies!”.
We must unite and stand with those who wish to overthrow the puppets and install a government for the people and by the people.
A Memorandum issued by the PREA Auditors of America was recently
posted in all dorms and other areas here at Dillwyn Correctional Center
where incarcerated people frequent advising us of the following:
“The Virginia Department of Corrections (VADOC) will be conducting an
audit for Compliance with the United States Department of Justice’s
National Standards to Prevent, Detect, and Respond to Prison Rape under
the Prison Rape Elimination Act (PREA) for Its Adult Detention
Facility.”
The scheduled dates of the PREA Audit are from September 26th-28th,
2023.
The Memorandum further advises:
“Any person with relevant information pertaining to this compliance
Audit may * confidentially * correspond with the Auditor via the
following address:
Ron Kidwell P.O. Box 193 Palmyra, Virginia 22963
“CONFIDENTIALITY. All correspondence and disclosures during
interviews with the designated auditor are CONFIDENTIAL and will not be
disclosed unless required by law. There are exceptions when
confidentiality must be legally broken. Exceptions include, but are not
limited to the following:
If the person is an immediate danger to him/herself or others (e.g.,
suicide or homicide)
Allegations of suspected child abuse, neglect, or maltreatment
In legal proceedings where information has been subpoenaed by a court
of appropriate jurisdiction.”
The Prison Rape Elimination Act or PREA was passed by the U.$.
Congress and codified into federal law as Title 42 U.S.C.A. section
15601. It was passed in response to the high incidents of rape and other
forms of sexual violence incarcerated people were subjected to in
prisons across the country.
Despite the language of PREA, it does not stop, prevent or reduce the
rape and sexual violence of incarcerated people. As an example, the rape
and sexual assaults against women at the Federal Correctional
Institution in Dublin, California in the years before 2022 was so bad
the prison was called the “rape club” by incarcerated women and prison
staff alike. Even the Warden of the prison at the time, Ray J. Garcia,
took part in raping and sexually exploiting women at the prison.
The real purpose of PREA was to create a set of national standards
(also called PREA standards) by the U.$. Attorney General that state and
federal prison systems can give the appearance of being in compliance
with in order to gain accreditation and federal grant money from the
U.$. Department of Justice.
PREA Audits as they are currently conducted do not work and will
never work for the following reasons:
As the above quoted Memorandum reveals, prison officials are given
advanced notice their prisons will be audited for PREA compliance. This
advanced notice sets in motion a scheme whereby prison officials began
the process of cleaning up and beautifying the prison before PREA
auditors arrive, both literally and figuratively. I have witnessed time
and time again how in the days leading up to the audit, incarcerated
people are instructed to paint walls, plant flowers, and wax and buff
the floors. Guards and prison staff begin acting nice and treating
incarcerated people with a little bit more dignity and respect. A
special meal is sometimes serviced to incarcerated people either on the
day of the audit or on the day before. In some cases, a prison may go on
an unexpected lockdown where incarcerated people are locked in their
cells on the day of the audit. All of this is done to placate/pacify
incarcerated people so they’ll be least likely to give the PREA auditors
a “bad report” or, in the case of the unexpected lockdown, to prevent
them from giving a report altogether.
In order for the PREA audit to be truly effective, they must be
conducted without prison officials having prior notice of the date and
time of the audit.
In addition to that, incarcerated people must be allowed to
communicate freely with auditors in a confidential setting. This is
often not possible because PREA auditors are accompanied by brass and
are deliberately led on a prearranged course throughout the prison that
keeps them out of contact with incarcerated people and out of the
housing areas where incarcerated people live and sleep.
Incarcerated people must not be retaliated against for making
complaints about having been raped and sexually assaulted by prison
staff. I know of many fellow incarcerated people who have been harassed,
threatened, moved to another housing unit, transferred to another
prison, and written bogus infractions in retaliation for submitting PREA
complaints. This sort of retaliation chills other incarcerated people’s
desire to submit PREA complaints which allows their abusers to escape
accountability.
Lastly, the only real solution to ending the rape and sexual violence
of incarcerated people is to abolish the Prison Industrial Complex. If
there are no prisons, then there can be no prison rape.
All Power to the People Who Don’t Fear Freedom!
