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Trouble #20: Inside-Out

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    Prisons are a central pillar of state power.
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    In addition to being veritable warehouses
    of human misery, they serve as a threat that
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    reverberates well beyond their walls, programming
    us from an early age into accepting a life
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    of economic, social and political subordination.
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    They’re an eternal warning to do what you’re
    told.
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    Or else.
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    This is an abnormal environment for a human
    being, certainly.
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    Y’know... these are essentially cages.
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    And to think that we stay in them 23 hours
    a day, come out for an hour a day...
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    it's taxing.
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    Prisons have existed in some form or another
    since the development of early states.
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    Yet for most of this time, they were primarily
    used to detain criminals as they awaited their
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    real punishment – usually some form of public
    torture, execution or indentured servitude.
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    This started to change in the mid-18th century,
    as the modern prison system began to take
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    shape amidst the rise of industrial capitalism.
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    Back then, major cities in Europe and North
    America were teeming sites of concentrated
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    squalor, desperation and inequality – which
    in turn, made them hot-beds of criminality.
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    Fuelled by ruling-class hysteria about the
    so-called “dangerous classes”, strict
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    laws were passed that turned relatively minor
    transgressions, such as stealing a pocket-watch,
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    into crimes punishable by public hanging.
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    Within this context, prison reform was proposed
    by progressive Christian groups, such as the
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    Quakers, as a more humane alternative to mass
    executions.
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    These early prison advocates argued that extended
    periods of isolation would provide ample opportunity
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    for sinners to reflect on their misdeeds and
    demonstrate their penitence to God.
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    Accordingly, they dubbed these new facilities
    penitentiaries.
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    It wasn’t long before those in power saw
    prison’s potential as a means for maintaining
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    social hierarchies under the rubric of public
    safety.
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    In the United States, prison construction
    experienced an early boom in the years following
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    the Civil War, as the state scrambled to reconstruct
    America’s white supremacist scaffolding,
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    which had been damaged by the formal abolition
    of slavery.
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    This racist system of mass incarceration was
    expanded again in the decades following the
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    defeat of the Black Power movement, and other
    liberation movements of the 1970s,
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    helping to give rise to its sprawling modern incarnation,
    the Prison-Industrial-Complex.
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    Over the next thirty minutes, we’ll talk
    to a number of individuals as they share their
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    own experience of dealing with this beast,
    and the intense challenges involved.
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    Along the way, we’ll discuss some of the
    organizing being carried out by prisoners
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    and abolitionists seeking to break down barriers
    of state-imposed isolation, rattle the cage...
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    and make
    a whole lotta trouble.
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    The panopticon was a prison design, designed
    by Jeremy Bentham in the late 1700s.
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    In the center of the building, there’s a
    watch tower.
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    And the prisoners are arranged in cells so
    the guard in the center can be watching any
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    of the cells at any given moment.
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    In disciplinary societies, the subject internalizes
    the feeling of being watched at all moments,
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    and engages in a practice of self-disciplining.
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    Because even the potential of being watched
    makes the subject begin to adapt their behaviours
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    to what they think are the expectations of
    the person who could be watching.
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    Prison is the state weaponizing the flow of
    time.
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    It’s a factory for the production of sadness
    and submission.
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    It’s a deeply hierarchical internal culture
    built on boredom and scrutiny.
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    It’s the deeply felt sense that no matter
    how bullshit our lives are, there’s still
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    something the state can take away from us.
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    Prison is like the permanent threat that holds
    up all relationships of exchange and domination.
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    So prison deeply affects all of us in every
    kind of routine interaction under capitalism.
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    Even if we never set foot inside of one.
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    I would talk about the Prison-Industrial-Complex
    as being something that has developed apart
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    from the idea of criminal justice.
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    It’s become a machine of its own.
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    For corporate profit.
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    For other motives that the complex serves,
    like demographic motives.
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    Politically, those who have the greatest motive
    for changing the way things are, are the people
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    people who get caught up in the system.
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    So it serves that kind of political motive.
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    It serves a demographic motive.
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    And it serves as a kind of tool for control.
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    The political economy of prisons is also tied
    to the history of de-industrialization.
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    In the United States, there have been waves
    of migration of predominantly African Americans
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    to urban centres like Chicago, Oakland, Philadelphia,
    Detroit.
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    And as jobs began moving to the suburbs, and
    moving abroad under globalization, this created
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    concentrated zones of urban poverty.
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    And so what happened is, basically prisons
    absorbed people who were shunted from the
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    labour market.
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    So, y’know... in places like Detroit or
    Chicago, people who are considered redundant
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    to the needs of capital are then round up
    in prisons.
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    It’s really about removing particular people
    from society.
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    Your race, your poverty, your history of colonization,
    mental illness, disability – these are all
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    things that intersect with the prison system.
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    And it becomes the place where we put those
    people that we don’t think of as hearty,
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    equal, useful citizens.
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    And so we dump them in a prison.
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    Immigration enforcement and detention involves
    a constellation of different agencies, including
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    the Canadian Border Services Agency, which
    has been compared to ICE.
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    People have been getting deported from Canada
    for a very long time.
