I N T E R N E T ' S M A O I S T BI-M O N T H L Y = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = XX XX XXX XX XX X X XXX XXX XXX XXX X X X X X X X XX X X X X X X X V X X X V X X X X X X X XX XXX X X X X X X XX X X X X X X X XXX X X X V XXX X XXX XXX = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = THE MAOIST INTERNATIONALIST MOVEMENT MIM Notes 172 October 15, 1998 MIM Notes speaks to and from the viewpoint of the world's oppressed majority, and against the imperialist-patriarchy. Pick it up and wield it in the service of the people. support it, struggle with it and write for it. IN THIS ISSUE: 1. INDIGENOUS PEOPLE'S DAY RALLY AT U. OF MICHIGAN, ANN ARBOR 2. DING, DONG, ABACHA'S DEAD... 3. MOBIL DUMPS STOLEN OIL 4. IN ZAMBIA, EXTORTION: COKE IS IT 5. LETTERS 6. DC RALLY AGAINST PRIVATE PRISON 7. MASSES SAY: JUNK THE VISITING FORCES AGREEMENT! 8. REVIEW: DOCUMENTARY ON ANGOLA PRISON PORTRAYS HUMANITY OF PRISONERS, DOWNPLAYS INHUMANITY OF THE PRISON SYSTEM 9. CLINTON'S DEFINITION OF "FREE AND EQUAL" 10. TERRORISM AND EXPLOITATION EXPOSE PALESTINE PEACE BALONEY 11. MICH. SCHOOL OFFICIAL GETS RICH WHILE PRISONERS GET TRANSFERRED 12. REVOLUTIONARY ANTI-IMPERIALIST LEAGUE: BUILDING INDEPENDENT ANTI-IMPERIALIST INSTITUTIONS OF THE OPPRESSED 13. WITH "PROGRESSIVES" LIKE THESE, WHO NEEDS REACTIONARIES? 14. UNDER LOCK AND KEY: NEWS FROM PRISONS AND FROM PRISONERS The Maoist Internationalist Movement (MIM) is a revolutionary communist party that upholds Marxism-Leninism-Maoism, comprising the collection of existing or emerging Maoist internationalist parties in the English-speaking imperialist countries and their English-speaking internal semi-colonies, as well as the existing or emerging Spanish-speaking Maoist internationalist parties of Aztlan, Puerto Rico and other territories of the U.S. Empire. MIM Notes is the newspaper of MIM. Notas Rojas is the newspaper of the Spanish- speaking parties or emerging parties of MIM. MIM is an internationalist organization that works from the vantage point of the Third World proletariat; thus, its members are not Amerikans, but world citizens. MIM struggles to end the oppression of all groups over other groups: classes, genders, nations. MIM knows this is only possible by building public opinion to seize power through armed struggle. Revolution is a reality for North America as the military becomes over-extended in the government's attempts to maintain world hegemony. MIM differs from other communist parties on three main questions: (1) MIM holds that after the proletariat seizes power in socialist revolution, the potential exists for capitalist restoration under the leadership of a new bourgeoisie within the communist party itself. In the case of the USSR, the bourgeoisie seized power after the death of Stalin in 1953; in China, it was after Mao's death and the overthrow of the "Gang of Four" in 1976. (2) MIM upholds the Chinese Cultural Revolution as the farthest advance of communism in human history. (3) MIM believes the North American white-working-class is primarily a non- revolutionary worker-elite at this time; thus, it is not the principal vehicle to advance Maoism in this country. MIM accepts people as members who agree on these basic principles and accept democratic centralism, the system of majority rule, on other questions of party line. "The theory of Marx, Engels, Lenin and Stalin is universally applicable. We should regard it not as dogma, but as a guide to action. Studying it is not merely a matter of learning terms and phrases, but of learning Marxism-Leninism as the science of revolution." -- Mao Zedong, Selected Works, Vol. II, p. 208 * * * OCTOBER 12 IS INDIGENOUS PEOPLE'S DAY RALLY AT THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN ANN ARBOR, ON THE DIAG AT 12 NOON What do you know about U.$. and Canadian occupation of Indigenous Nations? RAIL joins First Nation peoples around this continent in calling for an end to more than 500 years of occupation of their land. Amerikan and Canadian settlers live here illegally -- abusing the land they live on without permission of the people to whom the land rightfully belongs. In 1990, Quebec Provincial Police blockaded and then invaded the Kahnesatake Mohawk Nation territory at Oka. The siege began over attempts by the white town of Oka to expand its golf course onto Mohawk burial grounds. As the standoff escalated the Province of Quebec first offered to buy the land to prevent its use as a golf course (the government never said what it would use the land for) and then claimed to have purchased the land -- although no one ever saw papers documenting the transfer of property. In response to attacks on their land, Mohawks set barricades around Kahnesatake, and blockaded the Mercier bridge, disrupting traffic in and around the city of Montreal. As the Mohawk people showed their own will to protect their land, and as Nations around the illegitimate United Snakes and Canada showed their support for the Mohawks with blockades of their own, the settlers living around Kahnesatake and the Quebecois Police grew ever more vicious. Anti-Mohawk demonstrators harassed and beat Mohawks who tried to deliver food and other supplies to the Warriors, wimmin and children inside the territory. A pregnant Mohawk womyn was kept from moving on to a hospital for 15 minutes while settlers showed their concern for justice by stopping the ambulance she was riding in. As if setting the local settler loose to attack the Mohawks was not enough, the government also took one Mohawk warrior out of his community and put him in a New York prison before the summer standoff began. Kakwirakeron was imprisoned on nonsense charges and hidden in prison out of contact with his family and his people when the siege at Oka began. MIM Notes was there to cover the Oka siege, and we continue to expose the genocidal practices of the oppressor nation whenever we can. The siege at Oka, which lasted more than two months, resembled the 1973 siege at Wounded Knee on the Pine Ridge Lakota Reservation -- surrounded by the illegal state of South Dakota. The people on the Pine Ridge reservation endured a three-year campaign of terror under the GOON (Guardians of the Oglala Nation) squads of Tribal Chief Dick Wilson. The people asked and activists from the American Indian Movement (AIM) came onto the reservation to defend the people against Wilson's GOONs and to build houses, gardens and other institutions for the nation. AIM's presence brought the FBI to the reservation, and the FBI instigated a shootout in which a G-man was killed and Leonard Peltier of AIM was framed for his murder. RAIL is an anti-imperialist mass organization led by the Maoist Internationalist Movement (MIM). RAIL supports anti-imperialism to the point of and including armed struggles of the oppressed for national liberation and self-determination. * * * DING DONG, ABACHA'S DEAD... by MC45 And the comprador Abubakar is seeing his way free from imperialist sanctions. During a visit to England, current Nigerian comprador leader General Abubakar met with English Prime Minister Tony Blair to discuss the end of European Union sanctions against Nigeria. The E.U. had placed limited economic sanctions on Nigeria in 1995, after the late comprador General Abacha's military murdered nine Ogoni activists for protesting Shell Oil's brutal abuse of their land. But imperialists don't like to keep their running dogs isolated for too long. So when Abacha died earlier this year, England rushed a government minister down to the "dark continent" to greet Abacha's crony and successor Abubakar. While Abubakar has made promises about democratizing Nigeria, the European financiers cannot be credited with caring about Nigerian politics or human rights when they consider revoking sanctions. Like the executive committee of the international big bourgeoisie that they are, these imperialists care only about restoring their own countries' full access to Nigeria's resources. MIM guesses that their principal emotion on hearing of Sani Abacha's death was relief -- with a new face in office in Nigeria they can lift sanctions while continuing to claim their bogus moral ground.(1) * * * MOBIL DUMPS STOLEN OIL Meanwhile, a recent oil spill off the coast of Nigeria highlights the sordid history of Amerikan and other multi-national oil companies wrecking the land in Nigeria and then leaving Nigerians to recover the damage done. On 12 January, the head of Mobil Oil's operations in Nigeria found out that one of his company's pipelines -- a 24-inch pipe intended to carry oil from off-shore drilling to the shore -- had burst. The accident spewed 40,000 barrels of oil into the Atlantic Ocean. The New York Times reports that Nigeria's military government, still under Sani Abacha in January, kept news of the spill from getting broad press. Comprador governments have an interest in keeping bad news about imperialist exploits in their countries quiet. The comprador relationship -- by which a Third World government is propped up economically by imperialism in exchange for unfettered exploitation of the Third World country's natural resources and its people -- is only harmed by exposure. It is best both for the imperialists and the comprador lackeys if no critical news gets out, as this news only makes it more difficult to make the tax, land use and other deals detrimental to the people. The New York Times article reporting on the Mobil spill raises the question of U.$. responsibility for Nigeria's ecological and political health. In 1995, writer Ken Saro-Wiwa was murdered for his role in bringing international attention to the fact that Shell Oil was killing his Ogoni people and destroying their land. That was the last time Nigeria's relations with First World oil companies made front page news in the U.$.(2) Repeating a chauvinist understanding of America's role, the Times reports that although the Klinton administration did admonish the Nigerian government for murdering Saro-Wiwa, Amerika continued to invest $7 billion in oil money in the country. Seeing U.