www.newsandletters.org












NEWS & LETTERS, APRIL 2003

Two prisoners' views of American gulag

Pontiac, Ill.--Former Illinois Governor Ryan's decision to pardon over 150 inmates surprised us all. Here in Pontiac is where most of Death Row is housed. When we go to the yard, we are all separated by cages but nonetheless we communicate.

Two of the guys that received pardons went home as free men from Pontiac. Now they are on the cover of newspapers and they have the media's undivided attention. I hope they not only expose the injustices of the justice system but also the brutality of Pontiac and other prisons throughout the state.

Before the former governor made his decision, Rev. Jesse Jackson came down here to speak with the Death Row inmates. But whenever someone like Jackson or any media comes around, they don't let us go out into our cages for our yard time. The reason is that the warden as well as his foot soldiers know that this place is psychologically torturing guys and a lot of them here belong in some type of mental facility for the proper treatment. This is their way of keeping the truth about Pontiac in the dark.

Just think how Pontiac would look if the media came down here and saw guys outside in their single man cages. They would see guys mentally disturbed, running around in freezing weather, naked, screaming at everybody. They would see guys who still don't have coats for the freezing weather because Pontiac doesn't issue them like they're supposed to. The outside cages are barbaric to look at, so Pontiac hides the truth about them. Something is seriously wrong with the system.

* * *

Corcoran, Cal.-- some countries it's the practice to cut off the hand of a thief. The thief is then left to ponder his stump and weigh the positives and negatives of stealing again. Of course, he may starve if he does not steal. And what employer would give work to an inferior, one-handed man and a known thief.

In this country it is not the removal of the hand but the removal of life--captivity. Do disproportionately long prison terms not scar the mind as effectively as any trauma? Is even the "released" prisoner--who is under the thumb of the government, known as the parole department--ever again allowed true freedom or opportunity?

The answers are secondary, minor concerns to those that gain from such a situation. To give freedom is to lose control. As population grows, so must control. As our government gains power at the expense of our civil liberties, they are more and more able to impose THEIR goals, which they disguise as ours.

As we watch violent crime rise we are left to wonder why the state no longer focuses on rehabilitation. The throw-away policy is not effective or humane, yet they intensify it by building more prisons, implementing inhumane, disproportional sentences.

A major lie has been imposed on the public concerning "criminals." They say criminals are not like us, they are vastly different, they are sick and incurable. They say we must lock them away and forget.

There are two main issues that create a criminal. One type is those effected by their environment. Another is the mentally ill.

Remember that prisoners include drug dealers and drug users, and thieves/robbers in the majority numbers. But they are in the most part poor citizens to begin with.

The rest of the prisoners make up murderers, sexual predators and abusers of their fellow man. This category seems less connected to social status, so can often (though not always) be attributed to mental illness. Most could be helped or cured, some in a short amount of time, some in years, some never. But to group them all together as incurable and useless bodies is a crime in itself. To see the citizens as a manipulatable mass, and the sum of many different people, is truly to abuse them all.

Return to top


Home l News & Letters Newspaper l Back issues l News and Letters Committees l Dialogues l Raya Dunayevskaya l Contact us l Search

Subscribe to News & Letters

Published by News and Letters Committees
Designed and maintained by  Internet Horizons