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    For many decades that looked like people being
    held in a regular jail cell and then getting
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    shipped out of Canada.
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    But right now it looks like people being incarcerated
    either in provincial jails, or in what are
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    called Immigration Detention Centres, or Immigration
    Prevention Centres – but are really just
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    jails that are specifically for migrants.
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    In Canada we have indefinite incarceration
    for immigration, meaning that you can be held
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    forever.
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    So we have people being held over eight years.
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    We have multiple deaths in immigration custody
    — many of which we don’t even know the
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    names or the numbers, because it’s not tracked.
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    So when people are looking across the border
    saying “oh Trump is incarcerating children,
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    and putting kids in cages”... we actually
    do the same thing.
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    We have children in immigration detention
    as well.
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    A lot of people obviously are aware that in
    Canada we have over-incarceration of Indigenous people
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    Close to 40% now, of federally incarcerated
    women are Indigenous women in Canada.
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    In Saskatchewan, 99% of incarcerated girls
    are Indigenous girls.
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    Over 50% of incarcerated youth in Canada are
    Indigenous.
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    And while it’s true that America by far
    outstrips everybody in the world in incarcerating
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    people and in Black incarceration, Canada
    also has a Black incarceration problem and
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    a mass incarceration problem.
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    It’s pretty clear that prison is invested,
    and the justice system is invested in maintaining
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    a kind of permanent class of people who do
    crimes, who can then get managed by the police
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    and by the prisons.
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    And one of the ways that they do that is by
    reproducing these kind of cycles of trauma
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    on people.
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    Almost everybody I meet inside of prison has
    just, like... horrible stories of fucked up
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    things that have happened to them, going back
    to the time they were a kid.
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    And then those kinds of trauma lead people
    into situations where those traumas get re-compounded.
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    And the prison pretty consciously plays on
    those things, right?
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    Like almost everybody has these kinds of histories
    of sexual violence.
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    And then prison goes ahead and then gives
    any guard the power to strip search you at
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    any time.
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    People get used to these things.
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    But the process of getting used to them, getting
    to the point where it actually doesn’t matter
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    how many times you get strip searched in a
    week involves a form of loss, and internalization
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    of hurt.
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    And like a letting go of control over yourself
    that ultimately makes people more vulnerable.
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    Life inside prison is a highly structured,
    daily routine.
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    This is true whether you find yourself in
    a low-security federal penitentiary, or in
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    the administrative segregation wing of a super
    max.
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    Prisons are ongoing social experiments in
    totalitarianism.
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    Get your hands behind your back!
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    We’ve sent inmates to the hospital.
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    Broken/fractured skulls, broken arms, broken
    ribs.
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    Torn ears.
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    Broken eye socket.
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    It happens.
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    They use intense regimentation, internal hierarchies,
    sensory deprivation and boredom as tools of
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    psychological conditioning.
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    This practice is aimed at wearing people down,
    limiting the need for direct corrective violence,
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    and ultimately convincing inmates to accept
    the authority of the institution.
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    My mental health diminished.
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    Slowly but surely.
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    It’ll do it to anybody.
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    I lasted a while... now I just say ‘fuck
    it.’
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    But there is nothing natural about being locked
    up in cages and held against your will.
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    And all the routine in the world can’t change
    that.
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    The days are all more or less the same.
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    Overhead florescent lights flick on as a substitute
    for dawn.
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    You leave your cell in the morning, and go
    into kinda like the big room.
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    You wait around for the meal cart to come
    on.
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    There’s kind of a brief flurry of people
    trading, like, juice crystals for coffee whitener
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    or something like that.
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    You’ve got about fifteen minutes to eat,
    typically, before the guards want to bring
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    the trays back in, because their breaks are
    timed around meal time.
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    Then you’re just out in the day room for
    the day.
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    There’s very little to do there... sometimes
    the TV will be turned on.
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    After three hours a lunch tray comes on.
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    Again it comes on in a cart, in little plastic
    trays.
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    Everybody does their trades.
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    And then after lunch you get locked down so
    that the guards can take their break.
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    If you’re lucky, you’re in a situation
    where there’s two to a cell.
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    For many provincial jails, you’re three.
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    So there’s one person whose bed is on the
    floor.
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    So there’s actually no space to walk around
    or move, apart from maybe just, like, a narrow
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    space to get to the toilet.
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    And then after maybe two or three hours you
    get let back out.
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    You’re back in the big room... still nothing
    happens.
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    Maybe you catch up with your buddies who you
    haven’t talked to since yesterday at this
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    time, and tell stories about all the nothing
    that happened to you.
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    You don’t really have a sense of what time
    it is, so you just kinda go by what TV shows
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    are on, you know?
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    So you get, like...
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    Maury-o’clock.
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    And then you have Dr. Phil-o’clock.
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    And then Ellen-o’clock means its dinner
    time, because you eat at four, in order to
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    line up with how long the guards’ shifts
    are.
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    After dinner you get locked back up again
    for another couple hours.
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    You and your cellies.
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    Maybe you’ve brought some books in with
    you this time... all the beat to shit paperbacks
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    that have been kicking around the jail forever,
    and just like, covered with blood and snot
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    and don’t really get replaced.
