Benutzereinstellungen

Neue Veranstaltungshinweise

North America / Mexico

Es wurden keine neuen Veranstaltungshinweise in der letzten Woche veröffentlicht

Kommende Veranstaltungen

North America / Mexico | Repression / prisoners

Keine kommenden Veranstaltungen veröffentlicht

Modern Day Slavery in USA

category north america / mexico | repression / prisoners | news report author Saturday October 08, 2016 16:28author by Pink Panther - Aotearoa Workers Solidarity Movementauthor email awsm at riseup dot net Report this post to the editors

Since the 45th Anniversary of the Attica prison riots – September 9th, 2016 – an estimated 24,000 people have been on strike in the USA. If you haven’t heard of the strike you are not alone. It has mostly been ignored by the mainstream media and even much of the Left. This is because the strikers are made up of a group who usually don’t feature in strikes: prison workers.

Though the Thirteenth Amendment of the United States forbids slavery and involuntary servitude there is a glaring exemption that is obvious when you read what it states: “Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction.”

If you have been convicted of a crime you are not protected from the laws that protect other workers from involuntary servitude or slavery. Thus, all over the United States, thousands of prisoners are toiling for little or no money against their will in prisons.

According to the International Labour Organisation the wages paid to prison labourers range from about 23 cents to $1.15 an hour before tax. Once taxes and other deductions are paid, many of which are highly dubious deductions such as so-called “fines” and administrative fees, the prisoner will often have no money or leave prison owing money. A 2010 study by the Brennan Center for Justice found that states and counties are increasingly imposing “per diem” fees on prisoners, resulting in some inmates going into debt by the time they are released. In some states, such as Arkansas, Georgia and Texas, prisoners receive no money whatsoever for their labour.

Most prison labour is deployed in the day-to-day running of the prison, such as cleaning, laundry and kitchen duties, running the libraries and other such tasks, but a large amount of prison labour is being contracted out to private companies where the workers are forced to work for long hours with little, or no, compensation under conditions that are often dangerous.

One of the biggest advantages for companies using prison labour is they get a work force that is not only compelled to work for them but they can’t complain as their working conditions are not covered under the Fair Labor Standards Act because the courts don’t regard the prisoners as employees for the purposes of this law.

To make matters worse, as reported by the American Prospect in its investigative report “Modern Day Slavery In America’s Prison Workforce” (May 28th, 2014), the labour unions won’t represent prison workers because they produce goods that compete with other industries. Or, to put it another way, prison workers undermine the working conditions of other workers because they produce goods that can be made cheaper than those produced by companies that have to deal with irritations like minimum wages, working standards, health and safety issues and other such stuff that the capitalist classes are always moaning about.

The use of prison labour has been justified by the likes of Chris Gautz, a Michigan Department of Corrections spokesman, on the basis that “[Work] provides monetary value for [prisoners], but more importantly, a lot of prisoners come to us without ever having had a job. They’re learning not only the task of the job of what they have, and they’re learning the soft skills of showing up on time, general interpersonal skills, how to take criticism, all those things they’ve never had any experience with… The goal is to find them jobs before they’re paroled.”
Well, that may be the case in theory but the more brutal reality is that many prison workers were not unemployed before they arrived in prison and the skills they learn from prison labour does not always provide them with the skills they need to re-enter the work place once they have been paroled. That’s because a lot of the work is menial labouring and other make work schemes that are often jacked up between cash-strapped not-for-profit organisations and government agencies that anyone familiar with the so-called “work for the dole” schemes used in Australia and New Zealand on and off over the years would be all too familiar with.

Another big problem with the use of prison labour is that it is a breach of international law. Article 4 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, of which the United States is a signatory to, states: “No one shall be held in slavery or servitude; slavery and the slave trade shall be prohibited in all their forms.” Yet, it would appear that if you are unfortunate to be arrested and jailed in the United States you will be subjected to slavery or involuntary servitude.