$. investments in the Third World as a gift is a backwards way of understanding the economic relationship between Amerika and its neo-colonies. This perspective falsifies the motives for so-called investment -- they do not give, they invest, for their own returns. It also builds the illusion that Amerikan responsibility for Nigeria's problems stems from giving support to the country -- so that if the U.$. decides the Nigerian government is getting out of line it can pull out its money, walk away and claim to have done the right thing. In real life, the United Snakes is responsible for the poverty and oppression of Third World nations because this country gains its wealth and grotesque standard of living at the expense of other countries. The New York Times article also emphasizes how lucky the Nigerian people are that the oil spill was contained so well. Relatively little oil reached the shore because of water currents and the company's counter-measures. This claim of the Nigerian's being lucky about the level of damage comes out in response to coastal and near-coastal communities attempting to claim payment for the environmental damage from the spill. In reality, the people of Nigeria are very unlucky to have the Amerikan bloodsuckers invading their land. MIM says the Nigerians are correct to call for damage payments, and that harm caused by the spill are irrelevant to the question of payment due to the Nigerian people. No matter what the real environmental damages are today, it is certain that whatever problems remain will become the problems of the people long after the oil companies have left. MIM and all genuine anti-imperialists believe that imperialism owes a debt of reparations to the peoples of the Third World. * * * ZAMBIA EXTORTION: COKE IS IT Zambia's trade and industry minister announced on September 20 that Coca-Cola had suspended its Zambia Bottlers operation in protest over 25% excise taxes. The Zambian government is under heavy pressure from U.$.-dominated international aid and lending agencies to privatize industry. And because Coke has a lot of money engaged in exploiting the Zambian people through such private investment, it wields a big stick in negotiations for an even less equitable financial relationship with Zambia. The nutritionless beverage company employs 19,000 Zambians out of a labor force of 3.4 million. With only 6% of Zambians -- 204,000 people -- working in industry, Coke controls nearly one-tenth of the country's industrial jobs. Coke also uses up 25% of Zambian sugar produced per year and pays out large electricity bills. Oh yes, the multi-nationals and their running dogs will tell the people, we make big investments, tremendous contributions to your national economy. The volume of Coke sales for the second quarter of 1998 increased 10% over the second quarter in 1997. In 1997 stock price and dividends combined rose 28%, after rising 43% in 1996 and 46% in 1995. But it's not enough to say that Coca-Cola continues to make profits and to increase the volume of sales while it extorts tax breaks from forcibly impoverished southern African nations. We must also point out that volume increases in the southern African division of Coca-Cola were 19% for the second quarter of 1998, as compared with increases of less than 10% for the divisions within North America. This means that Coke pays little enough to its African employees and for the African resources it uses, and gains enough in profits, to have far greater expansion there than within U.$. borders. Yet Coke still wants to pay less to do business in Zambia because it understands the power of its economic position there and will thirstily use this position to suck every drop of wealth that it can from the Zambian people. As an Amerikan company that happily invested in Apartheid South African rule and in the overall European domination of southern Africa, Coke has had an important historical role in the impoverishment of Zambia. Imperialism was instrumental in creating poor living conditions for the people of the front-line African states -- those African countries that border or are close neighbors of Azania. This imperialist relationship has meant profits to Coke, and it has meant early death for the people of Zambia. At birth, Zambians expect to live less than 36 years. Even in other very poor countries, wimmin can expect to live a few years longer than men. Many people in the world live only into what Amerikans call "middle age" -- into their 40s and 50s. In most places, wimmin live longer than men on average because men face more health risks earlier in life, and have higher risks for certain diseases later in life. In Zambia thanks to the brutalizing hand of the First World robber barons, the peoples lives are cut so short that there is no difference in the life expectancy of wimmin and men. That means risks to wimmin are much higher earlier in life, and the people don't live long enough for wimmin to outlive men in old age. Within these living conditions and the realities of where Coke slurps its profits from, the corporation and its comprador allies in the Zambian government have the gall to refer to Coke as making a "contribution" to the Zambian economy. MIM fiercely disputes the notion that Coke is making anything other than an investment in its own future wealth. And we argue that Coke's activities in Zambia represent nothing more noble than the finely honed Amerikan practice of growing rich by the labor of the Third World masses. Coke's current tactic of making threats to avoid taxes is the direct strong-arm approach of a school-yard bully, made vulgar by the gross disregard for human lives this behavior reveals.(3) Eventually, when imperialism is destroyed, the oppressors will be made to pay reparations for the land, resources and human lives they have taken out of the Third World. Until that day, revolutionaries will continue the slow but steady work of building public opinion in favor of the just struggles of the oppressed for self-determination. If you too believe that imperialists are deep in debt to the people of the world, get in touch with MIM Notes at the address on page two. You can help us with the twice-monthly project of enumerating this debt to all our readers through research, writing and art. Notes: 1. PanAfrican News Agency 23 September, 1998. 2. New York Times 20 September, 1998. 3. Zambia sources: CIA World Factbook, http://www.odci.gov/cia/publications/factbook/country-frame.html; PanAfrican News Agency, 21 Sept., 1998, http://www.africanews.org/PANA/news/; Coke information at http://www.coke.com * * * LETTERS POTENTIAL NEW SOLDIER AGAINST LOCKDOWN Dear MIM, I am coming into an awareness of prisons and the prison system. I don't know how I feel at this point. But I feel that prisons are several things to many people. They are 1) Think tanks -- some of the best minds are there; if not coming they are developed there. This is a resource for us on the outside. 2) They are a study on behavior of confined people. Along with the military. I would imagine people are placed in solitary just to see what happens. 3) A source of cheap labor. I'm not going to criticize the powers that be in fact I credit them because they are looking out for their own interest. What's important is to be aware of what they are doing so you can sidestep their plans, which is total control of the populous. Send me more info. --Internet reader MIM Responds: Thank you for your letter. We are always eager to talk about ways people can support MIM and RAIL's anti-prisons and serve the people programs. Have you been accessing information from our Web page? In addition to that, we urge you to order two pieces of literature from us to learn more about our prison agitation and theory. The first is a Revolutionary Anti- Imperialist League (RAIL) pamphlet, "For the oppressed, Amerika = prison: Criminal justice as social control." ($1). The second is a MIM Theory journal, "Amerikan Prisons on Trial: Guilty." ($6). You are right on that prisons are places of serious study. It has been our experience that we can't fill orders for literature fast enough for the incredible demand for study materials. MIM has elsewhere remarked that the United Snakes would be a country of geniuses if everyone studied as hard or read as much as the prisoners! And certainly, you are also right that the government has used prisons, and Control Unit facilities in particular, as cruel experiments in behavior modification and control. We have years worth of correspondence from prisoners in Control Units attesting to this, and describing conditions (constant bright lights, extreme temperatures, etc) that are designed both to torture and to study the effects of that torture on prisoners. As for labor, you might find our articles in MIM Theory 11 on prison labor interesting. One such article from that journal is available on our web site, "Prison Labor: Profits, Slavery and the State." (http://www.etext.org/Politics/MIM/mt/mt11/labor11.html) So we urge you to check out this literature, to consider making a financial contribution to our books for prisoners program, and to get involved in our work. We have an ongoing need for research in various aspects of "corrections" that we use for our campaigns and public speaking events. We also are always in need of people willing to distribute our newspapers locally. Are you interested? Please keep in touch. E-MAIL READER BALKS AT PROLETARIAN LINE Dear MIM, It is so blatantly obvious that all of your articles are basically written by the same people. When you print something that was supposedly written by "a prisoner in Michigan," it is so obvious that it was, in reality, written by someone on your staff. Can't you do a better job of deceiving people than that? Obviously, the answer is no. It sure is funny, though. Thanks for all of the entertaining writing. I love your sense of humor. You obviously don't take this garbage seriously, and neither do I. --Internet reader July 1998 MIM Responds: MIM does not bother responding to most of the hate mail we get as a result of our Internet agitation -- it is too numerous and, frankly, it all sounds the same. Could it be that it's all written by the same agents of the state? Or is it just that for all their talk about individualism, there isn't a lot of creative thinking among Amerikan reactionaries? To such people, the life and death struggles of the international proletariat, and