Alabama prisons: ON STRIKE!January 1, 2021 As of Jan. 1, 2021, incarcerated workers in Alabama’s odious prison system are on strike! Led by the Free Alabama Movement, incarcerated workers throughout the state of Alabama have put down their work tools and refused to go to work from now until Jan. 31.
The inhumane
conditions of Alabama Department of Corrections,
their negligence around COVID-19, and their
implementation of video visitation equipment in
prisons that ADOC claims is “due to COVID,” but
is really a front for eliminating in-person
visitation, has contributed further to the
psychological warfare against everyone
incarcerated in Alabama prisons and has fueled
this strike.
Alabama prisons
a death trap for Black men The ADOC has been ruled the deadliest prison system in the country. An imprisoned person in Alabama prisons is ten times more likely to be a victim of homicide than in any other state. In 2019 the homicide rate in Alabama prisons was 73 people per 100,000, compared to the overall rate in Alabama of 7.8 people per 100,000.
The Free Alabama
Movement, founded and operated by Black men
behind the walls, has sought to bring this
knowledge to the public, which is one of the
main reasons behind the prison strike. Their
lives are on the line; this is a matter of life
and death for them.
Twice in the
last 18 months, the conditions inside ADOC
prisons have been revealed to be so shocking
that the Department of Justice ruled that the
entire Alabama prison system is
“unconstitutional under the Eighth Amendment.”
Video footage from within the prisons shows
deplorable living conditions, overcrowded cells,
violence between inmates and excessive force
from guards, and many other factors in violation
of the Eighth Amendment. On Dec. 9, 2020, the
DOJ filed a lawsuit against ADOC over these
inhumane conditions, citing understaffing and
ongoing violence as two major factors in the
lawsuit. (https://abcn.ws/2KMzhZ7)
“The 24-page lawsuit said that conditions in Alabama prisons have gotten worse since the initial findings — with homicides increasing and prisons becoming even more overcrowded than in 2016 when the investigation was initiated. ‘The State of Alabama is deliberately indifferent to the serious and systematic constitutional problems present in Alabama’s prisons for men,’ the lawsuit states.” (Dec. 10, 2020)
In a disgusting,
careless response, Alabama governor Kay Ivey has
vowed to have three Alabama mega-prisons
constructed over the next several years, costing
Alabama taxpayers more than two and a half
billion dollars! Two of the prisons, slated to
be built in Brierfield and Tallassee, Ala., have
been met with fervent local resistance by
residents who do not want a prison in their
communities or neighborhoods. (https://bit.ly/34Ri3AW)
Another core of this revolutionary strike is to protest the implementation of video visitation equipment in prisons across Alabama. This equipment, designed by Securus Technologies, has been touted as “a safer alternative to in-person visits during COVID-19,” but there are no guarantees that this equipment would be removed and in-person visits resumed once COVID-19 rates begin to drop.
Many prison
abolition advocates in the Free Alabama Movement
say that this is a long-conceived plan from ADOC
to eliminate in-person visitation altogether, as
a form of psychological warfare on those
incarcerated workers behind the wall. When
incarcerated workers have to deal with cell
overcrowding, violence, and heinous living
conditions, in-person visitation is for many a
brief reprieve from the sickening situations
they are in. But the state of Alabama, hoping to
break them mentally and emotionally, is seeking
to do away with even this small reprieve. Securus Technologies is one of five companies that the Free Alabama Movement is asking all those in solidarity to actively boycott during the month-long strike. The others are JPay, Access Corrections, Union Supply Company, and Alabama Correctional Industries, all of whom directly benefit from the slave labor of incarcerated workers in Alabama prisons.
Support the
strike! Abolish the prisons!
The Alabama
prison strike/30 Day Economic Blackout will kick
off resistance to the decaying neoliberal,
capitalist-imperialist system in the U.S. It is
critical that progressives unequivocally support
the Alabama prison strike, the Free Alabama
Movement, and the continued struggle to tear
down the walls and abolish prisons once and for
all!
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