MIM(Prisons) is a cell of revolutionaries serving the oppressed masses inside U.$. prisons, guided by the communist ideology of Marxism-Leninism-Maoism.
Under Lock & Key is a news service written by and for prisoners with a focus on what is going on behind bars throughout the United States. Under Lock & Key is available to U.S. prisoners for free through MIM(Prisons)'s Free Political Literature to Prisoners Program, by writing:
MIM(Prisons) PO Box 40799 San Francisco, CA 94140.
Salute fellow comrades, the fascist pigs have been in control for far
too long, the fascist pigs have used prisoner against prisoner for far
too long. It’s time for us to hear the words of a great fallen comrade
by the name of George Jackson who stated: settle your quarrels, come
together. Understand the reality of our situation. Understand that
fascism is already here, that people are already dying who could be
saved. That generations more will die or live poor butchered half-lives
as we do now if you fail to act.
My fellow comrades, I humbly ask each and every one of you to please
understand that if we want to successfully run a study group inside
modern slavery, then we need to stand together in solidarity, because we
out-number the fascist pigs. They just out-think us, because we are too
busy fighting, raping, and killing one another, just to name a few
things that we prisoners lend our hands to the pigs which stagnates us
and keeps the pigs in control.
I am issuing a call to revolutionary change. Fellow comrades I know what
I am asking of you won’t be easy, but lets take baby step together and
slowly put an end to all gang-related activities, so the fascist pigs
cannot use it against us to justify putting us in control housing units
or to censor our mail, etc.
Fellow comrades change first start with us, cause if we don’t respect
one another how can we demand respect from the fascist pigs.
MIM(Prisons) responds: We echo this comrade’s call for lumpen
organizations to end the violence and come together in unity. In fact,
when this writer calls for an end to “all gang-related activities” we
would instead say let’s turn these lumpen organizations into vehicles
for activities that educate and liberate the oppressed.
The protected, favored race here at Belmont Correctional Institution in
St. Clairsville, Ohio is black, especially Muslims. Racism is against
whites, light-skinned Hispanics, Jews, etc. A large part of the reason
for this unusual situation is the rural nature of the prison and thus
the staff employed by the prison. The catchment area for employees is
97% white, encompassing rural Belmont and surrounding Ohio counties and
the bordering WV county visible from the prison yard. While it is
counter-intuitive that an overwhelming white staff favors black inmates,
it is easily explained: they are scared of dark skin, of people with
whom they have had little or no interaction other than in the prison.
The mainstream media’s portrayal of blacks terrifies them. Because of
this fear, blacks get a “pass” on behaviors quickly causing disciplinary
action for whites, light-skinned Hispanics, etc. The few black staff
overtly favor blacks as well. Due to this, and the inadequate
socialization and education of the overwhelming majority of blacks here,
has led them to become oppressors of these same “white boys” groups by
the black majority. Official prison policy is “equalization” of blacks
amongst the eight kennels of 272 per kennel, that insures this
oppression in every kennel. (We also have the same dog program as in the
“Prison
Dog Rehab Program Underscores Inhumynity to Humyns” article of in
ULK 44, and yes, the dogs are better treated than inmates.)
This leads me to address the racism in ULK 44, that clearly
contradicts point #3, “We promote a united front with all who oppose
imperialism.” An example is contained in the response from MIM(Prisons)
on the article
“Ohio
Guards Instigate Beating, Lock Down Prisoners as Punishment”: “a
systematic oppression of certain nations (New Afrikan, Chican@, First
Nations) by the nation in power (the white nation).” This is overtly
racist, incorrect and divisive! Power being defined in terms of
political, social and economic power, that exploits the national and
international proletariat, the oppressors are not all white. A thorough
look at the exploitation of non-whites by non-whites in the First World,
especially in the United States, Western and Eastern Europe and Asia can
be elaborated upon in a full article within any upcoming issue of
Under Lock & Key. Though where it would fit in the listed
themes for issues 45-48 is a question, I could do so if MIM(Prisons)
would be agreeable to my becoming a ULK Field Correspondent.