our comrades struggling behind bars in Amerikkka, are "entertaining." We are sickened by the callousness, but provide the following explanation to our readers regarding the uniformity of our line, speech and tone. First of all, we welcome our comrades behind bars among the "staff writers" of MIM Notes, MIM Theory and RAIL Notes, so that distinction is a false one. Second of all, we are not trying to hide the democratic centralism that operates in our circles to present a coherent and unified political line in our publications. So yes, the articles bear that political line in common, and also apply similar revolutionary language to articulate that line. Finally, what if all our articles were written by the same persyn? Would that, in itself, make them incorrect? None of us on the outside would write an article and sign it as a prisoner (or make any other false claim of authorship of any kind), but then we would also argue that MIM and RAIL comrades on the outside have enough rational knowledge of prison conditions at this point to write from that perspective. Thanks for the opportunity to dispel some of the more pernicious Amerikan-individualist line that passes for "originality." PRAISE AND APPRECIATION Dear Comrades, Read in e-mail about your activities to expose their terrorism and national oppression that go by the names "justice" and "corrections" here in this wonderful milk-and-honey land of Amerikkka. Sadly, I'm afraid I can't participate in the upcoming events, but I do hope the small donation I've enclosed will help you carry out your important work. Looking forward to hearing about the success of your rally. On with the revolution! * * * DC RALLY AGAINST PRIVATE PRISON Washington, D.C. -- About 40 people turned out September 14 to protest a new prison planned for the city's Ward 8. The D.C. branch of the Revolutionary Anti-Imperialist League (RAIL) attended the rally. As MIM Notes has previously reported, the Federal government and its District of Columbia proxies are fixing to build a private prison in the city's Ward 8, which is 90% Black and the poorest ward in the city. The new prison would go on some federal park land. Ward 8 had a median household income of $26,300 in 1997, one-third less than the city median of $39,792 and only two-fifths the median income of richest area, Ward 3, which is 79% white. In 1990 Ward 8 had the highest unemployment rate, the highest number of single-parent households, the fewest homeowners and the highest proportion of people in public housing projects in the city. Since 1990, its population has dropped 19%. This economically devastated area is also the location of several large government installations, such as St. Elizabeth's mental hospital, Bolling Air Force Base, and the city's wastewater treatment plant. In 1994, almost 90% of those who voted cast their ballots for Marion Barry.(1) From the point of view of state and corporate interests, in other words, a perfect place for a prison. The rally, which took place right before local elections, included several losing politicians and others hoping to capitalize on the not-in-my-backyard flavor of the event (winning politicians stayed away -- they support the new prison). DC-RAIL had picked up a flyer opposing the prison, distributed by the local International Socialist Organization (ISO, a group with Trotskyist origins and largely social-democratic politics), but attributed to the Ward 8 Coalition, which includes many local organizations including Republicans, Democrats, Greens, and the ISO. Although DC-RAIL also opposes the new prison, we disagreed with some of the Ward 8 Coalition's arguments on their flyer. DC-RAIL distributed a flyer at the rally title "Oppose all U$ prisons -- Support prisoners!" which explained our position. Our main disagreement was with the argument that Ward 8 was the wrong location for a prison, and the implication that the prisoners were the problem. the DC-RAIL flyer read in part: "RAIL opposes the construction of anew prison in Ward 8 -- or any other ward. The 'not in my backyeard' approach to prison construction ignores the real problem of skyrocketing U.$. prison populations, especially in D.C. ... While RAIL recognizes the injustice of dumping another unpopular project on Ward 8 and calling it economic development, we believe that the real danger posed to Ward 8 is the government's increased capacity to lock up more of its population." The Ward 8 Coalition flyer noted that the Corrections Corporation of America (CCA), which is planning the new prison, recently had some escapes in Ohio, where D.C. prisoners have been transferred to a CCA prison -- and this was a reason to oppose locating the prison in Ward 8. Another flyer passed out at the rally said, "We refuse to allow a prison to be built near our homes, schools and churches!" The DC-RAIL flyer added: "RAIL recognizes that prisoners are not the real threat to public safety. The danger posed to society by an escaped prisoner pales in comparison to the everyday threat posed to the Black, Latino and First Nations as well as all oppressed people by U$ imperialism. In a just society prisons would not be filled with people from oppressed nations and the relatively poor groups in society imprisoned for property and drug crimes, while the worst criminals, like the people who bomb medicine factories in Africa, wield state power." RAIL opposes CCA, but not because prisoners are more likely to escape from CCA prisoners than government-run prisons. Rather, as the flyer said, we oppose prison privatization because "when oppression of the people becomes a business that goes to the lowest bidder, society takes another step towards fascism." Likewise, RAIL does not oppose CCA prisons because prison privatization does or does not save governments money.(2) At the rally, some of the slogans were things RAIL could well agree with, such as "Educate, don't incarcerate!" and "Money for health care, not for jails!" But "Ward 8 prison has got to go!" and some other slogans were of the not-in-my-backyard variety, with which we do not agree. The flyer concluded: "The people can't afford a victory that increases public animosity toward prisoners." RAIL agrees with the other protestors that building a prison is not a good answer to Ward 8's local economic problems. Prison jobs are parasitic and nonproductive, and draw members of working class and middle class into the repressive state apparatus, all of which we oppose. But we do not agree with the argument of the leader of the rally, Eugene Dewitt Kinlow, who complained that prison guards from Lorton prison (the prison for D.C., located in Virginia, that is closing) are supposedly being guaranteed jobs at the new prison. Kinlow wanted the prison guard jobs to go to Ward 8 residents. We do not argue that oppressed-nation members should get police-state jobs doing the dirty work of neocolonialism for the imperialist masters. RAIL opposes CCA, the new prison, and the whole prison system -- but we want to build opposition that furthers the cause of undermining U.$. imperialism and building Black nation self- determination. Notes: 1. Ward 8 profile from the Washington Post at http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp- srv/local/longterm/library/dcelections/wards/ward3p1.htm 2. For MIM's view on fascism and prison privatization, see MIM Theory 11, "Amerikkkan Prisons on Trial." * * * MASSES SAY: JUNK THE VISITING FORCES AGREEMENT! LOS ANGELES -- Close to 100 people participated in events in early September protesting the proposed Visiting Forces Agreement (VFA) between the governments of the U.$. and the puppet government of the Philippines. The VFA would give U.$. military ships and planes porting and landing rights, provide for the deployment of U.$. military personnel in the Philippines, and guarantee U.$. military personnel immunity for any crimes committed while in the Philippines. The agreement overturns the victory the Filipino people won in 1991, when the Philippine Senate voted to cancel the leases on the U.$. military bases in the country.(1) Speakers at a public forum on September 10 gave an in-depth analysis of the VFA itself, and tied the VFA to larger social problems in the Philippines, Asia, and the world. The keynote speaker, Arnedo Valera, a consultant to the National Democratic Front of the Philippines in its peace talks with the puppet government of the Philippines, went so far as to read sections of the agreement, in order to demonstrate that it violated the sovereignty of the Philippines, even by bourgeois legal standards. A speaker representing ACTION and the Okinawa Peace Network-L.A. discussed the history of U.$. military presence in Okinawa, which is similar to that of the Philippines. The U.$. occupied Okinawa, which had been colonized by Japan in the 19th Century, at the end of World War II. From 1945 until 1972, the U.$. controlled all of Okinawa, and used it as a military training ground and as a base for its wars of aggression in Korea and Vietnam. After the 1995 rape of a 12-year-old by U.$. soldiers, Okinawans voted in a plebiscite to remove U.$. bases. But the U.$. military remains to this day, and occupies 20% of Okinawa's territory, including over 40% of its arable farmland. Finally, a RAIL Comrade gave a short talk presenting the VFA as part of the ongoing World War III being waged against oppressed nations and explaining why the political and economic system of imperialism makes war inevitable. The RAIL comrade used the recent U.$. bombings in Afghanistan and the Sudan as examples of the imperialist's violence and aggression, as well as their use of the false scarecrow of "terrorism" to justify their own real terrorism. In fact, the reactionaries in the puppet government of the Philippines claim that Osama Bin Laden, supposed target of Amerika's recent bombings, has visited the Philippines several times in recent years. They are using this bogus threat of "international terrorism" to help pass the VFA. During the question and answer session, members of the Trotskyist- led group Radical Women asked if the anti-VFA movement could ever be successful while the bourgeoisie held state power in the Philippines. Mr. Valera answered this bit of idealism effectively from the perspective of the legal national democratic movement in the Philippines, pointing out that members of intermediate classes like the urban petit-bourgeoisie, the national bourgeoisie, and some reactionaries oppose the VFA. Mobilizing these forces to defeat the VFA and keep the U.