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    Then you get out for a couple of hours in
    the evening.
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    The evening shows vary a lot more than the
    daytime shows, y’know, so like maybe its
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    like the show where celebrities lip sync.
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    And then you get locked back up for the night,
    starting at probably about 8 o’clock.
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    Lights are on for another two hours.
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    Again, you just kind of kill time.
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    After lights out, you’ve gotta try to be
    quiet.
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    No more flushing the toilet until morning,
    because they’re these like ultra-powerful
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    industrial vacuum toilets that make huge amounts
    of noise.
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    And then you wake up when the florescent light
    turns on, and the whole thing starts over
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    again.
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    When you go in, these people are going to
    be very caring to you and they’re going
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    to ask to see your paperwork just to make
    sure you have it with you.
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    And you’re going to go through a metal detector.
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    It’s not scary... you’re going to be fine.
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    I was sixteen when my brother was incarcerated.
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    My brother was seventeen and he was given
    a juvenile life without parole sentence — a
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    sentence that only exists in the United States.
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    Living with an incarcerated sibling, you become
    aware of how expensive it is to even just
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    exist in prison.
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    I’m continually having to upload money in
    my brother’s account so he can buy commissary
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    items.
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    All communication between prisoners and their
    loved ones and family members is mediated
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    by a company that price gouges for prisoners
    to use...
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    phones, for example.
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    There’s this move towards phasing out in-person
    visitations and replacing them with digital
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    visitations.
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    So there are, in the United States, two prison
    telecom companies that dominate the industry:
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    Global Tel Link and Securus Technologies.
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    What these companies will sometimes do is
    require, in their contracts, that the prison
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    they’re servicing phase out in-person visits
    and replace them with these digital visits.
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    And they’re basically exploiting prisoners’
    need to stay socially connected to their families
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    and loved ones.
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    Burnside, or Central Nova Scotia Correctional
    Facility, is the jail for the Halifax region.
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    There’s like, about 400 men maybe, and about
    40 women... it depends on the day.
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    You can never really figure out capacity for
    these jails.
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    Because what they do is when they hit capacity,
    they just say that there can be more people.
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    Burnside is now at any one time between two-thirds
    and 80% remand, meaning people who haven’t
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    been convicted of any crimes at all.
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    They’re awaiting trial, or they’re on
    breach, or they haven’t got bail.
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    They’ve been struggling with lock-down.
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    So essentially since August, they have not
    really been out properly.
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    What we’re seeing, not only in Burnside,
    but really across the country is that these
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    things are becoming the new normal.
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    So lock-downs, they used to be quite rare.
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    Only when there was a search, only when there
    was an extremely violent incident.
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    And now it’s essentially become the new
    normal.
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    And so when I say on lock-down, I want to
    be clear here that what we’re talking about
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    is conditions of solitary confinement being
    extended to be the normal for the entire jail.
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    The old so-called ‘gangs’ that used to
    run everything—the Bloods, the Crips, Gangster
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    Disciples, Aryan Brotherhood—those are kind
    of like dinosaurs these days.
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    You have some younger groups that are organized
    a bit differently.
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    It’s less based on race than the old gangs
    used to be.
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    The lines are a little bit more blurred.
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    And if you come into prison and you’re not
    a gang member, they’re going to find some
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    affiliation to tag you anyway, because it
    increases the amount of money that they get.
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    So it’s... yeah, it’s definitely a cash
    cow.
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    I’ve done time in both men’s and women’s
    provincial prisons at this point.
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    It’s kind of a new phenomenon...
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    I wasn’t really expecting it.
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    The gender segregation aspect of prison is
    one of its most kind of poignant features,
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    in that it’s one of the sites where society
    most brutally segregates people and tells
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    them what their gender is, what that means.
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    These forms of gender segregation and differentiated
    control shape people’s behaviour pretty
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    profoundly.
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    Since people are spending, kind of months
    and years in these, like, extremely restrictive
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    conditions where people are very closely scrutinizing
    each other, and enforcing behaviours on each
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    each other.
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    This then spreads back out into the community,
    and it sort of becomes one of those ways that
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    prison is diffuse.
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    It’s not just the walls that, like, physically
    contain people.
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    It’s a whole set of institutions and forms
    of social control that, like, profoundly shape
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    behaviour.
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    It means the culture among prisoners—which
    is toxic and disgusting, and I don’t think
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    we should valorize it—then gets exported
    into these spaces as well.
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    And so those dynamics around violence and
    scrutiny get reproduced and favour people
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    returning to prison.
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    So over time, you do get these forms of, like
    a reproduction of a class of criminals.
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    Of, like, people whose role is to be permanently
    managed by the system.
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    The Attica Prison Uprising began on September
    9, 1971, two weeks after imprisoned Black
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    revolutionary George Jackson was assassinated
    while attempting to escape San Quentin.
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    During the four-day uprising, nearly 1300
    prisoners took over control of the prison
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    and held 43 guards hostage.
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    They issued a series of demands aimed at improving
    the inmate’s living conditions.