Incorrectly defining the oppressor class as white disenfranchises 100’s
of millions of the oppressed “majority” in the U.S. and Europe from the
struggle rather than being inclusive. In Dialectical Materialism, Mao
said, “Because the oppressed class [an economic class, not racial
groups] fails when it adopts the wrong plans and succeeds by correcting
its plans…” The wrong plans are to divide the proletariat along racial
lines, causing the exact divisions necessary for oppression. The correct
plans include all the proletariat; white, brown, black, yellow or
purple. Only then, in unity, can there be the equality necessary to end
oppression.
MIM(Prisons) responds: MIM(Prisons) distinguishes ourselves from
other groups on six key points and this writer cites our point #3,
promoting a united front with all who oppose imperialism, but then
ignores point #4 which clearly states that we disagree that there is a
proletariat in the First World, especially within the white nation:
“A parasitic class dominates the First World countries. As Marx,
Engels and Lenin formulated and MIM Thought has reiterated through
materialist analysis, imperialism extracts super-profits from the Third
World and in part uses this wealth to buy off whole populations of
so-called workers. These so-called workers bought off by imperialism
form a new petty-bourgeoisie called the labor aristocracy; they are not
a vehicle for Maoism. Those who work in the economic interests of the
First World labor aristocracy form the mass base for imperialism’s
tightening death-grip on the Third World.”
The quote above about systematic oppression is not “overtly racist,”
rather it is specifically addressing nation and not race. Certainly
“white” is a racially loaded term, and one could argue that
“Euro-Amerikan” is preferable. Yet, “white” remains a term that people
can relate to and that often has more negative connotations among the
oppressed. We want to stress the negative and encourage the oppressed to
not identify with Amerikanism, which is the number one enemy of the
world’s people. We are not encouraging people to be anti-white because
of some racial attributes (racism) but rather we are opposing the
reality of the white nation oppressing other nations (national
oppression).
This letter is from a first-time reader, so the above is old hat to our
regular readers. But what made this letter more interesting to us was
within the context of other things going on in Ohio. We can say with
certainty that what the writer above reports is the exception to the
rule in both Ohio and throughout the United $tates prison system. While
this could just be one persyn’s subjective experience, it is feasible
enough that we will assume for now that what s/he says about New
Afrikans playing the oppressor role in Belmont is true at this time. Now
let’s look at a report from a USW organizer in a different Ohio
prison:
“A lot of the individuals professing white supremacist beliefs also
contain some underlying socialist views. Whether enough of a test to be
an indicator of ‘all’ or not, i’ve decided to halt attempts at
developing their consciousness at this time. i’ve opened up my study
group to more than a few of them, usually after they’ve continued to
join in open conversations over the range. However, once they see
materials that expose Amerika as an oppressor nation they go
‘subjective’ on me, getting extremely defensive and also protective in
claiming the united $tates as their rightful possession.”
Our comrades at this prison have decided to focus on single-nation
organizing due to their experiences. We want to commend both their
efforts to be open to all potential allies, as well as their scientific
approach to the situation. Taking a scientific approach requires dealing
in probability. This comrade acknowledges that h limited experience does
not prove that all white supremacists are pro-imperialism, but that
combined with our theory of the labor aristocracy it supports a practice
of focusing on organizing New Afrikans. Clearly this single-nation
strategy is not coming from a racist political line, but a scientific
assessment of national alliances in practice. This practice will
ultimately prove more successful than if these comrades had hidden their
critique of Amerika in an effort to unite with these white supremacists,
which is why this is a dividing-line question for us.
In some writings on the First World lumpen we’ve specified that we are
talking about the oppressed nation lumpen only. This is because we see
nation as the principal contradiction, leading to the vast majority of
whites allying with imperialism, even at the lowest economic classes. In
other writings we talk about uniting the imprisoned lumpen as a whole.
This is because the conditions of imprisonment put all nationalities in
the same position, living side-by-side, where there is greater potential
for them to recognize their common plight. And there is history of this
being true in Ohio itself during the Lucasville uprising, as well as in
California. In both cases, it was not just white prisoners, but the
Aryan Brotherhood who stood with oppressed nation lumpen organizations
to demand concessions from the state. It is for this reason that in
point #3 we say, “Even imperialist nation classes can be allies in the
united front under certain conditions.”
