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The Prison Industrial Complex and the Global Economy
by Eve Goldberg and Linda Evans
Prison Activist Resource Center
PO Box 339 o Berkeley, CA 94701
510-845-8813 o [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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The Prison Industrial Complex and the Global Economy
by Eve Goldberg and Linda Evans

Over 1.8 million people are currently behind bars in the United States. This
represents the highest per capita incarceration rate in the history of the
world. In 1995 alone, 150 new U.S. prisons were built and filled.

This monumental commitment to lock up a sizeable percentage ofthe population
is an integral part of the globalization of capital. Several strands converged
at the end of the Cold War, changing relations between labor and capital on an
international scale: domestic economic decline, racism, the U.S. role as
policeman of the world, and growth of the international drug economy in
creating a booming prison/industrial complex. And the prison industrial
complex is rapidly becoming an essential component of the U.S. economy.

PRISONS ARE BIG BUSINESS

Like the military/industrial complex, the prison industrial complex is an
interweaving of private business and government interests. Its twofold purpose
is profit and social control. Its public rationale is the fight against crime.
Not so long ago, communism was "the enemy" and communists were demonized as a
way of justifying gargantuan military expenditures. Now, fear of crime and the
demonization of criminals serve a similar ideological purpose: to justify the
use of tax dollars for the repression and incarceration of a growing
percentage of our population. The omnipresent media blitz about serial
killers, missing children, and "random violence" feeds our fear. In reality,
however, most of the "criminals" we lock up are poor people who commit
nonviolent crimes out of eco-nomic need. Violence occurs in less than 14% of
all reported crime, and injuries occur in just 3%. In California, the top
three charges for those entering prison are: possession of a controlled
substance, possession of a controlled substance for sale, and robbery. Violent
crimes like murder, rape, manslaughter and kidnaping dont even make the top
ten. Like fear of communism during the Cold War, fear of crime is a great
selling tool for a dubious product. As with the building and maintenance of
weapons and armies, the building and maintenance of prisons are big business.
Investment hous-es, construction companies, architects, and support services
such as food, medical, transportation and furniture, all stand to profit by
prison expansion. A burgeoning "specialty item" industry sells fencing, hand-
cuffs, drug detectors, protective vests, and other security devices to pris-
ons. As the Cold War winds down and the Crime War heats up, defense industry
giants like Westinghouse are re-tooling and lobbying Washington for their
share of the domestic law enforcement market. "Night Enforcer" goggles used in
the Gulf War, electronic "Hot Wire" fencing ("so hot NATO chose it for high-
risk installations"), and other equipment once used by the military, are now
being marketed to the criminal justice system. Communication companies like
AT&T, Sprint, and MCI are get-ting into the act as well, gouging prisoners
with exorbitant phone call-ing rates, often six times the normal long distance
charge. Smaller firms like Correctional Communications Corp., dedicated solely
to the prison phone business, provide computerized prison phone systems, fully
equipped for systematic surveillance. They win government contracts by
offering to "kick back" some of the profits to the government agency awarding
the contract. These companies are reaping huge profits at the expense of
prisoners and their families; prisoners are often effectively cut off from
communication due to the excessive cost of phone calls. One of the fastest
growing sectors of the prison industrial complex is private corrections
companies. Investment firm Smith Barney is a part owner of a prison in
Florida. American Express and General Electric have invested in private prison
construction in Oklahoma and Tennessee. Correctional Corporation Of America,
one of the largest pri-vate prison owners, already operates internationally,
with more than 48 facilities in 11 states, Puerto Rico, the United Kingdom,
and Australia. Under contract by government to run jails and prisons, and paid
a fixed sum per prisoner, the profit motive mandates that these firms operate
as cheaply and efficiently as possible. This means lower wages for staff, no
unions, and fewer services for prisoners. Private contracts also mean less
public scrutiny. Prison owners are raking in billions by cutting corners which
harm prisoners. Substandard diets, extreme overcrowding, and abuses by poorly
trained personnel have all been documented and can be expected in these
institutions which are unabashedly about making money.