$. military out of the Philippines would be a victory which would aid the anti-imperialist movement. He also pointed out that the National Democratic Front of the Philippines, which is led by the Maoist Communist Party of the Philippines, recognizes that only armed struggle for liberation and the construction of socialism will truly defeat imperialism in the Philippines. On September 16 many of the people who attended the forum protested in front of the Philippine consulate, marking the seventh anniversary of the decision to terminate the U.$. military's leases in the Philippines. The events in Los Angeles and other cities (e.g., San Francisco) mirrored rallies and protests in the Philippine opposing the VFA. For example, peasants and fisherfolk picketed the U.$. embassy in Manila. According to a press release from the Peasant Movement of the Philippines, "They brought with them mongrel puppies representing President Joseph Estrada and defense secretary Orlando Mercado. [The puppies] were held with leashes by an activist dressed as Uncle Sam." Notes: 1. MIM Notes 169, 1 September 98. * * * DOCUMENTARY ON ANGOLA PRISON PORTRAYS HUMANITY OF PRISONERS, DOWNPLAYS INHUMANITY OF THE PRISON SYSTEM The Farm: Angola Gabriel Films Directed by Jonathan Stack and Liz Garbus Review by WMass RAIL Springfield College, Sept 24.--RAIL attended a showing of The Farm: Angola to distribute literature and to build support for our campaign against control units in Massachusetts. We hoped that a film about a maximum security prison would inspire people to work with us on this campaign. Angola is the largest prison in Amerika, covering 18,000 acres. Of its 5,000 prisoners, 77% are Black. Most of the prisoners are sentenced to "natural life" or extremely long sentences, leading to the warden's estimate that 85% of the current population will die behind the walls of Angola. Angola was transformed from an old-style slave plantation into a modern day slave plantation (prison) after the Civil War. The old plantation was also called Angola, after the place of origin of so many of the slaves who worked there. The film, winner of the Grand Jury Prize at the 1998 Sundance Film Festival, effectively talks about the effects of a life sentences on prisoners and really brings out the humanity of the prisoners. For example, the film tries to portray the loneliness created. The average prisoner at Angola never receives a visit from the outside after the first 3 years of incarceration. But it fails to talk about the systemic brutality of prison, nor does it address beyond mentioning the history of Angola as being one of Amerika's most violent prisons. What makes Angola so notorious is the brutality of armed guards, not the fact that the prison is so large. This effort to focus so much on the specifics of Angola and six prisoners who are profiled downplays Angola's role in the whole Amerikan injustice system. The film certainly prepares RAIL to talk about the reality of prisons in a public forum, but it is not an effective stand-alone presentation. And it is without RAIL intervention that hundreds of thousands of people had the opportunity to see the film recently on A&E cable TV. RAIL doesn't know anything about the politics of the filmmakers, and we can imagine they had to cut a deal with the prison administration to get such access to the prison. This is the only explanation as to why the administration is treated in such a gentle fashion. RAIL much prefers the approach taken by the makers of The Last Graduation about the end of Pell grants for prisoners. Instead of just following prisoners and educators, The Last Graduation broadens the issue. First the rise of higher education as a response to the Attica prison rebellion is covered. Then the video explores the bogus arguments from politicians to abolish prisoner education. The kid gloves used in The Farm make the film much less effective. Prison labor Angola uses 1,800 non-prisoner workers to run the prison. Two hundred families of employees live on the grounds of the prison. Early in the video, we see one guard boast of the great job security working in a prison brings. This reactionary statement is quite accurate, as prisons are one of Amerika's leading growth industries. Unlike the armed pigs on horseback, the real work on the Angola plantation is done by the prisoners. Most prisoners work in the fields for 4 cents an hour. The best jobs in the prison pay only 20 cents an hour. Prison profiles offer chance to relate to the incarcerated The film interviews six prisoners for their stories. One prisoner is a trustee, one on death row, one an old man dying from cancer, and another an old man turned religious leader. One of the most effective things about the film is showing the arresting mug shots of the prisoners interviewed. These photos are from 1972, or 1959. The prisoner incarcerated in 1959 was 24 at the time. The prisoner on death row reports that since age 12 he has spent all but four years in prison. Due to the Amerikan injustice system, prison is all some residents of North Amerika will ever know. The most amazing part of the film to RAIL is the segment on one prisoner's parole hearing. A Black man was sentenced 20 years ago for the rapes of two teenagers. When the "victim" was interviewed by police, she was asked "Would you be able to identify the assailant?" No, she said, because "All niggers look alike." But she was able to identify one person in the line-up -- the one in handcuffs. The photograph of the lineup shown in the film verifies this fact. At the parole hearing the prisoner presented new evidence, suppressed from the defense at the time of trial, that the medical report after the rapes reported that the teenagers were virgins. Therefore, not only was this Black man framed, but the rapes didn't even happen. There is more. At his parole hearing, the "victim" is told that the parole board is very sympathetic to her, and one parole board member identifies himself as the president of a "victims rights" organization. Two board members are old white men, and one is an old Black man. The "victim" is still a racist, saying that she fears all Blacks, and while she doesn't fear the Black pig on the parole board, she wouldn't be alone with him either. All on camera, the parole board decides to deny the application before the prisoner even enters, and when he leaves, they forget about the camera and make their bias even clearer. The warden of Angola claims his job is to spread hope that prisoners will "win the lottery" and be allowed to leave the prison. As the film ends, updates are given on each prisoner. No pardons are given, and appeal hearings are denied. This applies to even the elderly religious prisoner, who has a pardon recommendation on the governor's desk. After the main film, a short ABC News clip was shown about the annual rodeo at Angola. Again lacking in political focus, it at least showed how poorly prisoners are treated. Prisoners, many untrained, ride bulls and horses for prize money to the delight of outside spectators. Even ABC News, which was more concerned with issues such as "safety to the public" or the wisdom of offering "fun" to prisoners, had to report that the rodeo is likened to the barbarity of the Roman gladiator games and the throwing of Christians to the lions for sport. RAIL would like to get a copy of this video to show to people, especially the portion in which prisoners try to remove a poker chip from between the horns of a rampaging bull to the delight of the audience. Encouraging activism After the film and video, a short discussion was held in which the presenter argued for the audience to become active for social change and to speak to the various groups that had tables in the back room of the room. Neither the film nor the discussion addressed the fact that prisons do not stop crime. This is unfortunate, as the detailed information about the individual prisoner's cases makes it clear that no societal purpose is served in locking up someone forever for mistakes supposed deeds decades ago. The presenter argued that people should start from the perspective of a quotation attributed to Nazi Holocaust victim Pastor Martin Niemoller: "First they came for the Jews and I did not speak out - - because I was not a Jew. Then they came for the communists and I did not speak out -- because I was not a communist. Then they came for the trade unionists and I did not speak out because I was not a trade unionist. Then they came for me -- and there was no one left to speak out for me." The Niemoller quotation makes an attempt to get privileged people to act in their own self-interest to aid others. While the oppressed should certainly work together against common enemies, it would be naive to pretend that large groups of people do not benefit from Nazism or the prison system. RAIL puts so much work into the prison issue because the prisons and police are key weapons in Amerika's imperialist war against its internal Black, Latino and Indigenous colonies. This perspective offers an explanation as to why the incarceration rate for Blacks is eight-times that of whites. A significant part of the audience consisted of Springfield College students there not out of voluntary desire to learn about prisons, but for extra course credit. Most students left after the The Farm, not staying for the rodeo video or the discussion. Those who left were completely uninterested in signing a petition against Massachusetts control units. While RAIL was impressed with the portrayal of injustice in the film, we thought the necessary indictment of the whole Amerikan injustice system was far too subtle. This was too subtle to reach these students, and the lives of the Blacks incarcerated in Angola so foreign, that the video just didn't affect them. RAIL will likely show this film in the future, adding it to our arsenal of documentaries about prison. We will be sure to emphasize the weaknesses of this film in our introductory remarks as well as the discussion in order to present a more revolutionary view of the Amerikkkan Lockdown. Note: The Last Graduation is available from Zahm Productions, 101 West 79 Street 4C, New York NY 10024 Tele/Fax 212-595-5002. bzahm@interport.net .Institution price: $199 (call for individual, grass-roots and activist discount). RAIL does not know the availability of The Farm: Angola. * * * CLINTON'S DEFINITION OF "FREE AND EQUAL" On the day President Clinton's "Advisory Board on Race" finished it's "great and unprecedented conversation about race," he declared: "This board has raised the consciousness and quickened the conscience of America. They have moved us closer to our ideal."