Showing posts with label prison system. Show all posts
Showing posts with label prison system. Show all posts

Friday, December 14, 2012

Photoset

"Our society--the society we have made--creates criminogenic conditions in our sprawling urban ghettos, and then acts out rituals of punishment against them as some awful form of human sacrifice." -- Glenn C. Laury
"A black boy born in 2001 has a one in three chance of going to prison in his lifetime and a Latino boy a one in six chance of the same fate. The US has the highest incarceration rate in the world: 7.1 million adult residents--one in 33--are under some form of correctional supervision including prison, jail, probation, or parole." -- Marian Wright Edelman
"There are more African-Americans under correctional control today--in prison or jail, on probation or parole--than were enslaved in 1850, a decade before the Civil War began." -- Michelle Alexander
"When Angela Davis attacked the prison system, she talked about perhaps 250,000 or 300,000 people imprisoned throughout all of the US as a problem to be dealt with, a crisis, a situation that bordered on fascism. Fast forward 30-40 years to the present, today [there are] more than 300,000 prisoners in California alone, one state out of fifty. The imprisonment in California alone exceeds that of France, Belgium, and England--I could name 4-5 countries combined." -- Mumia Abu Jamal
"The prison-industrial complex is not only a mechanism to convert public tax money into profits for private corporations; it is an essential element of modern neo-liberal capitalism. It serves two purposes. One, to neutralize and contain huge segments of potentially rebellious sectors of the population, and two, to sustain a system of super-exploitation, where mainly black and Latino captives are imprisoned in white rural overseer communities." -- Assata Shakur

Saturday, November 3, 2012

"Prison is the only form of public housing the government has truly invested in."
--Marc Lumont Hill, Columbia University Professor

(via Tudo Bom(b))

Wednesday, December 7, 2011

POWERFUL image I stumbled across:


An injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere. Everyone has the right to own his/her own body.

Damn, sometimes I sound like a feminist. 

Tuesday, August 30, 2011

One thing about Irene really leaves a bad taste in my mouth

I know a lot of places are still under a bit of water, and a lot of people are still without electricity, but I think the Northeast tried to prepare for this as best we could. Buildings were sandbagged and boarded up, people raided grocery/convenience stores for all the emergency supplies imaginable, my local Home Depot sold out of backup generators even though they were going at $900 a pop, and mayors/governors everywhere told people to GET THE FUCK OUT. I mean, they evacuated the parts of New York City that were most likely to be seriously damaged--that has NEVER happened before.

But they missed a spot. No evacuation was planned for the prisoners on Riker's Island. Every other barrier island was evacuated, as well as some low-lying inland communities, but the 12,000+ prisoners--most of whom are low-level offenders, not hardened criminals--who are trapped in cells on an island composed primarily of landfill were not granted the right to a fair chance of surviving the storm (had it been as bad as predicted). Though committing an offense temporarily takes away one's right to liberty, it doesn't mean we can disregard these people's right to LIFE. Even the UN says that prisoners cannot be ignored in times of emergency like this. It disgusts me to see these people entirely neglected--our prison system is supposed to be a place to rehabilitate people, not to abandon them in cages while we protect ourselves. Prisoners are wards of the state, and the state has an obligation to protect them as it protects all its citizens. Their families should sue for like, the endangerment of their welfare or something. And this just goes to show how our prison system just doesn't give a damn about prisoners anymore. Fucking animal shelters looked for people to take the cats and dogs in to protect them from the storm, but these human beings weren't offered that same decency. You can't mandatory evacuate people selectively, that a) defeats the purpose and b) constitutes abuse--there's no other way to cut it. It makes me sick.