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    But rather than negotiate with the insurgent
    prisoners, New York Governor Nelson Rockefeller
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    sent in an army of 550 state troopers and
    74 Correctional Officers to storm the facility
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    and retake it by force.
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    43 people were killed during the resulting
    bloodbath, including 10 guards and 33 prisoners.
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    In the ensuing outcry, a number of reforms
    were passed to improve conditions in the
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    New York state prison system.
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    45 years later, on September 9, 2016, prisoners
    in twelve US states launched what has been
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    referred to as ‘the largest prison strike
    in history.’
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    Chief among their demands was the end of prison
    slavery – a reference to inmate’s hyper-exploitative
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    labour conditions, and a loophole in the 13th
    amendment to the US constitution, which formally
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    outlawed slavery ‘except as a punishment
    for crime’.
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    The US prisoner workforce consists of 800,000
    inmates across the country.
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    The average minimum wage they’re paid for
    non-industry prison jobs is now 86 cents per
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    hour.
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    In Louisiana, prisoners earn four cents per
    hour.
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    And in Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia,
    and Texas, prisoners are not paid at all.
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    A second coordinated prison strike, held over
    three weeks in 2018, saw protests, hunger
  • 18:30 - 18:36
    strikes and work stoppages by prisoners across
    seventeen US states, as well as inmates in
  • 18:36 - 18:39
    Burnside Prison, located in the Canadian province
    of Nova Scotia.
  • 18:39 - 18:44
    Both the 2016 and 2018 strikes were
    coordinated with the assistance of outside
  • 18:44 - 18:45
    supporters.
  • 18:45 - 18:49
    And while they have not yet achieved their
    demands, they have helped to galvanize a broader
  • 18:49 - 18:53
    discussion about the conditions of mass incarceration
    in the United States.
  • 18:57 - 19:04
    Inmates are using cellphones to get behind
    a common cause, pushing back against the system.
  • 19:05 - 19:12
    At Hayes, where inmates outnumber officers
    five to one, that's a serious threat.
  • 19:12 - 19:16
    If seventeen hundred inmates said 'I don't
    wanna be here no more' and just started walking
  • 19:16 - 19:20
    towards the fence, you think forty, fifty
    police is gonna be able to do something...
  • 19:20 - 19:21
    What the fuck are they gonna do about it?
  • 19:22 - 19:26
    The Burnside prison strike arose in tandem
    with the prison strike in the United States
  • 19:26 - 19:31
    so August 21st to September 9th, those dates
    were chosen because of very significant prison
  • 19:31 - 19:33
    uprisings that had taken place.
  • 19:33 - 19:38
    In the United States the prison strike really
    was a strike, it was based on withdrawing
  • 19:38 - 19:38
    prison labour.
  • 19:38 - 19:42
    We wanna get paid for working in these chain
    gangs for free!
  • 19:42 - 19:45
    Just know, we're tired of this shit, we're
    laying down man!
  • 19:45 - 19:48
    Y'all gonna have to earn your own check we're
    through with this shit!
  • 19:49 - 19:53
    Obviously in a provincial context, in a provincial
    jail there isn't as much labour but Burnside
  • 19:53 - 19:55
    wanted to join to address their conditions.
  • 19:55 - 19:59
    We were connected with the Incarcerated Worker's
    Organizing Committee and working with the
  • 19:59 - 20:02
    people that were working with the strikers
    in the states so there was that communication
  • 20:02 - 20:03
    back and forth.
  • 20:03 - 20:06
    We don't know kind of what the ripple effects
    of people being able to stand up for those
  • 20:06 - 20:11
    rights and take that lead in organizing is,
    but as time unfurls I think we're going to
  • 20:11 - 20:12
    see more and more on that.
  • 20:13 - 20:20
    I think there's a lot of hope in people on
    the outside organizing directly with prisoners
  • 20:20 - 20:28
    because what happens is when someone on the
    inside is caught engaging in organizing activity,
  • 20:28 - 20:33
    they'll often be subjected to really severe
    forms of repression.
  • 20:33 - 20:39
    When they accused us of being the leaders
    of the army of the twelve monkey rebellion
  • 20:39 - 20:43
    they engaged in full scale torture,.
  • 20:43 - 20:47
    You know, we were in freezing cold all winter
    long.
  • 20:47 - 20:51
    They would come by every fifteen minutes and
    rattle the doors in order to keep us awake
  • 20:51 - 20:53
    so that we wouldn't get any sleep.
  • 20:53 - 20:58
    When we left there after a year, we had both
    lost about thirty-five percent of our body
  • 20:58 - 20:59
    weight.
  • 21:00 - 21:05
    One of the ways that people do try to carve
    out space to have some kind of autonomy within
  • 21:05 - 21:11
    prison is to continue to find the ways in
    which they can't be quite as neatly surveilled.
  • 21:11 - 21:15
    So that just means that certain things only
    happen in the showers because, although any
  • 21:15 - 21:20
    guard can force you to rip your clothes off
    at any time, they don't film you in the showers
  • 21:20 - 21:23
    and they mostly don't film you in the cells
    unless you're on some sort of special regiment
  • 21:23 - 21:25
    like suicide watch or something like that.