On the other hand there are countless examples of oppressed nation
lumpen organizations working against the people, even playing the role
of organizing violence in alliance with the state, as the first writer
above alludes to. This is the dual nature of the lumpen class overall
that makes it a potentially dangerous and revolutionary class. Yet, the
national contradiction in the United $tates favors the revolutionary
potential for oppressed nation lumpen in the long run, while making it
more likely for white lumpen to become the foot soldiers fighting for a
fascist state to rise. At the same time, we believe the probability of
anti-imperialism to develop among white prisoners to be higher than
white Amerikans in general. It is not that black=good and white=bad in
an absolute sense. It is about percentages. And as our USW comrade found
while putting h theories into practice, while there is a high percentage
chance of white prisoners opposing the state, and even favoring
seemingly socialist ideals, there is a very low percentage chance of
them opposing Amerikan exceptionalism and hegemony. Such people are
allies in the prison reform struggle, but rarely in the anti-imperialist
struggle.
Book Review: Narcoland: The Mexican Drug Lords and their
Godfathers By Anabel Hernandez 2014
Anabel Hernandez exposes the biggest drug organization: The U.$. and
Mexican government. Business men, and all branches of the government.
Although she doesn’t dig deeper into the Amerikan agencies like FBI,
DEA, DHS, ICE, etc., she does point out to the involvement of the CIA in
the drugs-arms trade in Central America during the civil wars focused on
destroying the communist movements.
Unlike other “conspiracy theory” books, Hernandez backs up the facts in
her book with evidence and information newly open and available to most.
Recent scandals of money laundering by banks like HSBC, HSMX, Bank of
Amerika, etc only reinforce the evidence Hernandez presents in her book.
The main criminals are those who benefit from this
politico-social-economic capitalist system.
As someone that grew up in the poorest section of Mexican society I can
say that this book is the most revealing one I’ve ever read regarding
the sad situation in Mexico, especially when speaking of the so-called
“War on Drugs.” Besides highly recommending this book to everyone and
especially my co-nationals; I want to make sure that everyone is aware
of the stupid idolization some people fall to. These “drug-lords” are
part of the system too. They are working together. As Roberto Saviano
puts it in the book foreword,
“Narco-land is not only an essential book for anyone willing to look
squarely at organized crime today. Narcoland also shows how…capitalism
is in no position to renounce the mafia. Because it is not the mafia
that has transformed itself into a modern capitalist enterprise - it is
capitalism that has transformed itself into mafia. The rules of drug
trafficking that Hernandez describes are also the rules of capitalism.”
People in the poor countries, like Mexico, get pulled to crime out of
necessity, no arguing about that. But once some of these people get
ultra-rich, or just rich, they become part of the problem. These people
have billions of dollars not just millions, and rather than use this to
educate and arm the people, they use it to buy private planes, yachts,
mansions and party and celebrate with the elites at the businesses and
governments.
In one way these drug lords are depicted as “bad” by the capitalist
government, and society. In another they are admired and discretely
shown as a roll model via brainwashing to the youth and uneducated, in
the movies (Scarface), TV series (Breaking Bad), and
so-called documentaries (Gangland), among many other sources.
Hernandez says “It has to stop [the Mexican drug-political system], and
the only ones who can stop it are ordinary citizens… It will only end
when Mexican society unites agains this immense ‘mafia.’ That means
overcoming fear and apathy, and above all the tacit assumption that
things can not be any different.” It’s up to us to be more political
conscious and do what we must. Whether “Drug-Lords” or “capitalists,”
they are the same ideology. Meanwhile kids are hungry and lack clothes
and education, the most basic needs.
Book also available in Spanish, as “Los Señores del Narco,” de Anabel
Hernandez.
MIM(Prisons) adds: This book review makes an important point
about class analysis and identifying our friends and enemies. While the
First World lumpen, individuals who may get pulled into small time drug
dealing, are a class that as a whole we can hope to win to the side of
revolution, the drug lords have moved out of this class, if they were
ever a part of it. They function as a comprador bourgeoisie, profiting
off the suffering of their people and working hand in hand with the
imperialists. Just because the drug trade is supposedly illegal does not
change this reality. And as this review points out, the governments that
have outlawed drugs are among the biggest players in drug dealing. What
is legal and what is criminal under capitalism is about politics, not
about justice or humyn rights.