(1) The board held hundreds of meetings in order to reach the shocking conclusion that Clinton's original proposals are correct: some federal government money to schools in the hopes of reducing class size, more enforcement of current civil rights laws, and more Small Business Administration loans to "minority" businesses. These ideas, piddling though they are, are stalled in Congress anyway and not going anywhere.(1) Unspoken as part of Clinton's "healing" agenda, too, is the program for ever-increasing repression and imprisonment of the Black and other oppressed nations -- this part of the agenda is proceeding much more smoothly. Their plan is to lock up the bottom rungs while they integrate the top rungs into a new "diverse" Amerika. But we are not fooled. MIM's ideas are much better: proletarian feminist revolutionary nationalist struggles to create real self-determination for the oppressed nations of North America. We think this plan -- an extension of the original Black Panther Party program -- makes much more sense than a string of small programs designed to speed integration of the Black middle class and deepen the dependence of the Black potential bourgeoisie. On the day of the report from his advisory board, Clinton declared that "our country is more free and equal than ever before."(2) Is the country getting more "free and equal"? No -- and even Clinton's own liberal advisory board showed that it's not. Look at the prison system. If the country is getting "more free" then the number of people in prison should be decreasing. Obviously it is not. In fact, the number of people in prison and jail has increased 30% since 1992, when Clinton was elected. With more than 1.7 million people in prison now and still rising, "more free" doesn't cut it.(3) That is a slower rate of growth in the last five years than they had in the 1980s, but the increase has been disproportionately among Black and Latino prisoners. Since 1990, the number of men in prison (sentenced to a year or more) increased by 55% for Blacks, 53% for Latinos, and 46% for whites. Since 1993, for the first time, the total number of Black men in prison outnumbers the total number of white men. For 1996, the imprisonment (sentenced to a year or more) rate per 100,000 men in the population was 3,098 for Black men, 1,278 for Latino men, and only 370 for white men.(4) That's the last year the government has the numbers by "race," and it doesn't include people in prison or jail for less than a year. With the rates increasing faster for oppressed nation members, that means "more equal" also doesn't cut it. So, Clinton lied. Notes: 1. Washington Post September 19, 1998; Page A08 2. Remarks By The President To The Advisory Board On Race, September 18, 1998. www.whitehouse.gov 3. 1997 from June, New York Times 1/19/98, p. A10. Total incarcerated 1996 and rate of growth are from U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Statistics Bulletin, "Prison and Jail Inmates at Midyear 1996," Jan. 1997, NCJ #162843. 1980-1994 imprisoned populations are from The Real War on Crime: The Report of the National Criminal Justice Commission, edited by Stephen R. Donziger (HarperCollins, 1996), p. 34. 4. U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Justice Programs, Bureau of Justice Statistics Bulletin, "Prisoners in 1997," August 1998, NCJ #170014. http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/abstract/p97.htm * * * TERRORISM AND EXPLOITATION EXPOSE PALESTINE PEACE BALONEY by MC12 The Israeli army is still on a rampage, Israeli settlers still commit murder in Palestine, the Palestinian people still travel, and work for superexploitation wages, at the whim of the Israeli government -- and "U.S. Middle East Envoy Says He Is Making Progress."(1) So goes the Israeli-Palestinian "Peace Process," which has been used to attempt to stall the Palestinian liberation movement for the past five years, since the "Oslo accords" between Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO). The Israeli army launched a commando raid in the second week of September to kill two men, Imad and Adel Awadallah, who were allegedly leaders of the Hamas organization. To offer proof that the killings prevented a terrorist attack, the army showed off a small stash of weapons and a few wigs. After the killings, the Israeli army immediately attempted to seal off the West Bank and Gaza Strip, keeping tends of thousands of Palestinians from their jobs, as well as health care and many other resources they need in Israel (see below).(2) After the killings, thousands of Hamas supporters demonstrated in Palestinian territory, drawing more Israeli fire. To add insult to injury, Israeli authorities then announced that they would not release the bodies of their two victims, because the funerals would be "a generator of violence."(3) A few days later, on September 17 -- while Israeli-occupied Palestine was still under "closure" supposedly to prevent terrorism in Israel -- two Israeli settler-terrorists in a drive- by shooting opened fire on a group of Palestinian high school students on their way home from school, killing 17-year-old Iyed Karabseh and wounding several others. As Israeli terrorists ran rampant, Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu announced the upcoming construction of 600 new homes at a settlement near Hebron, deepening the permanent occupation of Palestinian land.(4) The "closure" of Israel's occupied territories takes a huge economic toll on the Palestinian people. Normally, more than 130,000 Palestinians cross into Israel proper, many of them for work. Closing the borders not only denies them their work, it also denies them access to services from the colonial government. Even in "normal" times, military checkpoints are permanent cites of harassment, and jeopardize health and wellbeing. When curfews or closures are in effect, the results are even worse. For example, in August, Fadwa Alam was in labor in the backseat of her car when Israeli soldiers stopped them on the way to a hospital 10 minutes past the checkpoint. After a long delay, and eventually having to drive a much longer route, her baby daughter was born on the side of the road, and died at the hospital they reached more than an hour later. The army says they didn't notice that a woman was in labor in the car, and anyway they deny there is proof the baby died because of the delay.(5) Three days earlier, as the Washington Post reports, "a three- month-old baby, vomiting and running a high fever, died in his mother's arms in Hebron. Shirin Hadad, the child's mother, begged Israeli soldiers to allow her to walk to a taxi stand just up the street from her house so she could go to the hospital. After nearly an hour of pleading, Hadad finally slipped away, walking through a vineyard to elude the soldiers. ... What would have been a 10-minute trip to the hospital took an hour and 40 minutes. When she finally arrived, doctors in the emergency ward could not revive the infant."(5) The system also serves direct economic interests, as would-be Palestinian capitalists are forced to hire more expensive Israeli trucking companies so their products can get through checkpoints more reliably. One textile factory manager told the Post, "This increases our costs and creates big problems. We cannot compete."(5) The persistence of roadblocks and checkpoints -- besides the power to close the territories at will -- makes a mockery of the so- called autonomy practiced by Palestinians since the Oslo accords in 1993. As President Clinton's representative Dennis Ross claimed "I think we are making headway" on the latest minutia, Israeli soldiers were pummeling Palestinian youth with rubber-coated bullets.(1) The Oslo accords have been a tool to silence or divert true movements for Palestinian independence. They have revealed the bankruptcy of the approach by Yasser Arafat's PLO, which capitulated in the hope of taking power as neocolonial administrators. For all their dickering, the PLO and Israel are together trying to undermine Hamas and any other organization that seeks Palestinian independence instead of the bogus "autonomy" cooked up under Oslo. While imperialists make hay out of Pakistan, India, and north Korea advancing missile programs, the Israeli state escalates its militarism without drawing a word of mainstream complaint. While all this was going on, Israel tested a new missile system supposedly designed to intercept in coming missiles, raising the stakes in Middle East conflicts. Funded jointly with the U.$., the new Arrow system cost $1.6 billion.(6) While the imperialists pour military money into Israel and the region, the Palestinian people are suffering economically as never before. According to the Post, "well over a third" of Gazans are looking for work. Since the Oslo accord, concludes the latest report: "Incomes, buying power and private investment have plunged while the numbers of families living in poverty have swelled." Meanwhile, Israel's economy has been more healthy in the 1990s.(7) Tens of thousands of Palestinians cross over to work in Israel, where they earn more than they could in Gaza. But the number with such permits has been cut in half by the Israelis since Oslo. The loss in earnings has been devastating -- making it possible to pay workers even less, and helping Israel regulate its internal labor market to its own advantage, largely through the importation of workers from Eastern Europe. Every time there is a "closure" of the territories, incentives are increased to hire non-Palestinian immigrants, whose labor supply is more reliable.