Friday, August 24, 2012

“What about the murderers?” Prison Abolition

(I’m excluding the “rapist” part that is often included in the question because that is something that would require a whole other essay, including a discussion about the omnipresence of rape in bourgeois democracy, where as Angela Davis puts it, “In the United States and other capitalist countries, rape laws as
 a rule were framed originally for the protection of men of the
upper classes, whose daughters and wives might be assaulted. What 
happens to working-class women has usually been of little concern 
to the courts.” Also, most men polled—87% in one particular survey of U.S. male college students-- do not believe that a husband can rape his wife, demonstrating how in this capitalist society a man can consider a woman to be his property and so forth.)

-“Liberalism considered it proper for an employer to say to an employee, ‘You shall die of hunger,’ but improper for the employee to retort, “You shall die first, of a bullet.’”
-Bertrand Russell, Skeptical Essays.

“Murder, the most foul of all crimes. And not abstract murder like shooting an unknown enemy on the battlefield, but standing in a closed room with a live human being and pulling the trigger face to face” says Boris in Woody Allen’s Love and Death. Ask most North Americans and they would probably agree with this statement: killing Afghanis who you don’t know on the battlefield is one thing, but killing a person that you actually know face-to-face, well, that’s murder. Since the vast majority of murders (the murders that get you in prison, not drone attacks on Pakistanis or police terrorism on Black ‘suspects’) are concerning people that the person knows, this must be the reason that people who might otherwise agree people shouldn’t be locked up in cages change their tune about people locked up for “violent” offenses, especially people convicted of murder: it is not because people are actually afraid that someone who killed her/his roommate or family member is actually going to search for your family, who she/he has never met, and have them die some terrible death that people say that “murderers should be locked up,” but because people cannot deal with the idea that someone would kill a person they actually know and haven’t demonized as a terrorist, like the Afghani family who is murdered. A Black man who is killed by police is not quite ‘murder’ because Black men have been demonized in the U.S. since they were first brought to this country bound in chains aboard ships. If the policeman had killed his wife and kids, the media would talk about the terrible murder—why didn’t he kill that undesirable homeless man or Black teenager instead of his lovely, law-abiding family?

-->If your perspective is that, “No, no, no, you’re not listening to me: ALL murderers should be in prison, including the cop who killed the homeless man,” it is still very prejudiced logic, because you obviously are not talking about drone attacks on the people of Pakistan, or the boss killing his worker of starvation or a miner dying of lung disease, and you’re basically saying that physical violence (in the form of a gunshot or knife wound, not violence as in killing a man through overwork) against the oppressed and violence against the oppressor is one and the same. And you’re acting as if we have a justice system that doesn’t terrorize, demonize, and frame oppressed people at every moment. The jury and judge for Blacks, ‘illegal immigrants,’ and other oppressed people isn’t chosen from their own communities; the people who sentence them have already decided that they are 'guilty,' they do not know or care about the person being sentenced. The Papin sisters who worked as maids in a household and killed their employer’s family were sentenced to life imprisonment and eight years in prison respectively—When under capitalism do you ever hear of employers being sentenced to a day in prison for the crime of making their workers be at their beck and call and work for them for fifteen hours a day, for killing their workers by sending them to work in the mines or factories? Never, because working people to death and making their lives monotonous and estranged from all other life is not considered ‘violent.’