Thank you for sending me the essay titled Let’s ‘Gang-Up’ on
Oppression by Owusu Yaki Yakubu.(1) Having become a “reformed” gang
member, this essay was extremely enlightening and solidified what I
already knew: that the government fears the unification of gangs and
their unified opposition against oppression. They also fear any gang
member or other lumpen street elements developing a socially conscious,
politicized, and revolutionary mentality.
I became politicized in the early 90s during my second year of
captivity. I took a long and hard look at myself as a so-called “gang”
member and I came to realize that I was being manipulated by the
powers-that-be, through the process of psychology and socialization, to
commit genocide against my own people. So I cut my gang ties and came to
embrace Revolutionary New Afrikan Nationalism.
In his essay Owusu speaks about the New Afrikan Independence Movement.
The article titled
Terminology
Debate: Black vs. New Afrikan, in No. 35 issue of Under Lock
& Key, also speaks about New Afrikan Nationalism. I am in the
process of starting an organization called My Brother’s and Sister’s
Keeper (MBSK), which embraces Revolutionary New Afrikan Nationalism
as its political mass line, or guiding principle. This ideology calls
for the establishment of an independent socialist New Afrikan republic
in the Southeast (USA), specifically in the Black-belt, the destruction
of the North Amerikkkan imperialist state, the liberation and
unification of Afrikan nations worldwide, the construction of a New
Afrikan society, and the building of a new world order.
A New Afrikan is an Afrikan born in north Amerikkka. The name and
concept “New Afrika” reflects our identity, purpose and direction. “New
Afrikan” reflects our identity as a nation and a people - a nation and a
people desiring self-determination. “New Afrikan” reflects our purpose
as we desire freedom, self-determination and independence. By stating we
are New Afrikans, we clarify we want to be independent from the
Amerikkkan Empire. We want land and national liberation. We no longer
want the ruling class of the amerikkkan Empire to determine our
political, economic, socio-cultural affairs. MBSK sees that a people who
do not control their own affairs is subject to genocide. When we control
our own destiny we can determine our political, economic and
socio-cultural affairs in the interest of our survival and development.
“New Afrikan” also speaks to our identity because that’s what we are.
Our nation is primarily a racial, cultural, social fusion of various
Afrikan ethnic and national groups - Iwe, Yoruba, Akan, Ashanti, Fante,
Hausa, Ibo, Fulani, Congolese and several others - into a unique people.
Even though our homeland was in Afrika, our people developed historical,
economic, and spiritual ties to the New Afrikan National Territory,
which consists of the states of Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, South
Carolina, and Louisiana. These states together are part of the
historical Black belt birthplace, and the North Amerikkkan homeland of
the New Afrikan nation. The struggle to free this land is called the New
Afrikan Independence Movement (NAIM). To state we are New Afrikan
recognizes our continuing aspirations to “free the land.” “Free the
Land” is the battle cry of the NAIM. When we say “free the land,” the
New Afrikan national territory is the land we are talking about freeing.
“New Afrikan” also recognizes our direction to build a new society based
on new values. We want to create a revolutionary, progressive, humane
society where exploitation of humans by humans is eliminated and all can
live in dignity, peace and respect. As conscious New Afrikans, we work
now to transform ourselves and our nation from decadent death-style of
oppression to lifestyles of liberation.
MSBK embraces and upholds the
United
Front for Peace in Prisons statement of principles. we oppose any
Willie Lynch-style divide and conquer tactics the fascist prison
authorities (pigs) use to cause division amongst the revolutionary ranks
and amongst the races or oppressed nations.
The essay Let’s Gang-Up on Oppression re-affirms what we
already knew: that we need to develop unity within and amongst lumpen
street organization and re-direct their aggression and radicalism to
wage the real war: revolution.
Again, I thank you for sending me your material. I made copies of the
essay and the UFPP statement of principles and passed them out among the
younger brothers here affiliated with lumpen street organizations.
There are two wars waging in oppressed communities throughout the United
$nakes: a war by the imperialist-oppressor nation to keep poor and
oppressed communities in semi-colonial bondage, and a war between lumpen
street organizations. The battlefields are the reservations, barrios,
ghetto cities and prison plantations. Many of you have defined the war
between us and the dominant nation incorrectly as “racism,” but what is
really going on is national oppression. And, in order to defeat and
destroy national oppression a “nation” must engage in a national
liberation struggle with the end result being national independence. But
this is getting ahead of myself.