(7) Incredibly, under the so-called autonomy, Israel still controls the flow of money and people between the two Palestinian territories of Gaza and the West Bank. Only 800 business owners, a small fraction of those who want to, are permitted to travel between the two areas, greatly limiting their mobility and opportunities to expand and trade.(7) For Gaza businesses, the checkpoints and travel restrictions make it cheaper to buy products from Israel than from the West Bank. This guarantees a market for Israeli exporters even as it retards the development of the Palestinian national bourgeoisie. Awni Hasham, who owns an office furniture business in Gaza, told the Post, "Now we are living in a very high-security jail. We live in a very closed area, paying every penny we have for electricity, water, a place to live. This jail is the responsibility of both sides -- the Palestinian Authority [PLO] and Israel. They put us in this situation."(7) The Israelis are protecting themselves by developing a politically obedient labor aristocracy, which is dependent on Israel's imperialist-backed colonialism for its class survival. The PLO strategy has played right into this development. Neocolonialism is a system in which oppressed nations govern themselves on paper, but true national self-determination is denied. The economy is controlled by imperialist powers, the national bourgeoisie cannot develop, and the poverty of the people is used to keep the price of labor down to superexploitation levels. For example, teenagers who still live in giant refugee camps work in a Gaza sweatshop 12-hour days, six days a week, sewing denim skirts and make 45 cents per hour.(7) People who backed the PLO before the Oslo accords thought it would lead to political independence, the Palestinian national bourgeoisie could develop, with political "democracy," and the people would prosper. But the dream of Third World countries building independent capitalism has been shown to be just that, a dream. Maoists, on the other hand, know that real national self- determination can only be won with both national liberation and socialism -- breaking with dependence on the imperialist powers and unleashing the productive power of the people for their own wellbeing. Even as the PLO strategy has melted into a thin air, making a mockery even of the most well-intentioned of their supporters, the Maoist argument has been vindicated many times over. Notes: 1. Reuters September 18. 2. Washington Post, September 12, 1998; Page A22. 3. Washington Post Monday, September 14, 1998; Page A13. 4. Washington Post September 18, 1998; Page A23. 5. Washington Post September 19, 1998; Page A01. 6. Washington Post September 16, 1998; Page A37. 7. Washington Post September 14, 1998; Page A14. * * * MICH. SCHOOL OFFICIAL GETS RICH WHILE PRISONERS GET TRANSFERRED by Ann Arbor RAIL The school superintendent in Ionia, Mich has recently become an example of how prisons are reserved for the poor and oppressed -- while ever greater wealth and leisure are for the well-off and the privileged. The superintendent is resigning this year, taking all of his pension and retirement benefits, following his second arrest for drunk driving. Drunk driving arrests are a hot topic for Michigan anti-prisons activists right now, as drunk driving offenders are among the top candidates for being transferred to out of state prisons against their will. The Michigan Department of Corrections (DOC) is currently doing everything it can to release no prisoners and expand its prisoner population. Michigan's Gov. John Engler was recently granted $186 million to increase the prisons capacity in the state this year. The DOC is keeping up its end of the bargain by transferring thousands of prisoners across state lines to dramatize the so- called overcrowding in the prisons. Prisoners with drunk driving convictions are likely candidates for transfer, because with relatively short sentences they are less likely than others to protest being moved far away from loved ones and legal assistance. That the resigning superintendent is an Ionia official is a bitter irony for prisoner advocates. Ionia has one of the greatest concentrations of prisons and prisoners in the state of Michigan. As far as RAIL knows, this superintendent has been arrested twice but has served no time. RAIL does not work for increased imprisonment of any group of people under the current illegitimate prisons system, and so we do not call for this one pig to serve prison time. Instead we call on all people who care about justice to note that justice will not come from Amerikan prisons. A system that locks up some people for drunk driving, and then quietly piles on them the additional sentence of being shipped out of their home state -- without additional trial or opportunity for arguing in their own defense - - this system will not bring justice for anyone. RAIL calls on all people who believe in the possibility of justice to work with us in exposing the brutalities of the current injustice system, and in building independent institutions that can institute true justice of the people. Sources: Michigan Radio News 26 September, 1998. * * * REVOLUTIONARY ANTI-IMPERIALIST LEAGUE: BUILDING INDEPENDENT ANTI- IMPERIALIST INSTITUTIONS OF THE OPPRESSED by RAIL In December 1994, the Revolutionary Anti-Imperialist League (RAIL) was founded to support struggles of oppressed nations against imperialism. RAIL sees that nations must have the power to determine their own destinies without the claws of imperialism stuck in their backs. We fight for the liberation of all oppressed nations from imperialist military, political, economic and social domination. Oppressed nations have every right to throw off the yoke of imperialism and determine their own political systems, land and resource management, equitable economic structures, just judicial systems, equitable gender relations, pro-people educational systems and health care. Liberation from imperialism is necessary to any people determining the course of their own lives. RAIL's activism takes the form of educating and agitating around U.$. occupation of Third World countries abroad, and occupation of the internal colonies cordoned by U.$. territory. In the Philippines, the United Snakes dictates economic policy. Under the Philippines 2000 plan, U.$. and other multinational corporations enjoy special perks of land use. The direct result of multinational investments in the Philippines is poverty and worsening living conditions for the Filipino people. Their land is stolen in favor of industrial corridors -- which turn into slave plantations on which the people who should rightfully be owners are lucky to work for less than subsistence wages. Stripping land from the peasants results in 40% unemployment for them. Two-fifths of the Filipino population cannot afford to eat three meals each day, and 75 percent lives below the government-defined poverty line. As RAIL continues the daily work of building support for the national liberation struggle of the Filipino people, the United Snakes is promoting a Visiting Forces Agreement (VFA) with the newly-installed President Estrada of the Philippines. The VFA will grant the U.$. direct military control over Philippine territory by allowing Amerikan forces to conduct operations throughout the Philippines, by granting military access to many Filipino ports, and through special legal provisions for military personnel who commit crimes while in the Philippines. Because of this theft, enforced poverty and outright violence, RAIL works to expose and propagandize against U.$. imperialism. The Filipino people are not free to determine their national destiny when Amerika controls large segments of their land through industry and military grants. Living within U.$. borders, we bear responsibility for the actions of a military and government that act in our name. Activists in this country must learn more about the struggles of the national democratic movement of the Philippines and learn from its successes in organizing the masses in fervent opposition to imperialism. We must learn from our Filipino brothers and sisters and work to build opposition here, in the belly of the beast, to imperialist control which kills Third World masses while plumping up imperialist nation coffers. The Philippines is but one example. RAIL sees militaristic control here as well, on the streets of this so-called democratic country. The military in the Philippines is much like the pigs on the streets in Amerikkka's cities -- both are occupying forces that do not represent the interests of the masses. Today there are more than 1.7 million people in Amerikkka's prisons. Hundreds of them are leaders of revolutionary struggles- from the Maoist Black Panther Party, the Puerto Rican independence organization FALN and the American Indian Movement and other organizations -- as well as leaders developed in prison. Hundreds of leaders are in prison because their nations' liberation struggles threaten the Amerikan standard of living and hegemonic position internationally. In Michigan, Gov. John Engler has added an astounding $186 million dollars worth of prison space to the state budget. In a state where 59% of prisoners are Black (compared to 14% of the general Michigan population), this is a gross addition to the most fascistic part of this state's control of the masses. The Revolutionary Anti-Imperialist League will work with any individual or organization that opposes all or part of Amerikkkan imperialism. We will work with you for an hour on our Sison Family Defense Fund, which is important to the Filipino struggle for national liberation. We will spend two hours with you, collecting funds for the Serve the People Books for Prisoners Program. If you want to give prisoners material aid, you can help out with typing and distributing briefs for the Serve the People Prisoners' Legal Clinic. We also encourage you to participate in regular RAIL educational events on issues that are most compelling to you. As the imperialists suck more and more resources, labor and life out of the oppressed nations, we work to build a better society which does not build itself off the backs of the oppressed. Work