Theres also a fair dose of hypocrisy in the situation, with the United States government condemning China for its use of forced prison labour. For example, on June 6th, 2016, CNN reported that the United States had stepped up pressure on the Chinese government and Chinese businesses using forced prison labour. However, CNN did point out that the federal agency responsible for contracting out prison labour in the United States (UNICOR) had also come under criticism for the low wages and often exploitative conditions endured by prison workers in the United States. (http://money.cnn.com/2016/06/06/news/economy/china-pris...orts/)
What is interesting was the weasel words used to excuse the United States’ use of forced labour by the article writer Sophia Yan: “Unlike China, the U.S. doesn’t deny that prison labor is taking place. Detainees are subject to a more transparent judicial process and review than in China, where the legal system can be opaque and confessions are sometimes coerced.” As noted above forced labourers in the American prison system don’t have any rights because the laws that protect most American workers don’t apply to prison workers because they are not regarded as employees for the purposes of the Fair Labor Standards Act. It’s also a very piss poor argument to claim that the United States using prison labour is okay because they are open about it but it’s wrong for the Chinese government to do so because they aren’t.

The point is that slavery of any sort is wrong. It’s wrong from an international law perspective. It is wrong from a moral perspective. It is wrong even under United States law. Yet the United States allows the use of forced prison labour – slavery – because of some highly dubious arguments about how work is benefitting the prisoners for that day in the future when the prisoner will be paroled.

Perhaps a more telling statistic is one that Mother Jones slipped in about who really benefits from the use of prison labour. According to their September 19th, 2016, article about the prison worker strikes Mother Jones stated that “prison workers reportedly helped Florida taxpayers save more than $59 million in 2014”.

So the state, which is supposed to be protecting its citizens from exploitation, is actually participating in the exploitation of the working class in order to trim the tax budget!

It does not require a PhD in Economics to work out who the real beneficiaries of forced prison labour really are. It’s the business owners who use prison labour costs to undermine the wages and conditions of the working classes and to undercut their competition by means that are blatantly illegal, underhanded and unfair. It’s the taxpayers who get their precious taxes reduced because the people providing the services paid for through their taxes don’t get paid and don’t have any working standards or legal protections. The only people who don’t get anything good from this arrangement are the workers themselves. They are losing their jobs because the businesses and other organisations they work for can’t compete with the companies and county and state government agencies using prison labour.
“Workers of the world, unite! You have nothing to lose except your chains!” It’s become a cliché but it is also true. In the case of prison workers in the United States, China and other countries the chains are not metaphorical but quite literal. The workers of the world must not stand for this shameful exploitation of the most vulnerable. We must not allow the American labour unions or the United States government to use weasel words to excuse doing nothing to protect prison labourers from being exploited. Slavery, involuntary servitude and any other form of compulsion in the workplace is an affront to all humanity and must be opposed by any means at our disposal. It is not acceptable to be silent when workers are being forced to work in conditions that even the mainstream media is calling modern day slavery, in a country that claims to respect human rights and the rights of the individual.

Just as I was about to sum up this article I read that, according to the Free Alabama Movement, which is one of the groups organising the prison strike that prison guards have started to join the strike. (Free Alabama Movement website, September 26th, 2016.) They, too, have began protesting against the conditions in prison including poor pay, overcrowding and human rights abuses.

On the negative side organisers of protests in prisons in Florida, Virginia, Ohio, California, and South Carolina have been subject to various sanctions including being transferred to other duties, lockdowns or solitary confinement. On the whole, though, there has been no indication of the strikes being violent. (The Largest Prison Strike in U.S. History Enters Its Second Week, The Insider, September 16th, 2016.)
As of the time of writing the strike is still under way. About 40 to 50 prisons in 24 states are involved to varying degrees in the prison strike, according to Ben Turk, who works for the Incarcerated Workers Organizing Committee, a chapter of the International Workers of the World.

There is no indication that either state or federal authorities have made any changes nor intend to make any changes to these conditions. This is not a surprise to anyone. However, it remains to be seen what developments will arise, if any, from the prison strike in the United States.

This page can be viewed in
English Italiano Deutsch

North America / Mexico | Repression / prisoners | News Report | en

Sat 20 Apr, 07:15

browse text browse image

seattle_police.jpg imageWill the Department of Justice Get Their Way in Seattle? 09:10 Thu 28 Jun by John Jacobsen 0 comments

Seattle City attorneys officially threw down the gauntlet with the Department of Justice last week, filing court documents which challenged the “reliability and trustworthiness” of a recent DOJ report on the Seattle Police. The DOJ report, which “finds a pattern or practice of constitutional violations regarding the use of force… as well as serious concerns about biased policing,” has been offered as evidence in an ongoing court case brought by Martin Monetti Jr. against the City of Seattle.Monetti, a Latino man, had his head stomped into the pavement after being told by then-Detective Shandy Cobane that he would “beat the [expletive] Mexican piss out of you, homie.”
This is just the latest move by Mayor Mike McGinn and the Seattle Police Department in their escalating strategy of resistance to the Department of Justice, who have repeatedly called for reform of the city’s embattled police department.

