Workers Vanguard No. 1029
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6 September 2013
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Hunger Strike Against the Torture of Solitary-California Prison Hell
In early July, some 30,000 California prisoners launched their
third hunger strike in two years against the barbaric torture of solitary
confinement. At its peak, the strike encompassed two-thirds of the 33 state
prisons and all four private out-of-state prisons that hold California inmates,
making it five times the size of the strikes in 2011. Prison officials
retaliated by blasting freezing air into the cells of hunger strikers and by
denying them vitamins and any liquids except water for 18 days. In an L.A.
Times (6 August) op-ed column titled “Hunger Strike in California Prisons is
a Gang Power Play,” the head of the California Department of Corrections and
Rehabilitation (CDCR), Jeffrey Beard, ranted that the men starving themselves to
put an end to the depravity of solitary did so “to advance their own agenda of
violence.”
With some 123 prisoners continuing to hold out eight weeks into the
strike, a federal court judge ruled that prison doctors can force feed the
remaining hunger strikers. A spokesman for the federal receiver in charge of
prison medical care celebrated the court order as clearing the way to “save
their lives”! Although prisoners had signed “do not resuscitate” directives, the
Dr. Mengeles of the CDCR are preparing to “save” them for the torments of the
Security Housing Unit’s (SHU) isolation chambers.
Welcome to Guantánamo North, where the systematic brutality is of a
piece with the unspeakable sadism of the U.S. jailers abroad. With 25 percent of
the prison population on the planet, the U.S. leads the world in the number of
people—disproportionately black and Latino—it throws behind bars. And California
leads the nation. Like Dante’s Inferno, the Italian poet’s 14th-century
epic portrayal of a journey through the nine concentric circles of hell,
California’s prison “Inferno” is a journey through concentric circles of
increasing barbarism. Located far from inmates’ families and enclosed by lethal
electric fences, “supermax” lockups like Pelican Bay State Prison contain the
high-tech sensory deprivation chambers of the SHU.
Entombed behind heavy metal doors in windowless, ten-by-eight foot
concrete cages for more than 22 hours a day, prisoners have no human contact
other than with guards. Conditions in the SHU were powerfully captured by Shane
Bauer, one of three Americans seized by the Iranian government and held
incommunicado in the notorious isolation ward for political prisoners at Iran’s
Envin prison. In a Mother Jones (November-December 2012) article titled
“Solitary in Iran Nearly Broke Me. Then I Went Inside America’s Prisons,” Bauer
describes visiting the Pelican Bay SHU, where his guide wants to know if it is
different from Iran. Bauer wonders if he should “point out that I had a
mattress, and they have thin pieces of foam; that the concrete open-air cell I
exercised in was twice the size of the ‘dog run’ at Pelican Bay…; that I got 15
minutes of phone calls in 26 months and they get none.” Instead, he simply opts
to reply that he had “a window.” The sunlight, fresh air and sounds of the
outside world it afforded kept him from breaking. But in the Pelican Bay SHU
“there are no windows.”
As far back as 1890, the Supreme Court condemned solitary as an
“infamous punishment” that drove prisoners “violently insane.” Today prison
authorities simply deny that the SHU is solitary. Unspeakably cruel, the
conditions in California’s prisons are not an aberration in racist America. On
the contrary, such barbarism is the product of a capitalist system that is in a
state of advanced decay.
As we wrote in “Hunger Strike in California Prison Hell” (WV
No. 984, 5 August 2011):
“High-tech sensory deprivation chambers like the SHU throw into
stark relief the nature of the bourgeois state as an apparatus of organized
violence to preserve the rule and profits of racist American capitalism.
“The prisons are the concentrated expression of the depravity of
this society, a key instrument in coercing, torturing and brutalizing those who
have been cast off as the useless residue of a system rooted in exploitation and
racial oppression. Elementary humanity demands that the SHU and all other
solitary confinement chambers be abolished. But it will take nothing short of
proletarian socialist revolution to destroy the capitalists’ prison system and
sweep away all the barbaric institutions of the bourgeois state.”