  • 21:25 - 21:29
    So during the periods of time in the day when
    the cell doors aren't locked, that becomes
  • 21:29 - 21:33
    a place to have private conversations or to
    exchange things or to settle scores or whatever.
  • 21:33 - 21:39
    So understanding those spaces as a way that
    people take back some power over their ability
  • 21:39 - 21:41
    to do things on their own terms.
  • 21:41 - 21:46
    This building serves as a constant reminder
    of the eighteen hour siege in which inmates
  • 21:46 - 21:51
    overpowered corrections officers, taking three
    of them hostage, along with a councillor and
  • 21:51 - 21:52
    potentially other prisoners.
  • 21:52 - 21:56
    It was this incident which led to the death
    of lieutenant Steven Floyd.
  • 21:57 - 22:02
    So there's already a migrant prison in Laval,
    and it's falling apart and the building is
  • 22:02 - 22:07
    apparently full of asbestos, and the government
    should definitely close it but we shouldn't
  • 22:07 - 22:09
    let them open another one in its place.
  • 22:09 - 22:14
    There's two architectural firms that have
    been awarded the design contract, one is called
  • 22:14 - 22:15
    Lemay, which is in Montreal.
  • 22:15 - 22:19
    And one is called Group A, which is in Quebec
    City.
  • 22:19 - 22:23
    About a year ago there was a communique claiming
    an action that involved releasing crickets
  • 22:23 - 22:25
    into LeMay's headquarters.
  • 22:25 - 22:30
    In the fall of 2018 there were workshops that
    got started, info sessions and discussions
  • 22:30 - 22:34
    in and around Montreal about the prison and
    why people should stop it.
  • 22:34 - 22:35
    There was a poster campaign.
  • 22:35 - 22:39
    There's been a few zines released about the
    project.
  • 22:39 - 22:44
    Loiselle, one of the companies involved in
    the soil remediation, had their offices spray
  • 22:44 - 22:48
    painted and someone painted a slogan against
    the prison on their wall.
  • 22:48 - 22:52
    In February there was a demonstration in St-Henri
    where people went to Lemay's headquarters.
  • 22:52 - 22:57
    Also in February people went out to Laval
    to block a site visit for the prospective
  • 22:57 - 23:00
    general contractors, which was pretty successful.
  • 23:00 - 23:04
    None of the bidders who showed up that day
    were able to reach the spot where they were
  • 23:04 - 23:08
    supposed to do the site visit and a lot of
    them turned around and went home.
  • 23:08 - 23:13
    All through March there was a call-in campaign
    against the potential contractors where people
  • 23:13 - 23:17
    were asked to call the companies and tell
    them not to bid on building the prison.
  • 23:17 - 23:21
    One rumour said that someone got a company
    on the phone who was like "why is our phone
  • 23:21 - 23:22
    number on the Internet?
  • 23:22 - 23:24
    Why do people keep calling us?
  • 23:24 - 23:25
    Stop calling us.
  • 23:25 - 23:27
    We're not going to bid on this prison".
  • 23:27 - 23:32
    There was a communique that came out that
    said people smashed the windows at the office
  • 23:32 - 23:37
    for a Lemay condo project and that they had
    sprayed paint all over two condo tower projects
  • 23:37 - 23:40
    that were also being overseen by Lemay.
  • 23:40 - 23:46
    If you have access to a community radio station,
    I highly advice setting up a kind of prison
  • 23:46 - 23:50
    radio show something that's just explicitly
    directed, where they can choose the music,
  • 23:50 - 23:51
    make sure they know it's happening.
  • 23:51 - 23:52
    Jail lines.
  • 23:52 - 23:56
    They advertise within the jail that they have
    a line and that it's open in the afternoons
  • 23:56 - 23:59
    and people can call them and that way you
    start building a relationship.
  • 24:00 - 24:04
    Just being able to talk with people, to connect,
    to have empathy and to understand each other.
  • 24:04 - 24:07
    To provide practical support around how to
    deal with legal shit, hooking each other up
  • 24:07 - 24:10
    with lawyers, helping relay calls through
    to people.
  • 24:10 - 24:16
    All of this becomes useful ways of subverting
    some of the alienation of prison.
  • 24:28 - 24:32
    In the months immediately following Donald
    Trump’s presidential election, the stocks
  • 24:32 - 24:37
    of the world’s two biggest private prison
    companies, CoreCivic and Geo Group both doubled
  • 24:37 - 24:38
    in price.
  • 24:39 - 24:44
    Investors had wagered that Trump’s strident
    anti-migrant, tough-on-crime campaign rhetoric
  • 24:44 - 24:48
    would translate into more profitable government
    contracts and the construction of new private
  • 24:48 - 24:50
    detention facilities.
  • 24:50 - 24:54
    When Mexico sends its people, they’re not
    sending their best.
  • 24:54 - 24:55
    They’re bringing drugs.
  • 24:56 - 24:57
    They’re bringing crime.
  • 24:57 - 24:58
    They’re rapists.
  • 24:58 - 25:02
    And once in office, Trump didn’t disappoint.