Many of you who belong to a street organization, misnomered a gang, know
the history of your group and can trace yourselves back to when your
organization fought against injustices being perpetrated against some
segment of your community. And you know that many have deviated from
your origins and laws. At the same time, a lot of you are struggling to
re-define and re-direct your organization back to their original
purposes – serving the needs of the people.
Conversely, we all recognize or should recognize that the conditions of
our communities and nations are a direct result of our colonization by
those who settled this country. The poverty, misery and suffering, the
drug addiction and violence are all because you are not in control of
your own development and destiny. Those who don’t rule, get ruled.
My question to you is 1) who ultimately bears the responsibility to see
that peace exists in our communities? 2) who bears responsibility to see
that we have adequate housing, medical care, education, etc? 3) who
benefits most from our communities being saturated with drugs? 4) who
benefits most from all of the violence in our communities? 5) who
benefits the most from all of us being incarcerated?
Know that the state and federal government have been discussing changing
federal laws that would declare gangs and gang nmembers to be domestic
terrorists. Why would they do that? Because those in power know that you
have the actual and potential power to change this society, that you
have the actual and potential power to liberate your nation. You can put
an end to police brutality, homelessness, hunger, war, etc. Yea, you
have that power!
“The police, and those that they truly serve and protect, do not want us
to respect the actual and potential power of our young people, they do
not want us to glimpse, through our youth, the power that lies within
each of us. If the crips and bloods can bring peace to our communities,
and the police can’t or won’t, then why do we need the police? If the
Disciples, Vice Lords, Latin Kings and other street organizations can
serve and protect our children and elders, and the state demonstrates
that it can’t or won’t, then why should we continue to depend upon it
and profess loyalty to it? If the power to end violence exists within
our own communities, then we should be looking for ways to increase our
power, and we should be looking for ways to exercise it.”(1)
Ain’t nothing wrong with being in a street organization, because after
all, a “gang” is a group of people with close social relations that work
together. The problem is that most street organizations are moving in
the wrong direction. They’re engaging in the wrong social practices
which are retarding the growth and development of our people.
Through the media and other outlets, the negative images of gangs are
filtered (like that bullshit Gangland), so that our people will
see street organizations as the main problem existing in our hoods, and
they’ll ask for more police presence and harsher prison sentences for
those identified as gang members. But gangs didn’t create the current
problems. The state fears that you’ll become conscious and active and
solve the problems.
Dig this: “One of the main reasons for the rampant crime that occurs in
the colonies is national oppression. The colonized live in areas where
there is unemployment or underemployment, crummy housing with high rent
and poor education. The colonized kill and fight over the money that
secures necessities… this reality afflicts the nationally oppressed in
the most harmful ways. The nationally oppressed do not hold state power
nor the economic power to compete with the oppressors… so the rampant
crime in the colonies is not due to self-hatred but national oppression
and capitalist culture and policy.”(2)
So you see, “Our problem is not that there are gangs in our communities
– our problem is that our communities are colonized territories that
suffer from arrested development caused by the U.S. settler-imperialist
state. Thus, we have no need to attack gangs – that is, ideally, we have no need to attack any
organized group of our people that work to free the process of our
collective development. [my emphasis] What we must do is make
sure that all organized groups in our communities have this as their
goal – and so long as we deal with members of our communities
(i.e. members of our families), the means that we use should be
education and persuasion, rather than physical force. However, even if
stronger means are called for, they should be means created and employed
by forces within our own communities and not those of U.S., local, state
and federal governments. The transformation of gangs into progressive
groups within our communities is part of the process of acquiring group
power that will enable us to control every aspect of our lives. Our
problem is that too many people in our communities – old and young –
lack the identity, purpose and direction required of us if we are to
acquire the kind of power that we need to truly free ourselves and begin
to pursue the development of our ideal social order.”(1)
The betterment of our conditions must begin with self, with you making a
conscious and disciplined commitment to transforming yourselves and your
organizations. Prestige bars any serious attack on power. Do people
attack a thing they consider with awe, with a sense of legitimacy? This
is an aspect of the “criminal” and the “colonial” (slave) mentality:
continued recognition and acceptance of the legitimacy of the colonial
rule, to continue to feel that the colonial state has a right to rule
over the colonized.