 It’s a huge paradox when people have “Victim’s Rights” marches and attempt to frame i.e. the person who robbed and killed the person as a villainous fiend. People focus on the fifteen or less minutes that it took to kill the person, and never on the sheer brutality and madness that is life under capitalism for the exploited. Rosie Alfaro, a woman on Death Row since 1992 in California, has a Wikipedia page mostly describing the murder, and of her life prior to that it merely states, “Alfaro was raised in the barrio in Anaheim, California, near Disneyland. She became a drug addict at 13, a prostitute at 14 and a single mom at 15, and mother to 4 children at 18. Eventually, she became a murderer at 18 (while pregnant with twins) and the first woman in Orange County, California to get the death penalty at 20.” That’s it, nothing more about how she suffered, how difficult it was to able to take care of her children at such a young age, how growing up in poverty and possibly abuse affected her, or her addiction to drugs, experience of Orange County racism, and how capitalism oppressed her and many similar to her. She is a merely a murderer, now age 40, a murderer at 18 and always a murderer. It also doesn’t mention how messed up of a society it is in which the parents of the girl who was killed “cheered” when Rosie Alfaro was given a death sentence. I found a quote from Rosie Alfaro, "I do think that someone has to pay for what happened to that poor girl, and that's me, But I can't help thinking how my life stopped, ended, at 18, and that I have no future, and all that is because of drugs." And no, not everyone who does drugs robs (or has to) or kills to get their fix, but nor does everyone grow up in poverty and violence, or mental illness. We can’t leave someone behind in the fight for prison abolition because of a murder committed years ago, especially when considering how violent life is under capitalism, war on black and brown communities, immigration raids, war in Afghanistan, Pakistan, & Palestine, and police terrorism.

In Richard Wright’s Native Son, the protagonist Bigger kills a wealthy white woman, a woman who is sympathetic to him and whose parents contribute grand funds to all sorts of liberal causes, while they own apartment complexes but only allow one of the apartment complexes be rented by Black tenets thus keeping them confined in a ghetto (including Bigger’s family). Jan, the woman’s boyfriend, a communist, says to Bigger, “Though this thing hurt me, I got something out of it. It made me see deeper into men. It made me see things I knew, but had forgotten. I—I lost something, but I got something, too…It taught me that it’s your right to hate me, Bigger. I know see that you couldn’t do anything else but that; it was all you had...Ever since I got out of jail I’ve been thinking this thing over and I felt that I’m the one who ought to be in jail for murder instead of you. But that can’t be, Bigger. I can’t take it upon myself the blame for what one hundred million people have done. I’m not trying to make it up to you, Bigger. I didn’t come here to feel sorry for you. I don’t suppose you’re so much worse off than the rest of us who get tangled up in this world. I’m here because I’m trying to live up to this thing as I see it. And it isn’t easy, Bigger. I—I loved that girl that you killed. I was in jail grieving for Mary and then I thought of all the black men who’ve been killed, the black men who had to grieve for their people were snatched from them in slavery and since slavery. I thought that if they could stand that, then I ought to. ” Jan then offers to find and pay for Bigger’s lawyer. Should it not be our desire to understand and be in total support and solidarity with the oppressed person who killed the person that we loved, rather than to cheer for their life sentence?

Describing how his character Bigger Thomas was born, author Richard Wright described the various ‘Biggers’ he had personally known and his life and said, “For a long time I toyed with the idea of writing a novel in which a Negro Bigger Thomas would loom as a symbolic figure of American life, a figure who would hold within him the prophecy of our future. I felt strongly that he held within him, in a measure which perhaps no other contemporary type did, the outlines of action and feeling which we would encounter on a vast scale in the days to come. Just as one sees when one walks into a medical research laboratory jars of alcohol containing abnormally large or distorted portions of the human body, just so did I see and feel that the conditions of life under which Negroes are forced to live in America contain the embryonic emotional prefigurations of how a large part of the body politic would react under stress.” Life for Blacks in the U.S. is extremely degrading and oppressive as the New Jim Crow allows police to terrorize Blacks at every moment. Activists often like to focus on death penalty cases in which we say, “the person is innocent! He didn’t really kill anyone!” When I once was passing out flyers that said, “sentenced to die for a murder he did not commit” for Troy Davis, a young man, who was Black, stopped me and asked, “So, are you saying that it would be OK for him to be locked up if he had done it?” I stopped and looked and the flyer and thought that it was all wrong—it was not saying don’t execute (or imprison) Troy Davis because he is an oppressed man in a racist state that exploited him, it was basically saying, “don’t execute that Black prisoner, but because he never killed anyone.” Of course, a lot of Black prisoners have been framed for murder by the police and most Black men have not killed anyone at all, but the point is that we should not distinguish between the ‘guilty’ and the ‘innocent’ oppressed and thus make a moral stance in that form. To quote from Engels in Anti-Duhring: “We therefore reject every attempt to impose on us any moral dogma whatsoever as an eternal, ultimate and forever immutable ethical law on the pretext that the moral world, too, has its permanent principles which stand above history and the differences between nations. We maintain on the contrary that all moral theories have been hitherto the product, in the last analysis, of the economic conditions of society obtaining at the time. And as society has hitherto moved in class antagonisms, morality has always been class morality; it has either justified the domination and the interests of the ruling class, or ever since the oppressed class became powerful enough, it has represented its indignation against this domination and the future interests of the oppressed.”

