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US is home of prison slaves? This topic should be every day on first page 365 24/7 till it gets resolved: Nationwide US prison strike demands end to ‘slave labor’ & ‘racist’ sentencing

August 22, 2018   ·   0 Comments

The inmates are  working almost for free in the mostly privately owned US prison system, which is very much appreciated among the US industries.
This is actually a scandal. Not because the inmates are working, and not because they get less pay.
However, since big corporate money is undoubtedly  funding the political system in US, then “overly long” prison terms “makes sense” for those, who profit from cheap labor, and this is not OK!
Therefore, increase of prison population is very much in the interest of the corporate world.
No wonder  that US has by far, almost ten fold, the highest number of inmates than the rest of the world.
Apparently this is not a big issue for the two political parties in US – real political competition needs more players in the field than just two – but this is the problem for so many more unsolved problems in US.
Mr.Reason
Main Article:

Spearheaded by a group of prisoner activists called Jailhouse Lawyers Speak, the strike is supposed to take form of civil disobedience from August 21 to September 9. Protesters have published a 10-point list of demands, centering on restoring the voting rights of prisoners and ex-convicts and treating those imprisoned with dignity.

Among the other demands are an “immediate end to prison slavery,” with everyone in prison to be “paid the prevailing wage in their state or territory for their labor,” and an “immediate end to the racial overcharging, over-sentencing, and parole denials of Black and brown humans.”

The activists are also demanding the abolition of several laws and federal programs that have imposed mandatory minimum sentences, require states to ensure violent offenders serve at least 85 percent of their sentence before becoming eligible for parole, or restrict prisoners’ ability to file lawsuits.

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Jailhouse Lawyers Speak #August21@JailLawSpeak

The American Civil Liberties Union has endorsed the strike, arguing that its key demand is the restoration of voting rights. Most US states bar prison inmates from voting, and in some cases deny the franchise to former prisoners as well. Only two US states – Vermont and Maine – allow all current and former prisoners to vote.

Watching The Hawks@WatchingHawks

Incarcerated people are planning a nationwide strike starting tomorrow, their demands include better living conditions, sentencing reform, educational and rehabilitation opportunities, and an end to prison slavery. https://truthout.org/articles/incarcerated-people-in-17-us-states-plan-prison-strike/ 

Incarcerated People in 17 US States Plan Prison Strike

The Nationwide Prison Strike is planned for August 21, the day Nat Turner led an uprising of slaves in 1831.

Though the 14th Amendment to the US Constitution, adopted after the Civil War, allowed for suspending the voting rights “for participation in rebellion, or other crime” – clearly targeting the citizens of Southern states that fought to secede – the phrasing has allowed states to temporarily or permanently disenfranchise felons in general.

The other major grievance of the prisoners comes from the 13th Amendment, which in 1865 abolished slavery and involuntary servitude, “except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted.” This, they argue, means that slavery is alive and well in the US prison system.

Another connection to slavery is symbolic: August 21 is the anniversary of the 1831 slave revolt in Virginia led by Nat Turner. On the same day in 1971, prison activist and founder of Black Guerrilla Family, George Jackson, was killed during an attempt to escape from the San Quentin prison in California. Activists have referred to both anniversaries as meaningful for their choice of a starting date.

September 9 was chosen as the strike’s closing day, to commemorate the 1971 rebellion at Attica Prison in upstate New York. Some 1,300 inmates at Attica demanded an end to slave labor and police brutality for four days, before a crackdown by law enforcement resulted in 39 people dead and 128 injured.

The US ranks first in the world both in the total number of people in prison and the incarceration rate (655 per 100,000). There are approximately 2.3 million people in a wide range of prisons and jails in the US, according to the most recent figures by the Prison Policy Initiative. If one includes another 3.7 million currently on probation and about 840,000 on parole, the US judicial system actually exercises control over nearly 7 million people.

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