“This gets to the heart of what went wrong in America in the years following the mandatory-sentencing and Three Strikes crazes. We removed the human element from the justice process and turned our courts into giant unthinking machines for sweeping our problem citizens under a rug.”

Cruel and Unusual Punishment: The Shame of Three Strikes Laws | Politics News | Rolling Stone

End Solitary Confinement in U.S. Prisons, Prepare to Back Hunger Strikers | Glen Ford

blackagendareport.com

Another prison hunger strike is looming in California, where more than 200 inmates at the Pelican Bay supermax have been in solitary confinement for between five and ten years and nearly 100 have been shut off from most human contact for 20 years or more. Across the nation, on any given day, more than 100,000 inmates suffer in solitary – about 25,000 in the federal system and another 80,000 or so in state facilities. That’s the equivalent of locking up every man, woman and child in Charleston, South Carolina, in their own little 8 by 12 foot box – for an eternity. Nothing like this American form of mass human torment has ever existed on the face of the earth: systematic, industrial strength torture, multiplied 100,000 times per day. Solitary confinement as a form of routine, mass punishment is beyond barbarity. Nowhere in human history do we find barbarians who tortured hundreds of thousands of people every day for decades at a time. Only in America.

Solitary confinement, by its very nature, is designed to ensure that no one but the torturers hears the cries of the tormented. However, knowledge of such monstrous evil compels decent men and women to action, in solidarity with those who have been wronged. The prisoners of Pelican Bay, who went on hunger strike in 2011, have sent word that they will do so again, on July 8, if the state of California does not meet their core demands. One demand is fundamental: that inmates not be confined to solitary unless they have been charged, “and found guilty of, committing a serious offense… a felony!” Instead, inmates are consigned to a life of oblivion based on anonymous allegations that they are affiliated with a gang, or for exhibiting the slightest hint of political thought – or for no discernable reason, at all. Not only is lengthy solitary confinement unconstitutionally cruel and unusual punishment, and a form of torture under international law, it is totally arbitrary and capricious.

In California, alone, more than 14,000 prisoners are held in isolation. The Pelican Bay inmates anticipate many of them will join the hunger strike, as thousands did in 2011, when 13 prisons were involved in the protest, and three inmates committed suicide. This time around, prison organizers have invited the participation of “all male and female prisoners across the U.S. prison systems,” both state and federal. Inmates in Georgia went on hunger strike in 2011 and again last year, pressing a range of demands.

If the California prisoners are forced to put their lives on the line again, on July 8, support networks need to be in place, beforehand. The Stop Mass Incarceration Network is putting out the call, so that the inmates at Pelican Bay and throughout the vast U.S. prison gulag will know that folks on the outside have their back. June 21, 22 and 23 have been designated as Days of Solidarity With the Struggle to End Prison Torture, and to immediately disband the torture chambers. You can sign up by going to StopMassIncarceration.org.

“As long as profit remains an incentive to incarcerate human beings and our corporate state abounds in surplus, redundant labor, there is little chance that the prison system will be reformed. It is making our corporate overlords wealthy. Our prisons serve the engine of corporate capitalism, transferring state money to private corporations. These corporations will continue to stymie rational prison reform because the system, however inhumane and unjust, feeds corporate bank accounts. At its bottom the problem is not race—although race plays a huge part in incarceration rates—nor is it finally poverty; it is the predatory nature of corporate capitalism itself. And until we slay the beast of corporate capitalism, until we wrest power back from corporations, until we build social institutions and a system of governance designed not to profit the few but foster the common good, our prison industry and the horror it perpetuates will only expand.”

Chris Hedges: The Shame of America’s Gulag - Chris Hedges’ Columns - Truthdig

Welp! "Inmates Review Prisons on Yelp!" Discuss Rat Infestations & Other 'Incarceration Nation' Related Issues

alternet.org

Some reviews are surprisingly glowing.