While a black man killing a police officer in self-defense is called a 'cop killer' and murderer, in its crime statistics the FBI calls the following as the only kind of 'justifiable murder': "The killing of a felon by a peace officer in the line of duty" and "The killing of a felon, during the commission of a felony, by a private citizen." Since Blacks and Latinos compose of over 60% of all 'felons' in the U.S. it basically gives carte-blanche to police and vigilantes to kill black and brown people who they think might be dangerous due to their own racism, or if they are committing a 'felony' i.e. the 2007 case in which Afro-Latinos Miguel Antonio DeJesus and Diego Ortiz were murdered, shot in the back by a white Texan who saw them stealing and fleeing from his neighbor's house who was not at home. Talk show hosts like Bill O'Reilly of course voiced concern about the man's well-being and did not want his "life to be ruined" for killing two Black "illegal aliens" who "should not have been here in the first place." The all-white jury in this case, of course, cleared the white man of any crime, just as the all-white jury cleared the racists who murdered Emmett Till in 1955.

Alternatives to Prison

 Ada Pecos Melton, a member of the Pueblo Jemez of New Mexico and President of American Indian Development Associates, writes concerning the indigenous justice paradigm and its difference to our justice system:

“The American paradigm has its roots in the world view of Europeans and is based on a retributive philosophy that is hierarchical, adversarial, punitive, and guided by codified laws and written rules, procedures, and guidelines. The vertical power structure is upward, with decision making limited to a few. The retributive philosophy holds that because the victim has suffered, the criminal should suffer as well. It is premised on the notion that criminals are wicked people who are responsible for their actions and deserve to be punished….In the American paradigm, the law is applied through an adversarial system that places two differing parties in the courtroom to determine a defendant's guilt or innocence, or to declare the winner or loser in a civil case. It focuses on one aspect of a problem, the act involved, which is discussed through adversarial fact finding. The court provides the forum for testing the evidence presented from the differing perspectives and objectives of the parties. Interaction between parties is minimized and remains hostile throughout. In criminal cases, punitive sanctions limit accountability of the offender to the state, instead of to those he or she has harmed or to the community.

The indigenous justice paradigm is based on a holistic philosophy and the world view of the aboriginal inhabitants of North America. These systems are guided by the unwritten customary laws, traditions, and practices that are learned primarily by example and through the oral teachings of tribal elders. The holistic philosophy is a circle of justice that connects everyone involved with a problem or conflict on a continuum, with everyone focused on the same center. The center of the circle represents the underlying issues that need to be resolved to attain peace and harmony for the individuals and the community. The continuum represents the entire process, from disclosure of problems, to discussion and resolution, to making amends and restoring relationships. The methods used are based on concepts of restorative and reparative justice and the principles of healing and living in harmony with all beings and with nature.”