  • 25:02 - 25:08
    What we are going to do is get the people
    that are criminal and have criminal records..
  • 25:08 - 25:11
    we’re getting them out of our country or
    we’re going to incarcerate.
  • 25:11 - 25:16
    Millions of Americans have recoiled in horror
    from the barbarism of Trump’s policies.
  • 25:16 - 25:20
    This was particularly true in the wake of
    the widely-broadcast images of children being
  • 25:20 - 25:24
    ripped from their parents’ arms and thrown
    into specially-constructed detention facilities
  • 25:24 - 25:27
    grotesquely referred to as ‘baby jails’.
  • 25:28 - 25:32
    But while the images and details surrounding
    the so-called ‘zero tolerance policy’
  • 25:32 - 25:37
    were particularly rage-inducing, the phenomenon
    of forced family separation is certainly nothing
  • 25:37 - 25:38
    new.
  • 25:38 - 25:44
    It forms an integral, if often invisible component
    of the practice of mass incarceration.
  • 25:44 - 25:47
    Nonetheless, resistance to these images was
    swift.
  • 25:47 - 25:52
    ICE offices and detention facilities were
    targeted by occupations across the United
  • 25:52 - 25:56
    States, forcing several facilities to temporarily
    shut down.
  • 25:56 - 26:01
    And while the occupations were eventually
    cleared, and the outrage died down, it gave
  • 26:01 - 26:05
    us a small taste of what a more sustained
    and widespread movement against prisons might
  • 26:05 - 26:06
    look like.
  • 26:16 - 26:19
    Building a practice that opposes prison is
    one of the most important things that we can
  • 26:19 - 26:20
    do as anarchists.
  • 26:20 - 26:24
    I think in order to do that, we have to start
    by changing the way that we look at society,
  • 26:24 - 26:26
    in order to learn to see prison.
  • 26:26 - 26:30
    Because I think oftentimes prison, it produces
    silence, it produces invisibility by literally
  • 26:30 - 26:33
    locking people’s voices and bodies where
    you can’t see them.
  • 26:33 - 26:36
    So beginning by looking and just being like,
    “where are prisons in this area?”
  • 26:36 - 26:40
    Physically go to them, watch them, walk around
    them, do protests at them, set off fireworks.
  • 26:40 - 26:44
    And then after that, just look at the ways
    that prison affects your life, even if you’ve
  • 26:44 - 26:47
    never been there, and just ask yourself “in
    what ways am I afraid?
  • 26:47 - 26:48
    When am I afraid?
  • 26:48 - 26:52
    What kinds of interactions are relying on
    the authority and the violence of prisons
  • 26:52 - 26:53
    in order to carry them out?”
  • 26:53 - 26:56
    Talk about this with your friends, figure
    out if you can cultivate practices that allow
  • 26:56 - 26:59
    you to break some of that fear or recognize
    that you have more choices that you weren’t
  • 26:59 - 27:00
    aware of.
  • 27:00 - 27:02
    For instance, like, why do you pay rent?
  • 27:02 - 27:03
    Why do you listen to your boss?
  • 27:03 - 27:05
    Why do you pay for food when you need food?
  • 27:05 - 27:06
    Break this down.
  • 27:06 - 27:11
    Because standing behind all of those authority
    figures are walls and barbed wire and locked
  • 27:11 - 27:11
    doors.
  • 27:11 - 27:14
    I think learning to see can actually give
    us more power to resist it.
  • 27:15 - 27:19
    Almost worse than prison itself is the fear
    of prison, and that’s one of the main ways
  • 27:19 - 27:22
    that prison projects itself into society and
    controls our behaviour even if you’ve never
  • 27:22 - 27:24
    heard the kind of a clank of a door closing.
  • 27:24 - 27:27
    So I’d say that, as anarchists, as people
    who, like, love freedom and are prepared to
  • 27:27 - 27:31
    act on it, that we also need to be somewhat
    prepared to do some time.
  • 27:31 - 27:37
    Keep in mind, that what we imagine things
    to be, are probably worse than they really
  • 27:37 - 27:38
    are.
  • 27:38 - 27:40
    You’re gonna feel anxiety and you’re gonna
    feel scared.
  • 27:41 - 27:46
    It always helps to have people from the outside
    because, I've spent about 27 years locked
  • 27:46 - 27:50
    up now, and I've spent most of that with my
    head on the other side of the fence.
  • 27:51 - 27:54
    It’s good not to get pulled into a place
    like this.
  • 27:55 - 27:59
    Once your head is on the inside of this and
    you’re thinking about the internal politics
  • 27:59 - 28:03
    of what’s going on in here, that can really
    wear you down.
  • 28:03 - 28:08
    So if you can keep your head, to the extent
    possible, on the other side of the fence that’s
  • 28:08 - 28:08
    always good.
  • 28:09 - 28:13
    And also, something that I’ve lived by in
    terms of a principle...
  • 28:13 - 28:16
    I like to continue being who I am in the here
    and now.
  • 28:17 - 28:19
    Because the here and now is really all that
    we have.
