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Herbal Activism Dedicated to Ken Gorman/Governor. A place to post up coming events, laws, news articles or special things you do for activism.

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Old 11-01-2005, 01:36 AM   #1 (permalink)
DdC
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Ganjawar: Prison Slave Labor, Rape & Pillage Deterrent

Torture in America, ITS REAL AND SYSTEMATIC.

Slave labor means big bucks for U.S. corporations
At the same time, the United States blasts China for the the use of prison slave labor, engaging in the same practice itself. Prison labor is a pot of gold. No strikes, union organizing, health benefits, unemployment insurance or workers' compensation to pay.

As if exploiting the labor of prison inmates was not bad enough, it is legal in the United States to use slave labor. The 13th Amendment of the Constitution states that "neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted shall exist within the United States."

There are approximately 2 million people behind bars in the United States -- more than three times the number of prisoners in 1980. The United States now imprisons more people than any other country in the world. In fact, in the last 20 years California has constructed 21 new prisons while in the same amount of time, it has built only one new university. That statistic is even more astounding when we think about the fact that it took California almost 150 years to build its first 12 prisons. Another five new prisons are under construction and plans are in the works to build another 10.

UNICORE

I LOST MY FREEDOM AND CAN'T FIND IT ANYWHERE LINX

Prison Reform Unity Project



Search The Lindesmith Library

The Nobel Prize-winning US Economist, Dr. Milton Friedman who stated around 1990, in a PBS interview, that: Our US Drug War causes 10,000 extra US murders every year; has doubled the number of US jails and prisons and (thus...) the number of US incarcerated people...

Relax Your Muscles as Much as Possible' cannabisnews

According to the outfit Common Sense for Drug Policy, which maintains the Web site -- drugwarfacts.org -- there are now approximately 77,000 state, local and federal inmates imprisoned on marijuana charges.

According to FBI Uniform Crime reports on numbers of marijuana arrests, in 1991 there were 200,465 arrests in the United States for marijuana possession. But far from being "phased out," arrests for marijuana possession rose steadily through the 1990s, reaching 646,042 in 2000 (3,742 of those in Nevada alone -- costing 10,000 police hours just for "processing.") More than half of all federal inmates are now nonviolent drug inmates.

According to the government-funded National Household Survey on Drug Abuse, 800,000 million youths between 12 and 17 tried marijuana for the first time in 1991. But in 2000, according to the same survey, 1.6 million youths between 12 and 17 tried marijuana for the first time. "If arresting more people is supposed to stop kids from trying marijuana, it seems not to be working," comments Bruce Mirken, spokesman for the Marijuana Policy Project in D.C.

What's life like in our prisons for those 77,000 marijuana convicts? Let's steel our nerves and go visit the Web site www.spr.org where the Los Angeles outfit "Stop Prisoner Rape" has posted the little plain-talking handbill it has prepared for young men entering our prison system, titled "For Prisoners: Advice on Avoiding HIV/AIDS."

The group's handout -- targeted primarily at heterosexual men who have no desire to ever be involved in homosexual activity -- advises: "HIV/AIDS transmission during a sexual assault is a serious concern. The following are practical tips for reducing your risk. Continued..."

... Feeling pretty comfortable now with what the legal system is doing to these 77,000 nonviolent pot-smokers in your name? (And those are just the ones who end up doing hard time, mind you. Remember, 646,000 were arrested in 2000. Do you suppose most of them had a nice, restful night in jail?

Do you realize, if their families spent a few thousand dollars apiece on legal fees, that adds up to more than a billion dollars, and taxpayer costs for lost police time are several times that?) Still going to tell me that treating them in this manner is just the way you show your "compassion" as you seek to "protect them from the health risks" of lighting up a joint, not to mention "sending the right message to the children"?

Non-Violent Drug Offenders

Prison Factories: Slave Labor

"The horrors experienced by many young inmates, particularly those who are convicted of nonviolent offenses, border on the unimaginable. Prison rape not only threatens the lives of those who fall prey to their aggressors, but it is potentially devastating to the human spirit. Shame, depression, and a shattering loss of self-esteem accompany the perpetual terror the victim thereafter must endure."
U.S. Supreme Court Justice Harry A. Blackmun, Farmer v. Brennan



"Certain American industrialists had a great deal to do with bringing fascist regimes into being in both Germany and Italy. They extended aid to help Fascism occupy the seat of power, and they are helping to keep it there."
- William E. Dodd, U.S. Ambassador to Germany, 1937. Continued...www.sume ria.net

The War On Drugs Must Be Stopped Because...



Male Rape in US Prisons
Childrens rights
Children in the US
Street Children
Juvenile Justice
Child Labor

Conditions of Confinement
Human Rights Watch has documented abominable conditions for children in detention in countries around the world. In the United States (Colorado, Georgia, Louisiana, and Maryland), Pakistan, Jamaica, among other countries, children are subjected to excessive force, inadequate medical and mental health care, and are provided with little or no education. Often, these children are placed in the facilities along side adults, exposing them to physical and sexual abuse.

Close to Home: Juveniles in Adult Jails
Op-Ed by Michael Bochenek The Washington Post

Correctional Systems, Inc. (CSI) is a publicly-traded corporation that contracts with governmental agencies to operate correctional projects.

Juvenile Info Network
Mental Health Issues and Juvenile Justice

The Real Price of Prisons
Dubya and Me: We've Got No Idea



An American Gulag in The Making

FAMILIES TO AMEND CALIFORNIA'S THREE STRIKES (F.A.C.T.S.)

FAMM
VCL- Lawyers and Judges against the drug war
Drug Reform Coordination Network
Cops Against The Drug War
Drug Sense
M.A.M.A.
F.E.A.R.
Cannabis News
MAP Inc.Org.
November Coalition
N.O.R.M.L.
Human Rights and the WoD
Drug War Prisoners

Supporters memorialize LACRC and protest DEA raid.
Only six weeks after 9/11, federal police devoted scarce resources
to attacking medical marijuana clinics.



(photo courtesy LACRC.)

CSDP
Bureau of Justice Statistics
DrugSense: Drug War Clock
Report: Millions Behind Bars in U.S.

D.E.A.th Deceptions

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