GA Prison Strike Stretches Into Second Day, News Coverage Nearly Nil

by: bruce.dixon

Sat Dec 11, 2010 at 10:33


The peaceful strike begun by inmates of several Georgia state prisons continued for a second day on Friday, according to family members of some of the participants.  Copyrighted news stories by AP, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution and local TV stations in Macon and Atlanta quote state corrections who say several institutions were placed on lockdown beginning Thursday in anticipation of the inmate protest, on the initiative of wardens of those prisons.  

Offices of the wardens at Hay's, Macon State, Telfair, and Augusta state all referred our inquiries to the Department of Corrections public affairs officer, who so far has declined to return our repeated calls.

The prisoner strike in Georgia is unique, sources among inmates and their families say, because it includes not just black prisoners, but Latinos and whites too, a departure from the usual sharp racial divisions that exist behind prison walls.  

bruce.dixon :: GA Prison Strike Stretches Into Second Day, News Coverage Nearly Nil
 Inmate families and other sources claim that when thousands of prisoners remained in their cells Thursday, authorities responded with violence and intimidation.  Tactical officers rampaged through Telfair State Prison destroying inmate personal effects and severely beating at least six prisoners.  Inmates in Macon State Prison say authorities cut the prisoners' hot water, and at Telfair the administration shut off heat Thursday when daytime temperatures were in the 30s.  Prisoners responded by screening their cells with blankets, keeping prison authorities from performing an accurate count, a crucial aspect of prison operations.  

As of Friday, inmates at several prisons say they are committed to continuing the strike.  "We are going to ride it," the inmate press release quotes one, "till the wheels fall off.  We want our human rights."

The peaceful inmate strike is being led from within the prison.  Some of those thought to be its leaders have been placed under close confinement.

The nine specific demands made by Georgia's striking prisoners in two press releases pointedly reflect many of the systemic failures of the U.S. regime of mass incarceration, and the utter disconnection of U.S. prisons from any notions of protecting or serving the public interest.  Prisoners are demanding, in their own words, decent living conditions, adequate medical care and nutrition, educational and self-improvement opportunities, just parole decisions, just parole decisions, an end to cruel and unusual punishments, and better access to their families.  

It's a fact that Georgia prisons skimp on medical care and nutrition behind the walls, and that in Georgia's prisons recreational facilities are non-existent, and there are no educational programs available beyond GED, with the exception of a single program that trains inmates to be Baptist ministers.  Inmates know that upon their release they will have no more education than they did when they went in, and will be legally excluded from Pell Grants and most kinds of educational assistance, they and their families potentially locked into a disadvantaged economic status for life.  

Despite the single biggest predictor of successful reintegration into society being sustained contact with family and community, Georgia's prison

authorities make visits and family contact needlessly difficult and expensive.  Georgia no longer allows families to send funds via US postal money orders to inmates.  It requires families to send money through J-Pay, a private company that rakes off nearly ten percent of all transfers.  Telephone conversations between Georgia prisoners and their families are also a profit centers for another prison contractor, Global Tel-Link which extracts about  $55 a month for a weekly 15 minute phone call from cash-strapped families.  It's hard to imagine why the state cannot operate reliable payment and phone systems for inmates and their families with public employees at lower cost, except that this would put contractors, who probably make hefty contributions to local politicians out of business.

Besides being big business, prisons are public policy.  The U.S. has less than five percent of the world's population, but accounts for almost a quarter of its prisoners.  African Americans are one eighth this nation's population, but make up almost half the locked down.  The nation's prison population increased more than 450% in a generation beginning about 1981.  It wasn't about crime rates, because those went up, and then back down.  It wasn't about rates of drug use, since African Americans have the same rates of drug use as whites and Latinos.  Since the 1980s, the nation has undertaken a well-documented policy of mass incarceration, focused primarily though not exclusively on African Americans.  The good news is that public policies are ultimately the responsibility of the public to alter, to change or do do away with.  America's policy of mass incarceration is overdue for real and sustained public scrutiny.  A movement has to be built on both sides of the walls that will demand an end to the prison industry and to the American policy of mass incarceration.  That movement will have to be outside the Republican and Democratic parties.  Both are responsible for building this system, and both rely on it to sustain their careers.  The best Democrats could do on the 100 to 1 crack to powder cocaine disparity this year, with a black president in the White House and thumping majorities in the House and Senate was to reduce it to 18 to 1, and then only by lengthening the sentences for powder cocaine.  On this issue, Democrats and Republicans are part of the problem, not the solution.