  • 28:19 - 28:25
    You can find ways... if you have some imagination,
    you can find ways to make the time you’re
  • 28:25 - 28:27
    doing now count.
  • 28:27 - 28:29
    You can come up with projects that matter.
  • 28:29 - 28:33
    And you can continue changing the world right
    from wherever you are.
  • 28:35 - 28:37
    What would you do
    if you was in my shoes?
  • 28:37 - 28:40
    Thoughts of suicide,
    but for my kids I choose
  • 28:40 - 28:43
    to survive hell on earth,
    cuz this is hell, I curse
  • 28:43 - 28:45
    whoever created it.
  • 28:45 - 28:46
    They shoulda laid in it first!
  • 28:46 - 28:49
    So they can feel
    how they own shit work.
  • 28:49 - 28:51
    Spitefulness is bad.
  • 28:51 - 28:52
    Ignorance is worse.
  • 28:53 - 28:58
    There’s no barbed wire, lots of greenery
    and striking contemporary art.
  • 28:58 - 29:01
    Inmates even have pretty great views out of
    their cell windows.
  • 29:01 - 29:04
    It’s all part of a plan to make prisons
    more humane.
  • 29:05 - 29:07
    Ask yourself in what way in your area, prison
    is changing.
  • 29:07 - 29:08
    How are these things developing?
  • 29:08 - 29:13
    So, like in the area that we’re in, here,
    there is this push away from using segregation
  • 29:13 - 29:16
    towards various forms of kind of sentence
    in the community.
  • 29:16 - 29:23
    Studying the history of prisons, you see that
    reformers are actually the ones who are kind
  • 29:23 - 29:28
    of planting the seeds for the next regime
    of social control.
  • 29:28 - 29:31
    And I think that no matter what those changes
    are you should always oppose them.
  • 29:31 - 29:34
    Whether it’s as obvious as building a new
    institution, or whether it looks like changing
  • 29:34 - 29:39
    laws to allow for more supervised sentences,
    rather than periods of incarceration.
  • 29:39 - 29:45
    The more that you can get involved with prisoners
    in here, and the more disruptive that your
  • 29:45 - 29:52
    activity with those prisoners can become to
    the larger complex, the more you liberate
  • 29:52 - 29:59
    not just prisoners from the prison complex,
    but the more liberation you’re spreading
  • 29:59 - 30:01
    in free space out there.
  • 30:01 - 30:07
    With as many people as you have locked up,
    you have a variety of people that want to
  • 30:07 - 30:09
    do a variety of things.
  • 30:09 - 30:13
    You have to begin with a relationship of trust,
    and you have to build that over time.
  • 30:13 - 30:16
    I find that most of the things that we’ve
    worked on have come because of that relationship.
  • 30:16 - 30:20
    We’re just, on a daily basis, communicating
    with people inside, and filling basic needs.
  • 30:20 - 30:23
    So that may be putting money on the phone,
    putting money on cantine, driving up someone’s
  • 30:23 - 30:25
    mom to visit.
  • 30:25 - 30:32
    A very important thing to organize and rally
    around is the right for prisoners to stay
  • 30:32 - 30:41
    in touch with their loved ones through physical
    contact and also through free modes of communication.
  • 30:41 - 30:43
    Out of that you’re going to hear a lot of
    the issues.
  • 30:43 - 30:47
    So as I said, the prison strike arose kind
    of spontaneously from us speaking on the radio,
  • 30:47 - 30:50
    and then getting a phone call about the conditions.
  • 30:50 - 30:54
    Everywhere they try to build a prison of any
    kind, we should try to stop it.
  • 30:54 - 30:58
    Let’s not let the state provide itself with
    more infrastructure to enforce the repression
  • 30:58 - 31:00
    of us and our communities.
  • 31:00 - 31:03
    I would recommend that people check out things
    written by other folks who’ve been through
  • 31:03 - 31:04
    this already.
  • 31:04 - 31:10
    That includes groups like Critical Resistance
    in California, anarchists in Brussels, there
  • 31:10 - 31:15
    was also a group called End he Prison Industrial
    Complex in Kingston, Ontario that was fighting
  • 31:15 - 31:17
    against the expansion of a prison in their
    city.
  • 31:17 - 31:21
    And those groups have all written reflections
    about their struggles on the Internet that
  • 31:21 - 31:22
    people could find.
  • 31:22 - 31:25
    There’s lots of people who’ve been fighting
    prison construction over the years, and I
  • 31:25 - 31:28
    would go check out all of their reflections.
  • 31:28 - 31:30
    Prison affects all of us even if we’ve never
    been there.
  • 31:30 - 31:31
    This is everyone’s fight.
  • 31:31 - 31:34
    So find your stake in it and be prepared to
    pick sides.
  • 31:35 - 31:36
    Prison fixes no problems.
  • 31:36 - 31:39
    It doesn’t make anything better... it only
    makes situations worse.
  • 31:39 - 31:43
    When people stick up for prisons in my life,
    I can say without any exaggeration that if
  • 31:43 - 31:47
    prison was gotten rid of tomorrow, that if
    all the guards were fired, all the P.O’s
  • 31:47 - 31:50
    were fired, the buildings were turned over
    to the pigeons and rain, that it would actually
  • 31:50 - 31:52
    just immediately make the world a better place.