MIM(Prisons) responds: We actually think we can do a
lot to eliminate rape for all people before abolishing prisons. Prisons
are a tool of class struggle. In the control of a communist government,
prisons would be revolutionized to serve the people. There would be an
end to the torturous practices so common in capitalist prisons of
isolation, heat, lack of health care and physical and sexual assaults.
Unlike prisons, rape and sexual violence are forms of oppression that
cannot serve the people. While the path to eliminating any of these
things remains long and challenging. Previous revolutionary societies
have made quick progress in the realm of reducing and almost eliminating
many forms of gender oppression. So we call on those who want to put an
end to rape and sexual violence to join us in the struggle to end
imperialism and replace it with a system in the hands of the
international proletariat.
Triple Cross: How Bin Laden’s Master Spy Penetrated the CIA, the
Green Berets, and the FBI By Peter Lance Harper-Collins
Publishers, 2006 608 pages
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I had briefly heard the story of Ali Muhammid, the Al Qaeda operative
who infiltrated various U.$. agencies, but nothing in depth. This book
answered lots of unanswered questions. Many of the assumptions I had
surrounding the 9/11 attacks were confirmed in this book and still other
questions arose.
It’s important to understand one’s enemy. The U.$. government has an
immense amount of operatives going at once and is instilling terror
globally on a massive scale. The author, Peter Lance, reveals some of
this here and calls out the FBI on its actions and to a lesser extent
the CIA.
This book shows the vulnerabilities of the empire. Much of the state
apparatus is as Mao rightly identified a paper tiger. The 9/11
Commission is a perfect example. The 9/11 Commission was created to
investigate the attacks on 9/11. The “findings” resulted in a huge book
titled The 9/11 Commission. Peter Lance was himself interviewed
by the commission and explained how upon being interviewed he found out
that half of the “9/11 commission” was made up of former FBI – the very
agency that Lance states failed to stop the attacks on 9/11! Thus such a
commission was bound to fail from the start. An utter failure.
Peter Lance lays out the idea that years before 9/11 attacks the FBI
had intel that could have prevented the attacks and dropped the ball.
It’s interesting to hear the FBI’s vulnerabilities because the state
works hard to maintain this facade that the FBI is this all knowing
behemoth when in reality they are prone to humyn fallacy just like any
other, paper tigers.
This book mentions that one of the reasons the author feels that the
FBI dropped some of its leads into the Al Qaeda cell responsible for
9/11 was that a Senior Supervisory Special Agent of the FBI Roy Lindley
DeVechio was alleged to be leaking information to a member of the
Colombo Crime Family: Greg Scarpa Senior. So to save the Feds the
embarrassment and jeopardize dozens of members of the Colombo family’s
cases the intel was swept under the rug. The FBI has been known
throughout its hystory to commit every crime we can think of in its
repression on the people. Some agents have even been known to have
intimate relationships, even falling in love with their intended
target.
It’s clear after reading this book that when we look at the Al Qaeda
network and all of its figures, Ali Mohammid stands out as the most
audacious and one of the most important figures in that organization.
The fact that while being trained at the John F. Kennedy Special Warfare
Center at Fort Bragg he was simultaneously training the Al Qaeda cell
that blew up the World Trade Center in 1993 is amazing. His photographs
were also used by Osama Bin Laden in bombing the U.$. embassy in Kenya
that killed 224 people in 1998.(1)
As communists we do not condone terrorizing the populace by targeting
civilians. Nor do we support the notion of taking actions based in
supernatural superstitions of any sort, but this does not take away the
blow to U.$. Intelligence Agencies that Ali Mohammed was able to execute
by toying with them and basically working them all like a handler. He
was an Al Qaeda sleeper, a deep penetration triple agent who played
Amerikkka at its own game. The only reason this story is not on the
front page of every newspaper and at movie theaters is it is a huge
embarrassment to U.$. intelligence.
The FBI, like Amerikkka, has a long hystory of breaking their own
laws while claiming to enforce their laws. During the Red Scare of the
1950s, the Feds would routinely employ “Black Bag Jobs”: breaking into
homes, stealing property, planting evidence or disappearing targets that
were political and often communist. Years later COINTELPRO taught us
that murder was not off the FBI’s table nor was imprisonment of
dissidents. The integrity of the FBI from the perspective of
revolutionary folks is shot and Lance gets at this a little on page six
when discussing how Ali Mohammed is the one who took the very
photographs Bin Laden used to target the U.$. Embassy in Nairobi in
1994:
“As the man who had sat in a room with the ‘terror prince,’ while Bin
Laden personally targeted the Nairobi embassy back in 1994, Mohammed
should have been the star witness in the embassy bombing trial, which
was just months away. Yet Patrick Fitzgerald, the lead prosecutor, never
called him.”