As this article goes to print Saturday morning, it's not known whether the strike will continue a third day.  With prison officials not talking, and corporate media ignoring prisoners not just this week but every day, outlets like Black Agenda Report and the web site upon which you're reading this are among the chief means inmates and their families have of communicating with the public.  The prisoners are asking the public to continue to call the Georgia Department of Corrections, and the individual prisons listed below to express concern for the welfare of the prisoners.

Prison is about corruption, power and isolation.  You can help break the isolation by calling the wardens' offices at the following prisons.  Prisons, naturally , are open Saturdays and Sundays too.

Macon State Prison is 978-472-3900.  
Hays State Prison is at (706) 857-0400
Telfair State prison is 229-868-7721
Baldwin State Prison is at (478) 445- 5218
Valdosta State Prison is 229-333-7900
Smith State Prison is at (912) 654-5000
The Georgia Department of Corrections is at http://www.dcor.state.ga.us and their phone number is 478-992-5246

A Sunday update to this story will be posted at Black Agenda Report, about 9AM EST.

Bruce Dixon is managing editor at Black Agenda Report, and based in Marietta GA.  Dixon is a member of the state committee of the GA Green party.


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Fascinating. (4.00 / 2)
Both Parties are completely culpable in the privatization of our prison system, which of course leads to the prison lobby demanding more and more inmates via irrational and poor law making.  I guess the treatment of prisoner residents of our own country and their very smart actions to demand better is not as sexy as what happens at Guantanamo given the lack of news coverage.  Now this is a movement.  Not based on a single figure or vague hopes.  But a real movement asking for specific results.  I'm so impressed.  

Privatization is nasty and egregious, but not the main villain... (4.00 / 8)
In 2007, less than five percent of prison ops were privatized.  The number is not going up very fast, and even the main cheerleaders of privatization aren't cheering for more prisons, possibly because it gives their tainted cause an even worse bad name, if that's possible.

The problem is way deeper than privatization.  We have a public policy of mass incarceration, a policy that makes a few people rich to be sure, but has other factors driving the bus.  Privatization is a big passenger, to be sure, but not the driver.  Among the drivers are racism, for one.  Another is a need to do something to contain and maintain the proper subordination of all those folks for whom there are no jobs and no prospects, for another.

"If you want that good feeling that comes from doing things for other people, then you have to pay for it in abuse and misunderstanding..."
Zora Neale Hurston


Interesting... (0.00 / 0)
I had not thought about the jobs angle.  This is deplorable.  

[ Parent ]
Yup! (4.00 / 4)
Christian Parenti began from the perspective of an activist trying to figure out the prison-industrial complex--which is real enough in it's own way.  But not the driving force, he concluded in the course of writing Lockdown America. Police and Prisons in the Age of Crisis.  In the end, he focused on the early-70s shift from a social welfare philosophy of containing restless masses via okay-paying jobs and social welfare to a punitive philosophy of containment via not-so-okay-paying jobs and punishment/imprisonment.

You look at how commonplace labor law violations became in strikebreaking and union-busting in the 1980s, and you've simply got to see that connected to what happened with prisons, and the explosion of non-violent drug arrests in particular. You have to see things systematically at that sort of level, or else you're never going to have a clue about what's really going on.

"You know what they say -- those of us who fail history... doomed to repeat it in summer school." -- Buffy The Vampire Slayer, Season 6, Episode 3


[ Parent ]
I remember Lockdown America (0.00 / 0)
Good book.  Wish I cd recall who borrowed it from me and never gave it back.

"If you want that good feeling that comes from doing things for other people, then you have to pay for it in abuse and misunderstanding..."
Zora Neale Hurston


[ Parent ]
I guess that is related to (4.00 / 1)
the fact that American workers have not received a pay raise other than inflation since 1980.