with RAIL to criticize and expose imperialist treachery and build independent institutions that politicize, organize and meet the needs of the people. To get involved contact rail@mim.org, or the addresses on Page 2. * * * WITH "PROGRESSIVES" LIKE THESE, WHO NEEDS REACTIONARIES? Liberal columnist Bob Scheer recently vigorously defended President Clinton's decision to bomb a Sudanese pharmaceutical plant. On the local radio show, "Left, Right, and Center," Scheer allegedly represents the "left," and his columns regularly criticize the Amerikan arrogance and militarism that contributed to the Vietnam war. Ariana Huffington, the show's far-right representative, quoted a New York Times article which showed there was no substantial evidence to back up the Clinton administration's claim that the Sudanese plant was being used to produce chemical weapons. She pointed out, as MIM has done, that thousands of children will die as a result of the destruction of this plant, because they will not have access to necessary medicines. Of course, Huffington is no friend of the world's oppressed masses, she was only using this incident to attack Clinton and his Democratic clique and promote her own Republican clique. Scheer responded by flatly stating there was clear evidence that the plant in Sudan was connected to "international terrorism," that President Clinton had responded firmly and correctly to send a message to "terrorists" who had blown up "our" embassies, and blah blah blah... Of course, he did not bother to address the New York Times article directly, nor did he give any evidence backing up the administration's claim that the plant was producing chemical weapons. Scheer proved that in order to defend their nominal access to the White House, even "left"-liberals will gladly spout war-mongering lies. It was as if Scheer had been transported back in time 34 years, and was saying, "Why yes those dirty yellow bastards attacked our ships in the Gulf of Tonkin, so we need to send more guns, soldiers, and bombs to Vietnam." The Johnson administration used lies about attacks by north Vietnamese PT boats to cover up its escalation of direct Amerikan aggression in Vietnam. Just another example of how the "left" wing of the Democratic party (and the reformists who tail it) is so accustomed to losing and compromising, that it has forgotten what winning is. Notes: KCRW's "Left, Right, and Center," 23 Sep 98. * * * UNDER LOCK AND KEY: NEWS FROM PRISONS AND FROM PRISONERS DENIED MEDICAL TREATMENT MIM, It's all one big conspiracy. The prison doctors, nurses, mailroom, blue shirts, white shirts, schoolteachers, and administration. Check it. I was on my way for parole months ago. The state van I was in ran head on into a car. The ambulance came and checked everyone but me. I told them on the spot that I could barely move my back, but this political pig "major stucky" said that I was just lying and I'd be all right. They refused me legal phone calls and medical treatment. Since this happened, my back has given out four times. Two of those times I fell and busted my head open. But they still insist I'll be all right! Two other people (officers) from the van were hurt and went straight to the hospital, and then stayed home for three weeks!!! But they keep insisting that I'm just faking and don't need a legal call because I'll be all right. What's up with poor excuse for a system...[T]he way they're dragging me, it will probably turn into a permanent injury for life! Just trying to keep everyone else on point, and let them know how South Carolina's department of Incorrections is at Evan's. The pigs that run it are the same everywhere! Just be strong and maintain. --A Victim of South Carolina's Prison System, 3 August 1998 SENTENCED TO 50 YEARS AT AGE 15 I'm a Chicano artist, poet and revolutionary warehoused here in Prison X. In 1995 at the extremely young age of 15 I was unjustly sentence to 50 years in prison by a racist judge, a "righteous" representative of the criminal Injustice system here in the United Snakes of Amerika. They justifies this evil punishment by saying that the three years it would take before I turned 18 was not sufficient time to "rehabilitate" me. They failed to consider that the mandatory 10 years I would serve by far exceeded the amount of time necessary for "rehabilitation". Maybe, just possibly, it was my Brown skin. I couldn't help but notice the numerous pink and pasty skinned young boys step in front of the "judge" and receive breaks one after another. I was sure I was at the Rodney King or Anthony Baez trial. As the judge looked at these pale children, that's exactly what he saw -- children, his children, grandchildren -- the children of Amerikkka. Is not the child of this bourgeois society accepted as the public image of the "all Amerikan boy"? Of course he could not be expected to condemn his own child to the concrete jungles and valley of deaths that plague this country. As I left the classification center on that bus headed for nearly 2,000 inmate maximum security prison the faces I saw were those of young Black and Brown warriors -- not just 18 years old -- some scared, some impassive in their naivete. Once we arrived we were overlooked with a lack of concern by the administration. On my tenth day I eagerly applied for school and was immediately turned away due the overcrowding, lack of teachers and funds. Because of Clinton's "Crime Bill" I could not apply for financial aid for college. My story is just one of the many Mexican, Afrikan and Native misguided and vulnerable youths entering the prison system every day. They are locking us up and throwing away the key. Fortunately I took it upon myself to get educated and politically active. But my revolutionary consciousness and activities have not come cheap. For I've been in the hole under very oppressive conditions for 18 months. The Klan has no intention of letting me out. They have fabricated lied and absurd stories to keep me silent and in this status. In one incident they were claiming I was a member from the Mexican Mafia and going on to say I was from another gang! The struggle continues... I am in the need of assistance. There are a great deal of comrades here who are ready to learn but don't have the resources to obtain the materials they need to begin their path to enlightenment and revolutionary consciousness. We need Spanish and English materials (i.e. MIM Notes, Notas Rojas, MIM Theory, etc.) including back issues of MIM Theory. It will be greatly appreciated and anything sent will be spread throughout the prison underground railroad. I thank you for taking the time to read this letter. -- An Iowa Prisoner, 19 July 1998 THREE PENNSYLVANIA PRISONERS EXPLAIN HOW YOUTH ARE TARGETED I'm another young strong survivor in the modern day slavery shit that they krackers call the Penitentiary. At the age of 20 and being here since the age of 17, I began to express the true things the young brothers go through in this chest of Leviathan. It's very difficult for the young brothers to get paroled outta here because the system looks upon us and says to themselves that we're still young so we haven't changed. It's not so much of if we've changed or not, it's do we have enough strength and sense to avoid these kamps? See they want to keep us in here as they are doing because we are fresh and young. We are capable of making plenty of babies and enhancing the Black population. Just take a look at how many Black Brothas are locked up now. As time goes on they are putting even larger amounts of youths in the adult system, and giving them buckets full of time. I have a Rappy (co-defendant) in another warehouse. He was 15 when he got impounded. Instead of placing him in a juvenile facility, they gave him 21 to 42 years and sent him to one of their plantations. That's Fucked Up! That's is an example of what I'm talking about when I say they, the system, the wicked foul corrupted system is putting us young brothers away for a long time and there is no stop. So far their plan is working but I have developed the mindset of getting around them krackers. It's all about beating them at their own game. Do you readers understand where I, this strong black man, is taking your minds? Don't be blinded brothers, through the trial and tribulations of the jail's hectic situations. We gotta stay focused on what they are putting down. It's beyond our belief. I'm awake brothas and sistas. The importance of this serious information is to open your eyes and let our people in on what the young brothers have to share concerning the program the krackers got set for us your brothers. ...Please brothas wake up and don't continue to be victims to this multibillion dollar business that's designed to make the krackers rich off us and do away with the Black seed at the same time. -- A Pennsylvania Prisoner, June 1998 I'm another Black Brotha, 21 years of age that is currently housed at SCI-Pittsburgh. I feel as though the whole correctional system is designed to destroy and do away with the Black Nation. A lot of us are in jail for crimes that we had to commit in order to survive and take care of our families. These racist krackers know this. They are the beast that places our people dependent upon them. They know exactly what they are doing. They are the ones that build bars on adjacent corner of our neighborhood. They are the ones that fashioned the drug cartels and disgorge them in our communities. No one knows anything about the co-co leaves in the ghetto slums of Philly. The government doesn't support our school program financially. They are constantly locking up fathers from households. This affects the children directly. There's nobody there to provide for children. Lack of funds cause kids to be inappropriately clothed for the weather. Kids mock their attire, which makes the child uncomfortable in school. They start to pay less attention in class, which begins to decimate their grades. Next thing the kids stop attending school. That's another Black mind that falls victim to the crazy, sadistic system these krackers put together. It's a chain! Can't you see? ...My brothas, we are the ones who built this Thing called Amerikkka, with our sweat, blood and tears. I know for a fact that we