259182_1552968282468_1783017524_960001_2165856_o768x1024.jpg imageOaxaca: David Venegas Reyes freed! 21:42 Wed 01 Feb by Proyecto Ambulante 0 comments

Yesterday afternoon, David Venegas Reyes, a member of the Oaxacan collective Oaxaca Voces Oaxaqueñas Construyendo Autonomía y Libertad (VOCAL) was finally freed. According to information supplied by the legal department of Section 22, the release took place without the payment of any bail and without any charges being made since Venegas Reyes was released following confirmation that he had not committed any crime for which he could have been arrested. [Castellano]

textHands off the Anti-War movement! Defend FRSO! Anarchist Solidarity against the Political Police 02:28 Tue 28 Sep by C. Alexander 0 comments

We stand firmly opposed to the raids carried out by the FBI, America’s political police, against a number of anti-war and labor activists across the country on Friday, September 24th, 2010. We give our solidarity to those threatened by these raids and to those subpoenaed to appear before a government Grand Jury next month. These attacks must be resisted.

textThe First Olympic Event 23:00 Tue 10 Nov by Paul 0 comments

In preparation for Vancouver 2010 Olympics sweeping new policies and increased security budgets in the city have all been directed at cleansing the streets of prostitutes and homeless people. The new 'civil city' policies have meant continual harassment for the most marginalized and insecure in Vancouver and highlight what the Olympics has come to represent underneath its thin vaneer of global togetherness.

The actual killers of journalist Brad Will imageCNDH report and APPO and Brad Will updates 09:55 Thu 23 Oct by AWK and CNDH 0 comments

From the analysis of the facts and evidence that make up case file 2006/4886/5/Q, it was verified that the public servants of the Attorney General's Office of the state of Oaxaca who participated in compiling preliminary investigation 1247/C.R./2006, as well as those in the Federal Attorney General's Office charged with compiling enquiry 11/FEADP/07, based in the Special Prosecutor for Attention to Crimes Committed Against Journalists, violated fundamental rights of legality, of judicial security, and of access to justice.

textSupport the Love Park 4: Anti-Racists Face Serious Legal Battle in Philly 13:17 Thu 26 Jul by Anti-Racist Action 0 comments

On Monday July 23rd, four anti-fascists from the Philadelphia, PA area were arrested at what was supposed to be a Ku Klux Klan rally in Center City Philadelphia. Jared Schultz, Tom Keenan, Jason Robbins - all of Philadelphia Anti-Racist Action - and Jim McGovern - of the Progressive Labor Party - were all arrested and charged with a series of trumped up misdemeanors in a situation that - for all practical purposes - was straight up entrapment.

Some things never change imageState Terrorism from Atlanta to Oaxaca (2005) 23:19 Mon 29 Jan by Capital Terminus Collective, Atlanta, GA, USA 0 comments

Oftentimes what separates the revolutionary from the merely progressive citizen, is the recognition that instances of oppression are linked (rather than existing as exceptional moral outrages). Accordingly, in our propaganda the Capital Terminus Collective has sought to make connections between the various issue campaigns we endorse. For example, in the following article (from an older issue of Anarchist Atlanta, but which describes ongoing campaigns in a context, and with an analysis that remains valid) local police brutality is connected to military support for authoritarian regimes abroad.

textDisparan desconocidos contra barricada en Oaxaca 07:05 Fri 24 Nov by milenio.com 0 comments

Testigos señalan que desconocidos se llevaron a tres personas.

textA Look At The First Annual Sacco And Vanzetti Memorial Parade 11:28 Wed 30 Aug by Jake 1 comments

On Sunday, August 27th, 2006, about 50 people braved the pouring rain to gather for the first annual Sacco and Vanzetti Memorial Parade.
For photos: http://boston.indymedia.org/feature/display/187113/index.php

text"They Will Never Get Us All!" 04:40 Sat 22 Oct by Andrew 0 comments

Harold H. Thompson is an anarchist prisoner serving life plus sentences in Tennessee, USA after a serious of farcical trials. Following an earlier collection released in 1996, this edition of They Will Never Get Us All! is an updated collection of writings and poetry produced by Harold over the past decade. In it he addresses the oppression of capitalism, the State, the prison industrial complex, and of course, anarchism and the struggle for a better tomorrow.