California Prisons: “The Worst of the Worst”
Even in the dungeon empire of “incarceration nation,” California
prisons are among the worst of the worst. Conditions are so atrocious that the
most reactionary Supreme Court in 60 years found them in violation of the Eighth
Amendment’s ban on “cruel and unusual punishment.” A 2011 majority opinion
recounted that California’s “prisons had operated at around 200% of design
capacity for at least 11 years” during which “needless suffering and death have
been the well documented result.” The court mandated that California cut its
prison population to 137 percent capacity. For nearly three decades, lower
courts had directed the state to relieve overcrowding, provide medical care and
stop abuse by prison guards.
In the two years since the Supreme Court ruling, California’s
Democratic Party governor Jerry Brown has openly flouted orders to release 9,600
prisoners. In April, a three-judge panel threatened to hold the governor in
contempt of court for defying orders to provide adequate medical treatment,
particularly for thousands of mentally ill prisoners who often find themselves
locked in single holding cells awaiting “group therapy.” Brown defiantly
retorted that his jailhouses provided “among the best healthcare in America and
probably the world.”
Following this ringing endorsement, an outbreak of
coccidioidomycosis, or Valley Fever, at two San Joaquin Valley prisons impelled
a federal judge to grant a class-action suit by seven inmates and order the
state to relocate around 2,600 prisoners to other facilities. For years, the
state has opposed any such move, arguing that it could cause race riots, an open
admission that segregation reigns in California prisons. Blacks, Filipinos and
people with compromised immune systems are at high risk for Valley Fever, a
disease that can be fatal if left untreated. In the past three years alone,
close to 2,000 inmates at the two prisons have contracted the disease and in the
past seven years 40 have died from it.
As the suit argued, the state’s refusal to transfer prisoners from
the Valley “was the equivalent of conducting a human medical experiment on the
inmates, without their consent. For an unacceptable percentage of inmates,
including the plaintiff subclasses identified here, assignment to these
facilities is a potential death sentence.” Here is recalled the infamous
“Tuskegee experiment,” in which from 1932 to 1972 public health officials denied
lifesaving penicillin to 600 black men in Alabama afflicted with syphilis.
There was, however, one medical treatment readily available in
California’s prisons: forcible sterilization. From 2006 to 2010, at least 148
women inmates were coerced into undergoing tubal ligations in a throwback to the
genocidal pseudoscience of eugenics. Between 1909 and 1964, California
sanctioned 20,000 such operations on patients in state-run facilities under a
law authorizing the sterilization of the “feebleminded,” the “diseased” and the
“perverted.” This law was only repealed in 1979. But its motivation remains.
When questioned about the $147,460 price tag for sterilization, one ob-gyn
opined: “That isn’t a huge amount of money compared to what you save in welfare
paying for these unwanted children—as they procreated more.”
The Criminalization of Black and Latino Youth
Mumia Abu-Jamal, America’s foremost class-war prisoner, knows
solitary from the inside. An innocent man, this former Black Panther spent 30
years on death row in Pennsylvania on frame-up charges of killing a cop until he
was released into the general prison population last year. In his “Sept. 14th
Statement on Solitary” from a year ago, Mumia wrote:
“Is it cruel and unusual and thus violative of the Eighth
Amendment to the U.S. constitution? Apparently this was so in the 1890s but not
so in the present, probably because of who was in prison then—and who are
now.
“It may surprise you to know that at the end of the 19th century,
Blacks were a distinct minority of American prisoners. And while numbers
certainly swelled post-slavery—to build the prison-contract-labor industry,
really slavery by another name—the biggest bounce in Black imprisonment came in
the aftermath of the Civil Rights and Black Liberation movements, when Black
people, en masse, opposed the system of white supremacy, police brutality and
racist juries.”
Despite the hat-in-hand pro-Democratic Party politics of the civil
rights leaders, not least Martin Luther King, America’s rulers hated and feared
the spectre of black militancy. They correctly saw it as a challenge to a system
of class oppression rooted in the forcible segregation of the majority of the
black population at the bottom of society. Despite the stone-cold racism of
George Meany’s AFL-CIO bureaucracy, labor struggles like the 1970 national
postal strike in defiance of anti-strike laws amplified fears that such
militancy would spill over into the organized working class with its battalions
of black workers.