This quote is not describing what might lead a person to “harm his or her community,” or explaining in detail how colonialist violence on indigenous people has brought alcoholism to indigenous people and how all of this contributes to violence, but it is a good example to give when describing alternatives to prison. Angela Davis has written about the Truth & Reconciliation Commission in South Africa—in which both white and black South Africans confessed their ‘crimes’ following apartheid and were dismissed—as a possible alternative, but there are huge problems with the TRC since the majority of people stepping forward with their “crimes” were Black South Africans—there was no accounting for how violent and racist white South Africans had been to Black South Africans; it was all deemed the same and worthy of forgiveness and ‘reconciliation.’ Violence committed by the oppressors to the oppressed should not be simply forgiven and forgotten with basically the same kind of oppressive political system; as John Pilger said of South Africa “apartheid did not die.”  Also, a Black South African killing a white South African, like a Black American man killing a racist police officer, should not just be treated the same as a racist killing a Black person, no matter if it is through the prison system or the Truth and Reconciliation Commission—being treated the same, of course, is not even the case anyway, with the oppressed always being the ones sentenced to prison and the oppressors always having the excuse that they were committing 'justifiable murder' because they were killing the oppressed. While there is a world of exploiters and exploited that is how things will remain.  The true ‘solution’ to murder is to have a society in which there is no violent exploitation through capitalism, no bosses--the means of production are owned by the people who work them, no police or imperialist wars and in which childcare is collectivized, health care is not merely a luxury for the rich, and life is not so repetitive and oppressive that so many sink into hopelessness and addiction. Eugene V. Debs said, "While there is a lower class, I am in it, and while there is a criminal element I am of it, and while there is a soul in prison, I am not free"--He did not exclude the 'murderers' or the 'violent people' who are locked up, people who have suffered immensely themselves under capitalism.
 

Re "Pussy Riot"

If only people would talk about the thousands of Palestinian prisoners in Israel, or Black American prisoners, or Muslims in US’s Communication Management Units, even half as much as Pussy Riot. There’s the assumption that because someone is a ‘political prisoner’ (if they happen to be Arab or Black or Muslim they’re called a terrorist or illegal, not a political prisoner) who talks about rejecting religion and the state/writes songs about it, they’re more worthy of attention than a Muslim woman or man who is in prison because she/he was racially profiled. The men and women whose letters I get at Barrios Unidos from prison don’t get the same support from activists because they stole something or were 'violent' or did drugs or happened to be ‘illegal’ or Black or poor, you know they didn’t dress up in bright tights and talk about feminism, they’re actual ‘criminals,' not 'political prisoners.' They’re in for life because of three strikes or are getting deported to Mexico after having lived in the US for most of their life—maybe it’s not as romantic a story as twentysomething white Russian girls breaking into song and getting sentenced for possibly two years, but these are much graver injustices and forms of oppression and racism happening all the time and people aren't concerned. Also, if women in hijab came in and started chanting, “Free Palestine! Stop drones on Pakistan!” in the Russian Orthodox church, I think most people wouldn’t care/people would say that they were terrorists or oppressed women or some other nonsense, and I don't hear anybody talking about how Muslims are systemically mistreated in Russia's, U.S.'s, etc prisons.

Friday, June 22, 2012

Monday, March 5, 2012

The apartheid state

"The trend was cemented in January, when the 1954 Prevention of Infiltration law was amended. The amendment allows the state to detain refugees without trial for three years, or indefinitely if they are from an “enemy” country such as Sudan.
This puts Israel at first place among western states for the longest jail time for asylum seekers, according to Amnesty International (“Israel: new detention law violates rights of asylum seekers,” 10 January 2012).
To help realize this provision, a refugee detention center is being planned that will hold 10,000 persons. Those that offer support to refugees, the law says, may face up to 15 years in prison."
Free Palestine!

Monday, March 21, 2011

Obama praises Brazil "democracy" in Rio speech

This is meanwhile "the arrival of Barack Obama in Brazil was marked by the illegal (and politically motivated) arrest of 13 Brazilian citizens who were protesting against the presence of the North American president in the country."

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Resistance in the Middle East


"Revolution appears to a conservative as collective madness only because it raises the 'normal' insanity of social contradictions to the highest possible tension. Just as people dislike to recognize themselves in a bold caricature. And yet the entire modern development condenses, strains, and accentuates the contradictions and makes them unbearable, consequently preparing that state of mind when the great majority “goes mad.” But in such cases, the insane majority puts the straitjacket on the sane minority. Thanks to this, history keeps moving along."
-Leon Trotsky, My Life