  • 32:04 - 32:09
    There are more people incarcerated today than
    at any other period in human history.
  • 32:09 - 32:13
    One recent estimate put the number at over
    11 million worldwide.
  • 32:13 - 32:18
    And given current trends towards accelerating
    rates of female incarceration, massive spikes
  • 32:18 - 32:23
    in Central and South America prison populations,
    surging levels of global migration and a worldwide
  • 32:23 - 32:28
    shift towards more authoritarian and nationalist
    governments... unfortunately, this pattern
  • 32:28 - 32:30
    looks poised to continue.
  • 32:30 - 32:35
    As we continue to slide towards more entrenched
    levels of social conflict and state repression,
  • 32:35 - 32:40
    it is vitally important that our movements
    develop stronger ties with those comrades
  • 32:40 - 32:42
    who’ve been captured and kidnapped by the
    state.
  • 32:42 - 32:47
    Not just for the benefit of those trapped
    behind bars, as important as that is, but
  • 32:47 - 32:51
    also as a way of demystifying prisons for
    those of us on the outside, in order to hone
  • 32:51 - 32:54
    our capacity to resist.
  • 32:58 - 33:02
    So at this point, we’d like to remind you
    that Trouble is intended to be watched in
  • 33:02 - 33:06
    groups, and to be used as a resource to promote
    discussion and collective organizing.
  • 33:06 - 33:11
    Are you interested in starting a regular letter-writing
    night for political prisoners, providing material
  • 33:11 - 33:15
    support to those organizing on the inside
    or fighting against the construction of a
  • 33:15 - 33:17
    new detention facility in your town?
  • 33:17 - 33:22
    Consider getting together with some comrades,
    organizing a screening of this film, and discussing
  • 33:22 - 33:23
    where to get started.
  • 33:23 - 33:27
    Interested in running regular screenings of
    Trouble at your campus, infoshop, community
  • 33:27 - 33:29
    center, or even just at home with friends?
  • 33:29 - 33:30
    Become a Trouble-Maker!
  • 33:30 - 33:34
    For ten bucks a month, we’ll hook you up
    with an advanced copy of the show, and a screening
  • 33:34 - 33:39
    kit featuring additional resources and some
    questions you can use to get a discussion
  • 33:39 - 33:39
    going.
  • 33:39 - 33:42
    If you can’t afford to support us financially,
    no worries!
  • 33:42 - 33:49
    You can stream and/or download all our content
    for free off our website: sub.media/trouble.
  • 33:49 - 33:54
    If you’ve got any suggestions for show topics,
    or just want to get in touch, drop us a line
  • 33:54 - 33:57
    at trouble@sub.media.
  • 33:57 - 34:01
    Just a note that shortly after being interviewed
    for this film, Sean Swain was transferred
  • 34:01 - 34:06
    across state lines from Ohio State Penitentiary
    to the Nottoway Correctional Center, in Virginia.
  • 34:06 - 34:09
    You can write him at his new address:
  • 34:12 - 34:17
    For additional resources on writing to political
    prisoners, check out the screening kit for
  • 34:17 - 34:19
    this episode, available on our website.
  • 34:19 - 34:23
    This episode would not have been possible
    without the generous support of Bursts and
  • 34:23 - 34:24
    iZrEAL Media Arts.
  • 34:24 - 34:29
    We’re going to be taking a month off to
    work on another project... but after that
  • 34:29 - 34:34
    be sure stay tuned for Trouble #21, where
    we’ll take a closer look at anarchist approaches
  • 34:34 - 34:37
    to anti-colonial and anti-imperialist struggles.
  • 34:37 - 34:39
    Now get out there…. and make some trouble!
Title:
Trouble #20: Inside-Out
Description:

Prison is the foundation of state authority and the anchor of capitalist social relations. It’s the baseline threat that coerces us into accepting a daily regimen of exploitation and abuse. It’s a shrine to power and a monument to futility. It’s cameras, motion sensors, and walls of thick concrete wrapped in concertina wire. It’s an ongoing experiment in regimentation and psychology. It’s a sweatshop run on reclaimed slave labour. It’s a forced separation that rips up families and tears loved ones apart. It’s the last shitty stop before you’re deported back to the life you fled. It’s a sprawling job site, where unionized guards earn a living by keeping human beings in cages. It’s a sterile time capsule, where individuals are kidnapped from the present and thrown into limbo for years on end.

For those inside, the struggle against prisons is often a struggle for survival; it’s a constant fight to preserve whatever dignity you can in a place that’s designed to grind you down. For those on the outside, it is a struggle to break through the barriers of institutionalized isolation – whether physical, technical, or bureaucratic. It’s a battle to build and maintain relationships with those the state would have you forget. Prisons are constructed to be impenetrable fortresses. The fight for their abolition is a daunting one. But no matter if you’re on the inside or the outside, their continued existence is an affront to the very notion of freedom... and one that demands resistance.

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Video Language:
English
Duration:
35:18

English subtitles

Revisions