In 1971, Republican president Richard Nixon launched a “war on
drugs,” which centrally took aim at black militants and the inner-city poor on
the heels of the ghetto upheavals of the 1960s. In 1973, following the bloodbath
he launched against the 1971 Attica prison rebellion, New York State Governor
Nelson Rockefeller enacted draconian drug laws that became a model for other
states. The “war on drugs” went into overdrive under Ronald Reagan with the avid
support of black Democrats like Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton. Today, nearly
half of the 2.3 million people behind bars in the U.S. are black.
The deindustrialization of much of the U.S., exemplified today by
the bankruptcy of “Motor City” Detroit, drove millions more black people out of
the workforce and into the ranks of the permanently outcast. Having created the
conditions condemning black as well as Latino youth to desperate poverty, the
rulers branded them criminals and devised a maze of “anti-gang” laws aimed at
funneling ever more of them into prison. Once again, the state of California was
in the lead with its 1988 “Street Terrorism Enforcement and Prevention Act.”
Wearing “gang clothing,” having tattoos or being named by a
“reliable” source is enough to be entered into the statewide CalGang database,
which now has an estimated 200,000 names, including children as young as ten.
Those in the database are not notified and there is no way to remove one’s name.
Such gang profiling begins in the schools, where poor and minority youth are
branded for life. Latinos have been a particular target, as testified by the
fact that they comprise 85 percent of those in the Pelican Bay SHU.
In prison, the charge of “gang association” is all that’s needed to
end up in solitary. “Evidence” of such association includes everything from
tattoos to greeting cards; written material, especially by or about black
freedom fighters like Mumia Abu-Jamal or even classics like Machiavelli’s The
Prince and Sun Tzu’s The Art of War; jailhouse lawyering and advocacy
of prison reform. As Shane Bauer wrote: “In California, an inmate facing the
worst punishment our penal system has to offer short of death can’t even have a
lawyer in the room. He can’t gather or present evidence in his defense. He can’t
call witnesses. Much of the evidence—anything provided by informants—is
confidential and thus impossible to refute.”
While the maximum confinement in the SHU for killing a guard is
five years, the length of stay for “gang association” is indeterminate. Outside
of death, virtually the only other road out of the SHU is “debriefing,” i.e.,
snitching out others as gang members. We demand an end to this Kafkaesque
nightmare both inside and outside the prison walls from the anti-gang laws to
solitary confinement! Decriminalize drugs and all other “crimes without
victims,” such as gambling, prostitution and pornography!
The Farce of Prison “Reform”
During the hunger strike, Attorney General Eric Holder called for
an end to mandatory federal sentencing for “nonviolent” drug users. Many in the
Republican Party establishment have also embraced such appeals. Overwhelmingly,
the concern on all sides is the cost to the government, with prisons now
grotesquely seen as some kind of new “welfare” for black people. Jerry Brown,
though, isn’t letting anyone go. According to the L.A. Times (22 August),
the governor is now working on a plan with the California prison guard “union”
and Corrections Corporation of America—the country’s largest for-profit prison
enterprise—to transfer prisoners to one of its jails in the Mojave Desert.
“It’s a win-win,” boasted an official of the prison guard
association. Prisoners won’t be released, and the guards will get more jobs
policing the new facility. If there is any criminal gang in California’s
prisons, these sadistic screws are it. But they are embraced as “union brothers”
by the sellout labor misleaders. Having allowed the industrial and now
public-sector unions to be savaged in the name of shared “sacrifice” while
turning a blind eye to the destitution of the ghetto and barrio poor, the labor
bureaucrats seek to maintain their dues base by organizing the strikebreaking
cops and jailhouse thugs whose purpose is the violent suppression of the working
class and oppressed. Cops and prison guards out of the unions!
The multiracial working class is the only force in capitalist
society with both the social power and historic interest to eradicate a system
rooted in exploitation. To unleash this power, there needs to be a political
struggle to break the chains forged by the trade-union bureaucracy, which have
shackled labor to its class enemy, particularly in its Democratic Party face.
The purpose of the Spartacist League is to build the revolutionary party that
will lead the workers in the fight to shatter the capitalist order. With the
proletariat in power internationally, the vast wealth now appropriated by a tiny
class of exploiters will instead provide the material basis for achieving an
egalitarian communist society. The modern instruments of incarceration, torture
and death will be placed alongside their medieval complements as relics of a
decaying social order that deserved only to perish.
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