For prisoners it’s bewildering to hear a D.A., in this case Patrick
Fitzgerald, did not call a witness who is alleged to have started the
chain of events to which people were killed. Anyone who has been to a
couple of court proceedings or who has watched a crime show on
television has a basic understanding that anyone involved in some way
would be subpoenaed if not charged. And yet Mohammid was not called as a
witness. It’s pretty apparent that the FBI was avoiding further
embarrassment and possible culpability in crimes much more grisly than
anything they were dealing with in the Nairobi Embassy bombing of 1994.
The hystory of the FBI is pretty grisly, indeed. During the 1960s and
70s many freedom fighters from the Chican@ movement and the Black
movement were disappeared or murdered in COINTELPRO operations. For most
revolutionary minded folks FBI and crime are synonymous in the United
Snakes. Even in non-revolutionary circles many understand that when
discussing the FBI it is not the local 4-H club by any means. An FBI
cover-up is quite understandable as such revelations naturally nudge the
people to then unravel U.$. agencies and naturally to examine the
legality of the United Snakes.
This book was a good exposé on how the FBI can go to such lengths as
covering up a mass murder plot to preserve its reputation within the
empire. For the oppressed nations we know how U.$. agencies have been
nothing more than arms of the State who uphold repression, but to so
many who are not conscious this book is a rough-hewn example of an
entity like the FBI which can hunt and murder unarmed freedom fighters,
free thinkers, and communist theorists but let it face folks arriving
with bombs, hijacked planes, and suicide vests and they trip over
themselves trying to flee to safety. We don’t promote armed struggle
today, but it was still subjectively nice to read how the FBI got
duped.
United States v. Ali Muhammid, 5(7) 98 Cr. 1023 (LBS) Sealed
Complaint, September 1998, affidavit of David Coleman, FBI
Religion was part of the impetus that went into the creation of modern prisons in the United $tates of Amerika. With the opening of the Eastern State Penitentiary in 1829 in Philadelphia, the experiment of molding human behavior with confinement and a bible, the idea was isolation and self-reflection would lead to penitence and a corollary eradication of sin, or criminality. However, the seeding of religion within such a volatile atmosphere never took root as designed, but has nevertheless served a persisting role behind the walls, bars and fences of condemnation and incapacitation, with positive and negative consequences. This short article visits the phenomenon of Black religion as it occurs from a materialist perspective within the Michigan Department of Corrections (MDOC), and its implications relative to Black life inside and outside the walls.
Social organization within the MDOC is controlled by Black men from the enclaves of cities hosting large segments of Black denizens. Power dynamics on the prison yards were determined by crews and cliques from these enclaves, with the inhabitants of Detroit overwhelmingly determining the direction and atmosphere of the prison yard; but the power of crews and cliques would start to diminish as a result of the Black power movements of the 1960s and 70s which had serious implications on how social (power) dynamics would be reformed. This reshaped the inner prison structure within the MDOC.
The prison system witnessed an exodus of Blacks from Christianity into the bosom of Black Muslimhood (Islam) for many Black cons – often infused with a radicalism endemic of the times. As prisoners from the cross-section of Michigan cities with the largest Black neighborhoods adopted membership into religious organizations like the Moorish Science Temple of America (MSTA), Orthodox Islam, the Nation of Islam (NOI), and lastly the Melanic Palace (and Islamic Palace) of the Rising Sun (MPRS/MIPRS), the diversity of the crews/cliques coagulated into unions of these religious folds. The yard was now structured, for the most part, by these four religious blocs who set the rules of compliance and how prisoners related to the powers that be: prison guards and administrators.
These Black religions served multiple functions from individual protection and a greater collective security in the face of growing quantitative and qualitative changes characterized by violence; a sense of belonging; quasi-familyhood and a material support system, however loose; an avenue to educate oneself and engage in character edification for self-betterment; an alternative power base to offset, counter and resist the state agency of the MDOC and its forms of repression, oppression, and aggression typical of a white political body utilized to isolate, control and dominate potential Black rebels, societal dropouts, and the politicized elements capable of organizing and fomenting direct opposition to white racism and anti-Black hate and containment.