On December 17, Tunisian street vendor Mohamed Bouazizi set himself on fire after being humiliated by the police and had his wheelbarrow of goods confiscated from him. His death led to protests throughout the country that culminated in the overthrow of the Western-backed dictator, Ben Ali, on the 14th of January. These were secular protests by men and women, fighting back against high food prices and against the corrupt government. In addition, trade unions played a large role in the struggle. As David McNally writes in his article Tunisia and the Global Crisis, “Trade unions, quiescent for years and their leaders initially hesitant to join the struggle, became key hubs of resistance thanks to pressure by rank-and-file members. Spurred into action and radicalized by events, the General Union of Tunisian Workers began organizing rallies and launched a general strike.”  Tunisia shows what is possible when labor is united. Protests continue in Tunisia as the demonstrators continue to demand the renouncement of Cabinet members that were tied to the Ben Ali dictatorship that have remained in power.
Not only in Tunisia, but throughout the Middle East, in Egypt, Jordan, Yemen, Algeria, demonstrators are rising against the neoliberal authoritarian regimes. Tunisia is now an inspiration for the protestors in these countries; one of the people participating in Egypt’s January 25 protests wrote, "I hope the [Tunisia-style] revolution will be taught in history. And that Egyptians will learn in school later about the January 25th revolution” and Queen Rania of Jordan received tweets from Jordanians such as, “Jordan is next!” The hegemonic Western press, always a proponent of the U.S. government’s strong support of democracy (if democracy means a despotic police-state), has expressed deep concern about these movements. Robert Kaplan wrote in an op-end New York Times piece, “And it was democracy that brought the extremists of Hamas to power in Gaza. In fact, do we really want a relatively enlightened leader like King Abdullah in Jordan undermined by widespread street demonstrations? We should be careful what we wish for in the Middle East.” We should be careful about those Arabs who want to choose their own fate by deposing “enlightened” monarchs, because if left to govern by the people of the Middle East, the region would be anti-U.S., anti-IMF and anti-Israel, and that is of course unacceptable. Also trembling with fear at the possibility of a real people’s democracy are the Arab despots themselves; just a few days after Ben Ali fled to Saudi Arabia, Emir Sheikh Sabah al-Ahmad, the ruler of Kuwait, ordered the distribution of $4 billion, along with free food for fourteen months. The quisling Palestinian Authority in the West Bank for its part closed down a pro-Tunisian demonstration that was staged there, grabbing a Tunisian flag from a demonstrator on the grounds that it was “disturbing the peace.”
The uprisings in the Middle East of course did not appear out of thin air and have a historical context behind them. In the 1950s-1970s, especially with the nationalist pan-Arab governments headed by Nasser in Egypt, governments throughout the Middle East implemented social policies (notably free education, land reforms, and subsidized food) in order to retain the support of the lower classes. A string of autocratic, pro-Western governments afterwards ended these policies and imposed neoliberal policies in their place through privatization and trade liberalization. The Ben Ali regime in Tunisia, for example, “enthusiastically supported” the U.S.-North African Economic Partnership, which was “designed to promote U.S. investment in, and economic integration of, the Maghreb region” and received millions of dollars in assistance from this program . These neoliberal policies have been complemented with a violent police force to brutally suppress protestors. Egypt’s minimum wage has not risen since 1984 (it is $6.30 a month) and have met with great protests over the years, including hundreds of thousands participating in factory occupations and strikes. In addition, the number of worker demonstrations in Egypt has increased in recent years from 97 in 2002 to 742 in 2009 (http://english.aljazeera.net/news/middleeast/2010/05/201052161957263202.html) According to Joel Beinin (whose full article is worth reading) The Trotskyist Revolutionary Socialists and The Communist Party are among those that have “made some gains among workers since 2004.” The militancy level of the workers in the Middle East is on the rise, as evidenced by the active presence labor had in the Tunisian uprising.
Blogger As’ad Abukhalil wrote, "When the Russian Revolution erupted, it was said that the Socialist Revolution broke in the least likely of places. Similarly, this Arab uprising in Tunisia, was in the most unlikely of places--if only because the West, Mo Ibrahim Foundation, and World Bank insisted that Tunisia is the model government for Muslims." What happened and is occurring in Tunisia and throughout the Middle East shows the power  of people when they unite in struggle against neoliberalism and oppression. Let’s hope these struggles will be just the beginning for this new year and that people throughout the Middle East and throughout the world in general, including the student movements in places like Puerto Rico and Great Britain and the protests in Greece, will continue rise against oppression with more vehemence than ever.