What struck me is that consumers had to send the wives out to work since the early 80's and also to put the consumption purchases on credit cards or other forms of bank debt after that time. By the late 1980's that had become unsustainable if the economy (based 70% on consumption and another 20% on investment that only happens when there are growing consumer markets to invest in) were to continue to expand, so second mortgages and refinancing the inflated homes were required to pay the debt bills.

That would have ended about 2000 had Greenspan not gone out of his way to inflate the market and create the housing bubble. The banks and libertarians were simultaneously creating new financial products to suck money from the housing bubble and hand it off to the banks and hedge funds. Deregulating the bank products was another part of the scam.

In the meantime, the wealthiest 5% of Americans were sucking off literally all the gains from increased productivity, so that they now own what, nearly 50% of all American wealth? As Kevin Phillips pointed out in Wealth and Democracy, the wealthiest families have vastly increased their wealth during this period of time. Much of that increase has been through use of hedge funds and private investment managers.

Paul Farrell at the Wall Street Journal confirms that the average investor no longer gets much return on stock investments. He describes the current situation thus: "America's divided into two stock markets: one for Wall Street's rich insiders, another for Main Street's suckers: 'Investors, as opposed to traders, buy stocks in companies whose profits they expect to rise. The conventional wisdom says stock prices will follow profits up, but over the last two business cycles, that simply has not happened.' "

While a lot of this is common knowledge, the arc of events seems to be getting worse rapidly. When I hear good economic news now my first question is what the source of that news is selling. The good news is always either sourced from or disseminated by someone who makes money by keeping people bullish on the economy. (Of course, there are also the Glenn Becks who are profiting from selling disaster news, but it's the same rip-off.) It is being done on the backs of the working and middle classes and it can't last.

The increasing oppression of the poor is a requirement of these economic changes, as is the increasing farming of the lowest income people for money through sub-prime loans, payday loans, over-priced used car loans, extremely high interest rate rapid tax refund loans, check-cashing services (5% or more of the face value of the check because 30% of the employed are not allowed to have bank accounts - the banks won't give them accounts but employers no longer pay in cash), rent-to-own stores, pawn shops and other ways to sop up money from the low income working people.

This is all systematic. The wealth of America is being shifted from the poor and working classes who create it to the extremely wealthy in old money families. That's the urgency about eliminating the inheritance tax. They want to increase their family wealth. With that wealth goes aristocratic power, of course. [I sometimes wonder how closely this resembles the destruction of the Roman middle class farmers and their descent into serfdom at the end of the western Roman Empire.]

Did I leave out bank centralization and the way big box stores are putting small businesses out of business? According to David Cay Johnston (Free Lunch) Wal-Mart's total corporate profits each year almost exactly match the amount of money the local governments have given up in business taxes in order to encourage Wal-Mart to build a store in their location. But Wal-Mart puts the tax paying local stores out of business by undercutting their prices. All at the price of a few pay-offs to a few local city and county politicians.

I might just be a raving paranoid selecting disaster news and warning of greater disaster to come, but the Great Recession, current high unemployment and the activities of the Koch brothers and the wealthy 100 in club Senate strongly suggest to me that this is not paranoia.  


[ Parent ]
This issue looks (4.00 / 4)
like it's beginning to get more attention at the elite level as well. The Prospect has a new special report on mass incarceration, and The Nation's next issue will be about it too.

Given the budget crutch in most states and the great expansion in the costs associated with mass incarceration, now is a great time to make the case that this policy is counterproductive, unconstitutional, immoral and too costly.

Politics is the art of the possible, but that means you have to think about changing what is possible, not that you have to accept it in perpetuity.


Also (4.00 / 2)
The Nation issue is here.

Politics is the art of the possible, but that means you have to think about changing what is possible, not that you have to accept it in perpetuity.

[ Parent ]
Although it seems crass (0.00 / 0)
I believe that a sort of populist "shock doctrine" should be employed by public-spirited activists. In  light of your diary on your plans for the Green Party in Georgia, and black incarceration as a signature issue, is it not advisable to utilize the currents of future history in Georgia to work for what you intend to achieve, anyway?

In your case, that would take the form of a mass outreach to the public in Georgia, which would not only ask folks to contact prison officials (as you did in the end of the current diary), but also to make the point that the Democrats (as well as Republicans) have been happy to put up with mass incarceration, for non-violent crimes like drug use. And, therefore, growing the Green Party, as you indicated in your previous diary, would have been a prophylaxis for the current situation (had it taken off, earlier), but furthermore can still be a curative, starting today.