During the onset of the 1980s, the Melanic Islamic Palace of the Rising Sun caught fire with its inductee membership [soaring] to rival other Black religious groups. But what set the Melanic Islamic Palace apart was their willingness to inflict violence on prison guards and staff. This, too, would prove to have both positive and negative consequences. Positive in that energy was invested in degrees of political education and the building of a requisite consciousness steeped in Black nationalist rhetoric, which spilled over and was consumed primarily by the NOI, and to lesser degrees the MSTA and Orthodox Muslims. Negative in that the State, like any serious sociopolitical entity, started focusing attention on these groups which would later bloom into a tsunami of backlash and repression that would blast the political and radical elements out of MDOC religious groups, pushing them to take up a near exclusive God-centric and moralistic brand of religious practice.
The Melanics would eventually be repressed, banned from group service, and branded a security threat group which is tantamount to free society’s terrorist designation. The ripple effects of this move would fuel the aftershocks for decades to come to this very day. Political content and its verbiage are now nearly obsolete among the Black religious groups for fear of repression and possible banishment of group worship. Radical activism has not only largely died out, but can also be frowned upon by Black religious adherents. The yard structure and its rules based compliance has all but evaporated with exception of a few prisons. And with those older prisoners from the 1970s and 80s having returned to society, become frail seniors in prison or having died off, a leadership vacuum was opened to be filled by the incoming street gangs of the younger generation who would steer asunder the remaining residue of rule by structure. A by-product of this alteration in yard power has been that the Black religious groups have become old in age relative to its membership, have become socially and politically ineffective, and have reverted to existing as mere prison social groups who sometimes operate as prison yard gangs.
In the midst of the expiring decades in prison from the 1970s to the 2020s, the move towards Black Muslim-ism in prison has had some serious uninttended consequences, mainly, a lost and/or move away from Afrikanism (consciously and unconsciously). Plagued by anti-Afrikan bias as a result of post-slavery cultural, spiritual and mental colonialism (mentacide), with the exception of few, the Black Muslim groups argued instead for an Asiatic and/or Arab identity that didn’t require them to identify with the savage, barbarian, backward, uncivilized Africans who had no history and remained primitive, as their white masters had intentionally misinformed them during the breaking process of Afrikans to Niggas. And when/where a colonial based Blackness was expressed, unbeknownst to its propounders, it was delivered from a religious package that actually vitiated Blackness as it grew out of a Eurocentric conceptuality birthed during the Hellenistic epoch.
This contradictory pro-Black western (Eurocentric) religious conceptuality carries itself from behind the walls into open society as one of the nails in the coffin to serious liberation struggle advanced by Black people inside the imperialist center of North Amerika. Unfortunately, Black has proven to be ineffective as a sole basis for unity in this country as its nuanced nature cultures fragmentation, and Black western conceptualized religion only fuels the fractures of Blackness into an extreme polylithic substance that rejects a collective Black consciousness that’s bound for, or even focused on liberation.
But does there exist any light to dispel this dark period of irrelevant prison-religion utility? With the 2022 revision to the MDOC religious policy permitting the group service of the indigenous Afrikan Ifa spirituality, and the often radical Hebrew Israelite religion, one might argue the cusp of change is potentially present, and a new day may be dawning. However, I am not convinced. The perpetual distortion of indigenous Afrikan spirituality with western conceptuality spells doom to prospects of Black religion being utilized for liberation purposes. And like education, if a subject is not used for liberation, despite whatever radical nature it may acquire, and pro-Black or anti-white rhetoric it protest, its final product will prove to be a pro-Amerikan assimilationist one.
So the problem with Black religion in prison, speaking in the context of Blackness, no different than Black religious experience in the free world, is it’s devoid of power politics, is Eurocentric (laden with western [Hellenistic] concepts), and is reformist-integrationist-assimilationist (pro-Amerika). These three elements fight against the ability of the Black body to develop a monolithic character (collective consciousness), at least as it concerns Black unity as necessary for our capacity to adequately struggle for liberation or an activist model and mentality that is capable of loosening the screws and weakening the bricks of the prison complex structure.
