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mass incarceration

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Mass Incarceration: Slavery By Another Name

by 02/28/2014
written by

The Afrikan Student Union at UCLA currently exists to promote, protect and serve the social, educational, and political interests of people of Afrikan descent. On Tuesday, February 4th, ASU Administrative Staff introduced a resolution to UCLA’s Undergraduate Student Association Council (USAC) urging it, the UCLA Foundation, and the UC Regents to divest from corporations that have investments in the two major private prison companies, CCA and GEO Group.

As Black intellectuals and activists, it is important to recognize the context in which we are functioning. The UC has the largest endowment in the world. If we know, through public information on the UC Regents, that the UC is investing in corporations such as Wells Fargo, Vanguard Group, Blackrock Fund Advisors, Bank of America, Morgan Stanley, Invesco Finance LTD, and JP Morgan Chase, which contribute to the privatization of prisons and in turn, the enslavement of black, brown and other oppressed communities, it is our collective responsibility to challenge this reality.

Louisiana is the prison capital of the world, meaning it incarcerates more prisoners than any other state in America and any other country. The Louisiana State Penitentiary at Angola is one of the largest and most notorious maximum security prisons in the country, which works as an agricultural complex that utilizes cheap prisoner labor (wages range between four cents and 20 cents per hour) for traditional agriculture production and light industry. The penitentiary occupies 18,000 acres of land that was once a 19th century plantation–the Angola Plantation–named after the area in Africa that supplied most of the plantation’s slave labor. Thus, how can anyone say that the current imprisonment of our people is not eerily and disturbingly similar to the chattel slavery our ancestors endured?

More Black men are under correctional control today than were enslaved in 1850. Moreover, Black women are the fastest growing segment of the juvenile justice population and the criminal justice system. The question, we should be asking ourselves is: are Black people inherently criminal? For the aforementioned statistics to be justified that is what society would intend for us to believe.

However, as former Chair of the Black Panther Party, Elaine Brown asserts, it is important to be “ruthless in your analysis.” CCA and GEO have massive political lobbying power, which has set the stage for black and brown prisoners to become free laborers while incarcerated. In the 1990s, CCA and GEO Group successfully lobbied for mandatory minimums, three-strikes and drug laws, which have contributed to the incarceration of millions of black, brown, and other, oppressed communities. In fact, CCA and GEO worked with Congress to effectively lobby for the 1995 Prison Industry Act, which was promoted by ALEC, and turned prisoners into laborers. Moreover, one would realize through research that most black and brown prisoners are imprisoned due to non-violent drug offenses.

As Angela Davis, former UCLA Professor of Philosophy said, “Prisons do not disappear human beings. Homelessness, unemployment, drug addiction, mental illness, and illiteracy are only a few of the problems that disappear from public view when the human beings contending with them are relegated to cages.”

We are facing an endemic problem in this country, and that is the perpetual marginalization and criminalization of Black people. And, instead of addressing the root causes of these problems, the United States is allowing for generations of Black Americans to remain broken and disillusioned. Fortunately, the UCLA Undergraduate Student Association Council (USAC) voted unanimously in support of the resolution; however, work still needs to and will be done to achieve our goal, which is liberation of all Afrikan people.

02/28/2014 0 comments
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Marc Lamont Hill: “We Create an Entire Industry on the Prison”

by 02/21/2014
written by

The Afrikan Black Coalition (ABC) is a coalition designed to unify Black students across the UC system in order to discuss and resolve issues concerning academic policy, campus climate, and matriculation from the University. By bringing together the Afrikan/Black Student Unions from UC and CSU colleges, ABC presents the opportunity for unity in spite of geographical boundaries. This year’s conference was held at UC Santa Cruz last Friday evening to Monday afternoon.

The campus was abundant of conscious Black students who were there to implement or learn how to implement changes in society. The theme of the conference focused on the idea of “Reimagining Black Activism” and generating a new age of activism led by the youth.

Keynote speakers Marc Lamont Hill (political activist), Bobby Seale (Co-founder of the Black Panther Party), Ambassador Shabazz (Malcolm X’s eldest daughter), and Angela Davis (former Black Panther Party member) provided insight on their experience in the Movement and shared words of wisdom to the listening Black audience.

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Marc Lamont Hill speaks to students/ photo credit: JR

In his call to action, Marc Lamont Hill, a CNN analyst and political activist, touched vastly on the importance and understandings of the prison industrial complex and the private prison industry.

“We create an entire industry on the prison”, Hill said. For example, he continued, “A town with a population of 20,000, Six, seven, or eight thousand [locals] work in the prison, and you add the 8,000 prisoners who weren’t from that town [who were] sent to the middle of nowhere… those 10,000 people now make the town’s residency rate 30,000. They [prisoners] count as residents of the town even though they can’t vote. So now you got 30,000 people in the town, the town gets more money, [and] more political representation… the whole town exists because of the prison.”

He expressed the expansion of criminality as an economic incentive for the private prison industry. Through systematic inequalities and injustices, capitalism is reinforced through public incarceration and private funding. With statistics showing the majority of these prison populations as African-American males, there comes a time where we must question the system at hand.

In his address, he affirmed that we as a community cannot talk about educational justice without prison justice, and therefore we must challenge ourselves to step up and do the work. He left the audience with words of instruction and encouraged the Black community to “Ask different questions [and to] engage in the practice of deep listening to understand the perspectives of one another.”

02/21/2014 0 comments
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