more >>

imagePolice State Tactics at Toronto G8 -20 Jul 06 by Larry Gambone 1 comments

Why the state over-reacted is now being debated. Many people figure they deliberately let the black bloc run free as a rationalization for the billion squandered on “security.” An equal number believe the violence was a warning of what to expect if people react against the coming government cut-backs, the so-called austerity program to destroy workers living standards. Others think that the government does not have such a fine tuned level of control and the police simply went berserk, venting their hatred against those who do not share their anti-democratic sentiments.

imageIdeas: Sound of the Police Feb 11 by Devin K 0 comments

Since the time we are young we are saturated with images of the friendly cop, there to help you and your community. We are told the police are here to protect us from the "bad guys" and keep us safe from the salivating hordes of criminals just waiting for an opportunity to harm us. But what really is the function of the police? Who are they really here to protect? Here Devin K tries to answer such questions.

imageQuebec police forced to own up to use of agent provocateurs at summit protest Aug 25 by Joe 2 comments

The day after online footage revealed the presence of police provocateurs at the Montebello SPP summit protest the Quebec police have been forced to admit that the rock wielding men initially confronted for being in the agreed 'family friendly' zone by a union leader were indeed police agents.

textThey First Came For.... Mar 25 by Wayne Price 0 comments

Based on Martin Niemoeller's well-known statement about Nazi persecution, which begins, "They first came for the Communists and I did not speak up--because I wasn't a Communist."

textThe Next Battle of the Social War: Nine Black Panthers and state repression Jan 24 by Dave Strano 6 comments

January 23, 2007 should be a day that lives in infamy within the movements for social justice in North America. On that date, the nearly four decades long war on the Black Panthers was shown to still exist. Nine individuals, most identified as being members of the Black Panther Party and the Black Liberation Army, were charged with murder or murder related crimes by officials in California. The incident in question involved the killing of a police officer inside the police station in which he worked in 1971. Over 35 years later, the struggle that the killing of the officer symbolizes is alive and strong.

more >>

imageWe demand to know the whereabouts of David Venegas Reyes Jan 31 VOCAL 1 comments

At approximately 3.50 pm on Sunday 29 January 2012, our comrade David Venegas Reyes was arbitrarily arrested on the direct orders of Jesús Martínez Álvarez, Secretary General of the Government of Oaxaca; this happened as he, along with other comrades, was accompanying the caravan back to the Autonomous Municipality of San Juan Copala, led for over a year by the displaced women. [Castellano] [Français]

imageInternational Day of Solidarity with Leonard Peltier Sep 30 LPDOC 0 comments

International Day of Solidarity with Leonard Peltier: Clemency Now!

The Leonard Peltier Defense Offense Committee calls on supporters worldwide to protest against the injustice suffered by Indigenous activist Leonard Peltier. Gather on February 4, 2012, at every federal court house and U.S. embassy or consulate worldwide to demand the freedom of a man wrongfully convicted and illegal imprisoned for 36 years!

imageThousands Of Invisible Pickets Dec 16 WSA 0 comments

The prisoners in Macon, Hays, Telfair, Baldwin, Valdosta, and Smith state prisons do not have picket signs we can read, no do they have speeches that can be read out loud to us. We cannot see their faces or hear their voices. They are mostly invisible to us. It is now up to us to break though this wall of invisibility purposely imposed upon us and prisoners, by those who control society and our lives. The right to strike is the right of every exploited person in an exploitive society, prisoner or not.

textWorkers Solidarity Alliance (WSA) Statement Against Political Police Raids Oct 07 WSA 5 comments

The WSA condemns this attack and the arbitrary power which it claims for the repressive agencies of the state. We should also note the hypocrisy of the state agencies who do not shrink from supporting or engaging in mass-scale terrorism abroad, while asserting arbitrary powers at home in the name of "anti-terrorism" and allowing domestic armed extremists to assist in policing the border in Arizona. [Castellano]

imageLondon Activists Target Of Police Intimidation Jun 23 Common cause - Ontario Anarchist Organisation 0 comments

June 22, 2010

For Immediate Release:

The recent arrests of two London activists for “promoting disturbance” represent yet another dramatic escalation in the Canadian state’s ongoing attempts to criminalize dissent.

more >>
© 2005-2024 Anarkismo.net. Unless otherwise stated by the author, all content is free for non-commercial reuse, reprint, and rebroadcast, on the net and elsewhere. Opinions are those of the contributors and are not necessarily endorsed by Anarkismo.net. [ Disclaimer | Privacy ]