This might also work to ameliorate the current conditions by putting pressure on the elected Democratic politicians. If you can produce, over the next 5 weeks, say 100,000 public pledges, from newly minted ex-Democrat rank-and-file of the state of Georgia, to go Green at the state level, I think you'd be guaranteed to get the attention of powerful Dems.

The seriously smart way to go about this is to simultaneously make a pitch for evangelists for the Greens and/or the current prison crisis. If you get 5% of your 100,000 pledgers to agree to at least approach 1 group that they're a member of (church, PTA, whatever), you might start a peaceful revolution in Ga that surprises you in how quickly it acquires political muscle.

As for how to get the attention of your fellow citizens, who are busy with their own lives, given the constraint that corporate owned media isn't likely to give you any hearing, at all: A few months ago, I updated a small booklet on the subject of revitalizing democracy in the US, which I personally delivered to Gary Null's office in NYC. A good chunk of that paper was about how to efficiently get political messages to people, in a world which is not particularly friendly to propagating such messages, when they haven't originated from some monied interest.

I've not the slightest doubt that it can be done. Feel free to ask Null's office for a copy, and utilize anything listed there. (Not all my ideas, btw. One I 'stole' from Null, himself!). I've not spread the document around, widely, for reasons discussed in the document, itself, but the fact is that Null & company aren't doing anything with it (AFAIK), and I just don't have the resources to do much about most all those ideas, by myself.  I could just email you a copy, myself, but making them produce a copy will jog their memories that it exists. The document is called, "Democracy Artery - A Framework for a Democratic Renaissance"

You'll probably be weirded out by many of my suggestions in this vein, but if you find yourself asking, "Is this guy serious, or crazy?" - well, I can guarantee you that I'm serious. :-)

N.B.: I also discussed the notion of a populist shock doctrine in my paper.

435 Dem Primaries 2012
Coffee Party Usa
TheRealNews.Com


It's not gonna happen anything like that fast... (4.00 / 2)
You don't specify how this "mass outreach" works.  WTF is it?  In the real world, there are no means at our disposal to contact and engage anything like 100,000 people in 5 weeks.  I feel foolish even bothering to answer such a suggestion.

"If you want that good feeling that comes from doing things for other people, then you have to pay for it in abuse and misunderstanding..."
Zora Neale Hurston


[ Parent ]
If you're quite sure that can never happen (0.00 / 0)
don't bother reading my paper.

I was assuming you have some sort of nucleus of people - say 1,000, that you could tap for outreach purposes. Since Georgia has a population of 9.8 million, that's .01% of the population.

If you actually only have a small fraction of that, that's a different story. OTOH, where do you want to be in a year or two?

435 Dem Primaries 2012
Coffee Party Usa
TheRealNews.Com


[ Parent ]
Regarding racism as a driver of hugely increased incarceration rates, check out the book The New Jim Crow. (4.00 / 5)
Here is a quote from a review of the book:
Contrary to the rosy picture of race embodied in Barack Obama's political success and Oprah Winfrey's financial success, legal scholar Alexander argues vigorously and persuasively that [w]e have not ended racial caste in America; we have merely redesigned it. Jim Crow and legal racial segregation has been replaced by mass incarceration as a system of social control

You can read the review in full and order the book at:http://www.amazon.com/New-Jim-Crow-Incarceration-Colorblindness/dp/1595581030/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1292121098&sr=1-1


You beat me to it, Ammas! (0.00 / 0)
I got an email from the organization Color of Change just this week informing people of this book. I was going to post it here, but I'm glad to see you've already done so!
Anyway, it's a good opportunity for me to let folks know that if they aren't on Color of Change's email list, they ought to sign up (and donate, if you can).

Folks here might also be interested to know that Color of Change is also on the front lines of fighting for Net Neutrality and against those civil rights groups and CBC members that are (taking money from and) siding with the broadband industry.  


[ Parent ]
For more on this great book (4.00 / 1)
see Paul's diary here and Democracy Now here.

Politics is the art of the possible, but that means you have to think about changing what is possible, not that you have to accept it in perpetuity.

[ Parent ]
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