Prisons are also a leading rural growth industry. With traditional agriculture
being pushed aside by agribusiness, many rural American communities are facing
hard times. Economically depressed areas are falling over each other to secure
a prison facility of their own. Prisons are seen as a source of jobs in
construction, local vendors and prison staff as well as a source of tax
revenues. An average prison has a staff of several hundred employ-ees and an
annual payroll of several million dollars.

Like any industry, the prison economy needs raw materials. In this case the
raw materials are prisoners. The prison industrial complex can grow only if
more and more people are incarcerated even if crime rates drop. "Three
Strikes" and mandatory minimums (harsh, fixed sen-tences without parole) are
two examples of the legal superstructure quickly being put in place to
guarantee that the prison population will grow and grow and grow.

LABOR AND THE FLIGHT OF CAPITAL

The growth of the prison industrial complex is inextricably tied to the
fortunes of labor. Ever since the onset of the Reagan-Bush years in 1980,
workers in the United States have been under siege. Aggressive union busting,
corporate deregulation, and especially the flight of capital in search of
cheaper labor markets, have been crucial factors in the downward plight of
American workers. One wave of capital flight occurred in the 1970s.
Manufacturing such as textiles in the Northeast moved south to South Carolina,
Tennessee, Alabama, non-union states where wages were low. During the 1980s,
many more industries (steel, auto, etc.) closed up shop, mov-ing on to the
"more competitive atmospheres" of Mexico, Brazil, or Taiwan where wages were a
mere fraction of those in the U.S., and envi-ronmental, health and safety
standards were much lower. Most serious-ly hurt by these plant closures and
layoffs were African-Americans and other semiskilled workers in urban centers
who lost their decent paying industrial jobs.

Into the gaping economic hole left by the exodus of jobs from U.S. cities has
rushed another economy: the drug economy.

THE WAR ON DRUGS

The "War on Drugs," launched by President Reagan in the mid-eighties, has been
fought on interlocking international and domestic fronts.
At the international level, the war on drugs has been both a cynical cover-up
of U.S. government involvement in the drug trade, as well as justification for
U.S. military intervention and control in the Third World.

Over the last 50 years, the primary goal of U.S. foreign policy (and the
military industrial complex) has been to fight communism and pro-tect
corporate interests. To this end, the U.S. government has, with reg-ularity,
formed strategic alliances with drug dealers throughout the world. At the
conclusion of World War II, the OSS (precursor to the CIA) allied itself with
heroin traders on the docks of Marseille in an effort to wrest power away from
communist dock workers. During the Vietnam war, the CIA aided the heroin
producing Hmong tribesmen in the Golden Triangle area. In return for
cooperation with the U.S. gov-ernments war against the Vietcong and other
national liberation forces, the CIA flew local heroin out of Southeast Asia
and into America. Its no accident that heroin addiction in the U.S. rose
exponentially in the 1960s.

Nor is it an accident that cocaine began to proliferate in the United States
during the 1980s. Central America is the strategic halfway point for air
travel between Colombia and the United States. The Contra War against
Sandinista Nicaragua, as well as the war against the national lib-eration
forces in El Salvador, was largely about control of this critical area. When
Congress cut off support for the Contras, Oliver North and friends found other
ways to fund the Contra re-supply operations, in part through drug dealing.
Planes loaded with arms for the Contras took off from the southern United
States, off loaded their weapons on private landing strips in Honduras, then
loaded up with cocaine for the return trip.

A 1996 expose by the San Jose Mercury News documented CIA involvement in a
Nicaraguan drug ring which poured thousands of kilos of cocaine into Los
Angeles African-American neighborhoods in the 1980s. Drug boss, Danilo
Blandon, now an informant for the DEA, acknowledged under oath the drugs-for-
weapons deals with the CIA-sponsored Contras. U.S. military presence in
Central and Latin America has not stopped drug traffic. But it has influenced
aspects of the drug trade, and is a powerful force of social control in the
region. U.S. military inter-vention, whether in propping up dictators or
squashing peasant upris-ings, now operates under cover of the righteous war
against drugs and "narco-terrorism."