May 2, 2013

Prisoners are turning to the online consumer review site Yelp to discuss their treatment within US prisons.

Jack Beck, who heads the prison inspection group for the legislatively sanctioned Correctional Association of New York, told the Washington Post that in most states that do not have outside oversight, inmates are basically powerless to report abuse or seek redress. The only outlets are internal prison grievance systems, which rarely work and can invite retaliation from prison staff, he says.

Since Yelp brings in traffic by the millions — logging 36 million reviews as of last quarter — lawyers as well as inmates and their families have turned to the website to vent. Yelp’s prison reviews cover topics ranging from complaints over mediocre food to serious allegations of abuse.

While the typical Yelp post critiques a local restaurant or praises a local shop, enterprising account holders have used Yelp to watchdog traffic signals and public bathrooms. Now the incarceration system joins the list of public facilities up for review.

Yelp covers 19 nations and does not sort statistics by business type, so it is difficult to say how many lockups have been scrutinized on the site. According to the Washington Post [3], six incarceration facilities in the Washington region have earned reviews, including two this year.

Some reviews are surprisingly glowing. One reviewer who has visited family members in Calif.’s San Quentin state prison wrote [4]…

[In Full w/ links]



The Inhumane Practice of Solitary Confinement | Bloomberg

bloomberg.com

The use of solitary confinement in U.S. prisons and detention centers has broken the bounds of reason and decency. The federal government reported last month that the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency routinely holds hundreds of immigrants in solitary confinement — even though the inmates are detained on civil charges. The news underscored the continued outlier status of the U.S., which subjects tens of thousands of inmates, including the nonviolent, to a practice that much of the world regards as torture.

absurdlakefront replied to your post:

The fourth amendment is coming to mean nothing, just like the first, fifth and sixth amendments in the face of our paranoid security obsessed state. The eighth has been disregarded at black sites for years. All distressing and the public sleeps.

Tru dat. And beyond the black sites of the GWOT era (continuing under Obama, executive orders notwithstanding), the disintegration of the 8th continues in our very own incarceration nation (prisoners in solitary and CMU’s as but one example).

“We have got to awaken from this colorblind slumber that we've been in to the reality of race in America.”

Michelle Alexander

I just listened to a really powerful, informative speech by this person on KBOO just now, about incarceration + race in the US and the war on drugs. Important stuff!  her book here, the radio program here

“The United States, with less than 5 percent of the world's population, has about one-quarter of its prisoners. As you noted, the US has the highest incarceration rate in the world. Over 2.4 million persons are in state or federal prisons and jails - a rate of 751 out of every 100,000. Another 5 million are under some sort of correctional supervision such as probation or parole (PEW 2008). The US remains the last of the post-industrial so-called First World nations that still retains the death penalty, and we use it often. Nearly 3,500 inmates await execution in 35 states and at the federal level. It was not until the early 21st century that the US abolished capital punishment for juveniles and those with IQs below 70. One in every 35 adults is under correctional supervision and one in 100 adults is in prison. Looking at the racial dynamics, one in every 100 black women, one in 36 Latino adults, one in 15 black men, and one in nine black men ages 20 to 34 are incarcerated (Pew 2008). Approximately 50% of all prisoners are black, 30% are white and 17% are Latino (Bureau of Justice Statistics 2007). Notably, the race of victim, race of offender, and social class remain the best predictors of who will receive the death penalty.”

— Nancy A. Heitzeg, professor at St. Catherine University in Minnesota in March 2010 interview “The Racialization of Crime and Punishment”

incarceration nation

The United States holds 5% of the worlds population.

The United States holds 25% of the worlds imprisoned population.


US = Incarceration Nation

Over the past 3 decades, the number of prison inmates in the US has increased by more than 600%, leaving it the country with the highest incarceration rate in the world.
—Bureau of Justice Statistics, 2002.

Yes, we really are the Incarceration Nation. Should we change the laws and/or the system, or do we just have “worse” people?

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