If we take control of our communities and the power to control every
aspect of our lives, then we can ensure that the lynchings end. You can
put an end to there ever being another Oscar Grant, Sean Bell or Trayvon
Martin lynching.
Soldiers, Riders, Gangstaz – protect your community, clean it up, build
it up, feed it, educate it, and let no one do it any harm. That’s
gangsta, but revolutionary!
Ride or Die! Unite or Perish! July 2013
MIM(Prisons) adds: This statement from BORO is a good
explanation of why the United Front for Peace work is important, and is
demanded by the people. While we are building the
United Front
for Peace in Prisons we must also work towards a United Front on the
streets, where the lumpen organizations come together to fight our
common enemy: imperialism. We have seen examples of strong unity and
educational advancement in many street organizations. The UFPP works to
set an example in prisons that can be taken to the streets.
This article was translated and updated by USW C-4 based on an
article originally printed in Notas Rojas
Lately there have been news reports about the amount of L.O. related
violence. The “solution” proposed is the presence of more police on the
streets and barrios of the oppressed nations. In every state where
lumpen organizations exist propositions are being heard to raise police
funding by millions of dollars. Asking from a reformist perspective, why
isn’t that money used to create youth training centers for office/trade
or education, and the only logical response is that the police,
government and white-nation simply want to make life more impossible for
oppressed nation people. Above all for Latinos and Blacks.
Lumpen Organizations are a logical extension of capitalist society
When speaking about gangs and violence let’s not forget that the most
powerful gang and most violent of ’em all is the U.$. government, and
it’s agencies of protection are the same entities that determine what is
and isn’t a gang. It can be said that the gang of “Amerikkka” serves as
a model for street gangs which are less violent and less powerful. The
similarities are obvious: they both defend territories they’ve taken
possession of, many times with violence, they both take part in illegal
trade of narcotics and guns for financial gain (and in the case of
street-gangs for protection). In the U.$. there was the initiation of
chemical warfare on the Black nation in the form of the crack cocaine
epidemic which began in the 70s and 80s, also worth noting is the more
recent uncovering of CIA agents selling high power firearms to the drug
cartels of Mexico. The difference with respect to lumpen organizations
and their members is that many times they don’t have another option. The
government on the other hand does it as a way to enforce it’s politics
to assure it’s hegemonic control over the Third World as well as a form
of making money. No one prohibits the government from continuing.
The irony of the matter is that government functionaries are fighting
against something that represents the logical extension of the
colonizer’s society of the U.$. along with it’s values and all. The
power, the violence and the voracious ambition are all part of the
patrimony of the United $tates. Instead of attacking the root of the
problem, the pigs favor armed suppression of the youth. To truly solve
the problem you have to solve the problem of the nature of society as a
whole and destroy the model on which street gangs are based, the
military and the government of the United $tates.
Whatever diminishment in gang activity there is due to mass
incarceration and/or the augmented presence of pigs will only serve to
quiet the issue for a short period of time and might even cause the
transfer of the gang to a territory with less police. A real solution to
the violence of street crime needs to include the abolition of the
system that requires that some live in misery while others live in
disgusting and exaggerated wealth, while the rich accuse the poor of not
being “smart” like them as an explanation for the wealth.
The inequality of power is a necessary condition of
capitalist/imperialist society. The solution requires doing away with
this oppressive system. For those who are searching for a more immediate
solution for society’s problems like gang violence which affect their
communities, the community ends up losing when they make it a priority
to increase police presence. How many times must it be proven that the
police are our enemies. They kill us without a care in the world. See
our recent article on
David
Deacon Turner, former NFL player killed by the pigs.
Many people who witness the more visible violence, that of the LOs and
not of the police, are siding with the pigs against the LOs. This is
expected for many reasons, including the friendly relationship between
the police and the press. The press doesn’t occupy itself with exposing
the abuses and assassinations by the police.
For this debate the voice that’s most needed is that of the LOs and
their members. After all, can we trust in the press or in a press
conference by the police? Or that the press will lie about the LOs? The
LOs and their supporters have reason to stay away from the yellow press;
instead they should utilize other methods and mediums in building public
opinion to speak for them. This is another of the millions of reasons
why the oppressed need their own independent media. LO members are
encouraged to write MIM(Prisons) to have their voices heard in
ULK and to help develop an analysis of the lumpen by the lumpen
for the betterment of the lumpen.