Prison religion, or Black religion in general has made Karl Marx into a prophet where they serve to actualize his quote: “religion is the opium of the people.” And while I am certain over time many brothers within the MDOC will be exposed to Ifa and even grow to appreciate and practice it, no different than those brothers who have acquired knowledge about Kemeta, it will yet remain tethered to western monotheistic conceptuality through which brothers will be taught to practice it. In this way, it’ll be of little consequence as the receiving receptacles will fail to decolonize their minds of western conceptuality. Instead, the example of the Haitian revolutionaries must be followed by marrying our spirituality to struggle for power. Otherwise, Ifa will function as a mere symbol of Afrikanism, and brothers will be lying to themselves about being Afrikan-centered while actually promoting an inconsequential cultural nationalism that does absolutely nothing to foment a consciousness that could serve as models to alter prison conditions to their benefit. Ifa will be a mere badge of knowledge; a gold chain or Rolex shown off as a fetish, and will soon be denigrated to the margins of irrelevancy on par with the rest of black prison religions within the MDOC.
In my final analysis, drawing from more than two decades inside the cage, I conclude Black religion in the MDOC has been regressive. And contrary to some external beliefs outside the walls, Black prison-religion is not progressing towards Afrikan-based religious affiliation. Black Islamism is still the preferred go-to as it has successfully positioned itself as the popular vehicle for black intellectualism, freedom and expression of Black pride. In the end, however, Black religion in the MDOC is failing Black convicts and has betrayed and continues to betray authentic Black activism and struggle.
It’s uncanny how books fall into your hands at times. Recently my circle has been discussing the subject of prisoners of war (POW’s) in the United $nakes and, what do you know, a comrade slides me this book on a POW who died imprisoned, the Chiricahua Apache Chief Geronimo.
Going into the book I treaded lightly as biography type books are quite biased. Many of the tomes written on leaders of the oppressed within the empire tend to be heavily biased slander that amounts to imperialist propaganda. This book was written as an “Interview” by Barret while Geronimo was a POW at Fort Sill, Oklahoma. I went into the book bracing myself for a book that would attempt to tell Geronimo’s story while promoting Amerikkkan ideals if even unconsciously. I was not wrong.
The subtitle of the book itself is an error: “The True Story of America’s Most Ferocious Warrior.” Geronimo was a First Nations warrior. America is the name of the white nation who stole the land it now occupies. The subtitle thus describes Geronimo as a member of this white settler nation which is ridiculous, as he fought against Amerikkka.
The first part of the book focuses on general Apache life with an emphasis on the mythology of the Apache creation story of origin. Steeped in the metaphysical ideas of a “God” and how a talking dragon would visit early ancestors. Sadly many of the world’s societies have such creation myths that are passed down. It highlights the need for a materialist approach to all we do and gives a glimpse of how the world would think if we were without dialectical materialism.
Part two, “The Mexicans”, answered a lot of questions I had. Here it describes how at one point Geronimo and his tribe traveled into “old Mexico” – as he calls it – and while the warrior went to trade in the town they returned to a massacre where it was reported that Mexican troops had killed everyone including Geronimo’s aging mother, wife, and three children.
I had often heard of Geronimo’s anti-Mexican sentiment, now I know why. Contradictions among the people continue today where oppressed nations fight for crumbs and leave devastation on either side. It’s disappointing to hear, knowing Geronimo’s passion for fighting Amerika it would have been beneficial for the oppressed to join forces and fight Amerika as this was in 1858, ten years after the U.$. war on Mexico and the birth of the Chican@ nation. Surely there was much resistance sparking and embers of resistance still burning.
I can’t stop to wonder had a united front of oppressed nations come together and resisted the U.$. how it would have resulted, add Black folks in the mix and it would be even better.
The first half of the book seemed to exalt Geronimo’s raids and murder of Mexican people. The first half has almost no mention of his war on the white nation, on which much of his reputation is built on.
Part three titled “The White Men” depicts various attacks and treachery when U.$. troops would call “peace” only to meet up and murder the Apache forces. At one point the Apache Chief Manigus-Colorado was called by the U.$. military for peace talks and assassinated. Geronimo seemed to be the only one who did not trust the U.$. troops or “white men” and thus never attended peace talks during that time period and lived through the treachery.
Chapter 16 titled “In Prison And On The War Path” was chilling to read. Here Geronimo contemplates war on Amerikkka and death. This portion of the book struck me more than any other of the passages. I feel his words and taste them internally. To me it’s as raw as it gets for those of us who are prisoners of war.