are naturally smarter than the Beast, that's why they try their best to keep the Black mind oppressed with enticing substances called drugs and alcohol. Brothas we must stay strong and get our mind, body and soul together. For us who are doing time in these penitentiaries make yourselves the ultimate warriors. Brothas Read! Read about your oppressor so that you can learn about his mind set. The more we learn about them, and the more we strive to lose their ways and actions the more effective we become in the struggle. Ulimwengu (Free the World!) -- A Pennsylvania Prisoner, June 1998 MIM responds: We can't afford to count on the oppressed being "naturally smarter" than the oppressor. That same genetic superiority argument has been used by the white chauvinist system to put down Blacks, Latinos, First Nations and anyone else who they want to control. We know that the oppressed will rise up and overthrow this murderous system and create a society of equality and justice. This is not because of natural intelligence, it is because of the situation of the oppressed in a system that creates the need for revolutionary change to serve the justice demanded by the majority who are oppressed by the minority. Under socialism we strive to reeducate even the oppressors and ultimately integrate them into society to serve the people alongside all of humanity. Dear MIM, I'm a 21 year old Black minded Youth whose currently dealing with the atrocities and mental obstacles set forth by the Tyranny of Pennsylvania DOC [Department of "Corrections"]. I'm currently housed at state correctional institute at Pittsburgh [SCIP] where these guards are psychologically chewing upon the mind of youth with sports and play. Employees of young age are exercising their authority upon us with bogus misconduct and physical abuse. This institution has been formulating asinine policies that aren't a part of the DC-ADM. Just recently inmates' families were being subjected to in-house imprisonment, stress and pressure from their neighbors. The superintendent, Mr. James Price instituted a policy within the womb of SCIP where all inmate mail leaving the prison must have written on it, "Inmate Mail - PA Dept. of corrections. This places our family on house arrest and violates our families' privacy. This is a psychological weapon to ward off the support of prisoners' families and friends. The prison system in Amerikkka is a direct reenactment of slavery. They take the foundation of the family and auction them off to the highest bidder. They take us in their grip and whip -- now called handcuffs and nightsticks. Then drive us off in their horsepowered vehicles to be stripped and searched from the wisdom teeth to the anal cavity. These acts were those that were exercised upon Blacks during slavery. The mental ownership is more deadly than that of the physical. -- A Pennsylvania Prisoner, June 1998 PRISONS WEAKEN FAMILY SUPPORT Strong family support has a lot, To do with one's Rehabilitation. During the American Slave Trade, the Slavemaster went to all extremes to destroy family relationships. Mothers were separated from their newborns. Fathers from their only child. Children were raised on plantations thousands of miles away from loved ones. The purpose of this was to destroy any kind of family bonding. The human being is a social being whose growth depends upon having a relationship with others. Family is what we're linked to emotionally and spiritually. That family support gives us the physical and mental vigor. Family makes us the individuals we are today and tomorrow. We can see these Modern Day Prison Slave camps across this country. Particularly, South Carolina Slave camps have emulated the American Slave Trade by going to all lengths to ruin any kind of family relationship an inmate has with loved ones. The prison Director of South Carolina Slave camps has designed policies prohibiting conjugal visits, holding hands inside the visitation room. Inmates are forced to sit across the table from his wife. At one time inmates were allowed to have food visits with family members during the holidays. The food visit promoted family togetherness. These policies are designed to destroy relationships with family members. Inmates are transported outside of their region, hours away from home exclusively to destroy family bonding. Having that family bonds gives one the incentive to change. You'll notice those who still have that family bond, regardless of hours of distance. Their disposition is totally different from those who don't have that family bond. That family bond has a tremendous impact on the individual, and the modern day slavemasters understand this. The family assist's in getting the inmate prepared for returning back to society. Some of you may say, "Those inmates deserve to be treated in that manner." I do understand what some of those inmates have done, and I can empathize. Something you must consider is that 95% of the inmates will return back to society. If they're denied rehabilitation -- and a great portion of that comes from family support. What is going to be the inmate's condition? Apparently the Prison Director doesn't care about the family relations, but you should! Many of those 95% percent could be coming to a community near you. Respectfully, -- A South Carolina Prisoner, 13 August 1998 FIGHTING CENSORSHIP IN FLORIDA RAIL my fellow brothers, Thanks for your letter. I received your newsletters No. 163 and No. 164 but the institute did not let me have it due to a statement inside the newsletter, "The real criminals are the officers." Which is true. I've been here for several months and it has been pure hell. I've been place on CM (Close Management). I'm in a cell myself but I talk to other inmates. This prison is one of the most fucked up camps. These pigs assault us on a daily basis. The come in our cells tearing shit up and spitting that chewing tobacco everywhere. I tried to go on a mental health transfer but the mental health doctor is down with the pigs! I went as far as slicing my forearms! This whole "institution" is fucked up! I've been trying to get away from here but these pigs ain't having it. I even gather several men back here (in CM) and had a riot.... But we don't let these pigs break us down!... It's time to shut this concentration camp down cause these pigs ain't rehabilitating me!... --A Florida Prisoner, 23 July 1998 LEGAL VICTORY FOR PRISONER MIM, I'm updating you on the outcome of my trial. I am located at X facility because the state claimed I incited a riot. This led up to several officers claiming that I was the reason that they were stabbed the next day. They never talked about how the punk officers beat me up. I had a jury trial and was found not guilty of all accounts. I had a great paid lawyer. He knew from the start that the state tried to railroad me. The state said they don't know what happened to the videotape. My attorney said that the reason why the state can't find the tape because the tape would prove that I was assaulted first. All these officers said that I am in big trouble. I said to myself, y'all in trouble if I don't win -- you get the picture. When the verdict was read, "not guilty", one white mutha fucker got read as apple. The White Ass officer almost died. The state hates me, but they know if they fuck up that I have help on the street. My case is in the Federal Court. The shit the state got away with in the State Court they can't do in the Federal Court.... --A Maryland Prisoner, 12 July 1998 MIM responds: Unfortunately the shit the state pulls in the State Court is no different from the shit the prosecutors (the State, the federal government, or an individual) pull in Federal Court. There is no haven of justice in this system. We applaud any legal victory such as the one this Maryland prisoner describes, but we know that the only way to create a just system will be to overthrow imperialism and build a socialist society. ATTORNEY SOLICITS TEXAS BRUTALITY REPORTS The Texas Department of Criminal Justice [TDCJ] is experiencing their guards body slamming and dunking prisoners at an alarming rate. This has caused serious injury or death. And this injustice of brutality is being justified as "Major Use of Force". Because of this recent rampage of brutality of by TDCJ guards, the severe injuries to prisoners and the TDCJ Administration's order in the Ruiz Lawsuit, is cause for an investigation by the Law Office of Donna Brorby! Should any TDCJ Prisoners witness an assault, or major use of force by any official on their assigned unit, they should obtain the inmate name and number. Record the date, time and location of the incident. Acquire the name and title of all parties involved, state who did what, when and how. Make sure that all information and facts are carbon copied and sworn to be true and correct to the best of your knowledge. Such documents thereafter can be forwarded as Legal Mail to the following address: Ms. Donna Brorby, Attorney at Law, 660 Market St., Suite 300, San Francisco, CA 94104. In the Trenches! --A Texas Prisoner, 23 July 1998 PLEA FOR READING MATERIAL I am very pleased to see that more than myself is aware that the criminal injustice system is nothing more than a tool for social control wielded against the oppressed nations. And I would like to thank you for your genuine concern to those of us who are less fortunate and held captive behind these walls. Today I received my first issue of MIM Notes and after studying them and re-reading them, those of us that are held captive in the womb of our enemy down here in Texas are in much need of your enlightened material and I have many fellow brothers who are dedicated to the struggle, but due to the lack of doe they pay us in the Texas injustice system makes it hard for us to provide food to feed the mind or soul, and if something is not fed daily it will die slowly from starvation, so I ask of you to please continue sending me MIM Notes, as well as literature and books! If possible books on the Black Panther Party, Marxism-Maoism, Lenin, political, and about economics as well as of Malcolm X. These materials I not only ask on my behalf but on many other brothers' behalf as well. Your brother in the Struggle, -- A Texas Prisoner, 15 May 98