He states:
"In the summer of 1883 a rumor was current that the officers were again planning to imprison our leaders. This rumor served to revive the memory of all our past wrongs, the massacre in the tent at Apache Pass the fate of Mangus-Colorado, and my own unjust imprisonment, which might easily have been death to me.
“We thought it more manly to die on the war path than to be killed in prison.”
So much to unpack here. The mention of the leaders being imprisoned brought back memories of Pelican Bay SHU. The SHU was where leaders of the imprisoned oppressed nations in Califas were kidnapped and “imprisoned”. Taking leaders is a common practice of the oppressor nation. For Geronimo it triggered the Apache when they heard that their leaders would be kidnapped again. That’s a very traumatizing experience. I feel it. For those who have never been captured, tortured or kidnapped I can only say that the closest example I can give of Geronimo’s words here is that of a child who was kidnapped by a stranger, taken from their family and returned as an adult and then one day this persyn was either snatched again or told that another person would be kidnapped. Imagine the trauma this persyn would feel: the memories of being taken. The trauma likely became unbearable to the point that resistance, even resulting in death, must have seemed welcoming.
It seemed that every few pages Geronimo or his tribe would sign another treaty with Amerikkka. A lack of political investigation resulted in decisions based on subjectivity. As materialists we know that the oppressor will not relinquish power willingly, hystory has taught us that. Had Geronimo been a dialectical materialist he would have come to that realization much sooner.
Reading how the U.$. Army General Miles told Geronimo he would build Geronimo a house and give him access to cattle and provisions if he would simply stay in his place on the reservation was really revealing. Geronimo was a prisoner of war and knew it. Today many Chican@s and other oppressed don’t even know that we too are prisoners of war, for the U.$. war on Aztlan continues. We too are in a reservation called the United Snakes.
A low intensity war continues on the Chican@ nation. The U.$. government has always maintained an offensive on the colonies since the invasion was first launched, the offensive simply changes names, vehicle, and nationality, but its vision and operation remains fully intact. On April 20th, 1886 U.$. troops stationed in Arizona and New Mexico were issued this order by the U.$. War Department:
“The Chief object of the troops will be to capture or destroy any band of hostile Apache Indians found in this section of country and to this end the most vigorous and persistent efforts will be required of all officers and soldiers until the object is accomplished.”
If one were to substitute the word “Chican@s” instead of “Apache Indians” this statement could have been written last night. Insert the dreaded “gang member” which the colonizers love to use to vilify oppressed nations youth survival groups and the statement may be even more authentic to today’s mission. The pigs are tasked with accomplishing this mission in their war on the poor. Political groups or parties claiming to work in the interest of the oppressed here in the Snakes who do not move in ways that acknowledge this program of protracted soft war on the oppressed while conducting their work in the field in the so called interest of the colonized reduce their efforts to crass concerns of proletarian morality.
Today the state is resuming its offensive to “capture or destroy” hostile indigenous people (Chican@s, not First Nations in this context) and as the statement says they are obligated to do so “until the object is accomplished.” “Their vigorous and persistent” efforts today amount to the KKKourts, three strikes, “gang” enhancements, hyper-policing, and of course murder and assassination to none but a few.
It is not that Chican@ people are dimwitted and without comprehension to grasp that we are being attacked and targeted. What muddies the water is to see Chican@ or Black pigs carry out this program of “capture or destroy.” This works in the state’s interest to disguise the ONGOING onslaught on our people, that has not stopped since 1848 and before. As one long chain of oppression the state may employ Chican@ Toms and Black Uncle Toms as actors, but it is a state operation, that is: a program of white supremacy to maintain white power.
At the end of this book it’s a shame to read about Geronimo converting to Christianity to which he describes associating with Christians will “improve my character”. A warrior reduced to surrendering to the oppressor. Metaphysical thought like Christianity has not “improved” the character of the oppressed, rather, it has worked to subdue and pacify even one of the “ferocious” warriors like Geronimo. There’s even a picture of Geronimo in his Sunday best with the caption “ready for church” at the end of this book.
This was an interesting book that teaches one of the injustices committed by Amerikkka against indigenous peoples; but there are also lessons of how a warrior can (through the brute heel of the oppressor) become broken and surrender, and in doing so lead much of eir people into the abyss of plantation-minded Amerikan apologia. I needed to read this book at a time of extreme repression in my own life to re-energize and I think you need to read it as well. To die on the war-path for liberation . . .
The minimum security prisons out there afford some freedom of movement. To the 85%er this freedom of movement, no matter how limited, is interpreted to the 85% as freedom in its totality. This is partly due to the knowledge that he doesn’t have a free-dome. So let’s now focus on freeing the dumb by giving them the correct knowledge. So far the one who isn’t “free” mentally, we’ll now explain the difference between freedom and the illusion of freedom.
True freedom means liberation. The illusion means reforms. Liberation is an exodus or a migration from the system that it springs from – slavery. Reform is an adaptation to the slave system that makes it seem that since you received a trinket, you have received freedom. The difference is based on the truth vs the illusion. The world over, there are still struggles that stem from a lack of freedom. This lack of freedom is different for those who aren’t free, I’ll explain.
You see physical freedom does not preclude mental freedom. But mental freedom can only come from a free-dome. Ask yourself this, will the person who enslaved you free you? If you look at the history, the role between captor and the captured only changes when those who were captured unchain themselves. So the question answers itself. In Amerika a so-called war for the emancipation of Blacks was fought. However, we know that Ol Abe Lincoln only freed the slaves because ey had to not because ey wanted to. In fact Texas celebrates Juneteenth because they were the last state, 2 years after everyone else, to free their slaves. The North, who wanted to industrialize Amerika, saw that the South if it had the manufacturing industries like cotton gin etc. that they could take over Amerika because of its free slave labor. So they fed on the moral factor of the slave as an incentive to fight for the cracker. But what happened after the war?
Well let’s see, vagrancy in Amerika was illegal because you couldn’t pay taxes, so whitey invented black codes and then came up with convict leasing camps for anyone who couldn’t pay taxes. Brothers were right back where they left and convict leasing led to the legislation of the 13th Amendment that put us back into slavery in the penitentiary. So are we free or were we ever free? The answer must be no.
Yesterday marked the 52nd year anniversary of the assassination of comrade George L. Jackson. George bravely gave his life to the revolution. Let’s not let his legacy die. In the spirit of George and all our other beautiful comrades, let us usher in the true freedom, not the illusion but the true freedom. First acquire knowledge of self so that you can mentally be free and then once we acquire mental freedom we can physically take back what is ours. If we don’t know what to fight for we’ll keep ending up in prison well the maximum security prison. To change that we must transform our communities from minimum security prisons to people’s collectives. Get the devil out & destroy him.
Power to the People
MIM(Prisons) responds: Peace, Comrade. We thank this comrade for covering the importance of the subjective forces with regards to the liberation of the oppressed.
We would like to comment shortly with regards to the Civil War. This comrade states that the Civil War was fought between the North and the South due to the former’s rivalry to the South and its fear that the South’s industrialization would beat the North quickly due to the latter’s chattel slavery. However, we would say that the chattel-slavery mode of production of the U.$. bourgeois dictatorship in the South was an impeding factor for the development of the productive forces (what is often called industrialization) and that the U.$. empire found out that this backward relations of productions far out-lived its usefulness and need. Not only did it keep the South in a backwards agricultural economy, it also bred the new Black nation inside the U.$. borders which would to this day remain an intense problem population for Settler-Amerika.
There are many discussions today in U.$. society of what the Civil War was over. The neo-confederate fascists obscure the line and muddy the waters by saying that the Civil War was a war over “state’s rights.” The bourgeois Liberals say that the Civil War was a war where Amerika’s democratic values were restored to the fullest and united the empire. As Marxists, we see the class forces behind these conflicts rather than the psychological state/goals of individuals participating in it. The truth is, that the chattel-slavery relations of production was more bad than good for the U.$. empire by the time the war erupted. The class forces that wanted to keep it in the South such as the landed aristocracy (i.e. family bloodline plantation owners) and the agricultural bourgeoisie (i.e. modern capitalists who operated in cotton and other various industries of agriculture) were in antagonistic contradiction against the industrial bourgeoisie of the north who was leading the development of the productive forces in the country. We tell the fascists that if there was no slavery, then there would have been no Civil War. We tell the liberals that enslaving oppressed nations for parasitic superprofits is as Amerikan as apple pie. The Civil War helped release the New Afrikan masses to become a true proletariat, selling its labor power on the market.
And as the author above alludes to, the empire continues its war against the internal semi-colonies within the United $tates as well as the oppressed nations around the world, and the only solution to this contradiction is liberation.