In Mexico, for example, U.S. military aid supposedly earmarked for the drug
war is being used to arm Mexican troops in the southern part of the country.
The drug trade, however (production, transfer, and dis-tribution points) is
all in the north. The "drug war money" is being used primarily to fight
against the Zapatista rebels in the southern state of Chiapas who are
demanding land reform and economic policy changes which are diametrically
opposed to the transnational corporate agenda. In the Colombian jungles of
Cartagena de Chaira, coca has become the only viable commercial crop. In 1996,
30,000 farmers blocked roads and airstrips to prevent crop spraying from
aircraft. The Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) one of the oldest
guerrilla organiza-tions in Latin America, held 60 government soldiers hostage
for nine months, demanding that the military leave the jungle, that social
ser-vices be increased, and that alternative crops be made available to farm-
ers. And given the notorious involvement of Colombias highest officials with
the powerful drug cartels, it is not surprising that most U.S. "drug war"
military aid actually goes to fighting the guerrillas. One result of the
international war on drugs has been the internationalization of the U.S.
prison population. For the most part, it is the low level "mules" carrying
drugs into this country who are cap-tured and incarcerated in ever-increasing
numbers. At least 25% of inmates in the federal prison system today will be
subject to deportation when their sentences are completed. Here at home, the
war on drugs has been a war on poor people. Particularly poor, urban, African
American men and women. Its well documented that police enforcement of the
new, harsh drug laws have been focused on low-level dealers in communities of
color. Arrests of African-Americans have been about five times higher than
arrests of whites, although whites and African-Americans use drugs at about
the same rate. And, African-Americans have been imprisoned in numbers even
more disproportionate than their relative arrest rates. It is estimat-ed that
in 1994, on any given day, one out of every 128 U.S. adults was incarcerated,
while one out of every 17 African-American adult males was incarcerated.

The differential in sentencing for powder and crack cocaine is one glaring
example of institutionalized racism. About 90% of crack arrests are of
African-Americans, while 75% of powder cocaine arrests are of whites. Under
federal law, it takes only five grams of crack cocaine to trigger a five-year
mandatory minimum sentence. But it takes 500 grams of powder cocaine, 100
times as much, to trigger this same sentence. This flagrant injustice was
highlighted by a 1996 nationwide federal prison rebellion when Congress
refused to enact changes in sentencing laws that would equalize penalties.

Statistics show that police repression and mass incarceration are not curbing
the drug trade. Dealers are forced to move, turf is reshuffled, already
vulnerable families are broken up. But the demand for drugs still exists, as
do huge profits for high-level dealers in this fifty billion dollar
international industry.

>From one point of view, the war on drugs can actually be seen as a pre-emptive
strike. The states repressive apparatus working overtime. Put poor people away
before they get angry. Incarcerate those at the bot-tom, the helpless, the
hopeless, before they demand change. What drugs dont damage (in terms of
intact communities, the ability to take action, to organize) the war on drugs
and mass imprisonment will surely destroy.
The crackdown on drugs has not stopped drug use. But it has taken thousands of
unemployed (and potentially angry and rebellious) young men and women off the
streets. And it has created a mushrooming prison population.

PRISON LABOR

An American worker who once upon a time made $8/hour, loses his job when the
company relocates to Thailand where workers are paid only $2/day. Unemployed,
and alienated from a society indifferent to his needs, he becomes involved in
the drug economy or some other out-lawed means of survival. He is arrested,
put in prison, and put to work. His new salary: 22 cents/hour. From worker, to
unemployed, to criminal, to convict laborer, the cycle has come full circle.
And the only victor is big business. For private business, prison labor is
like a pot of gold. No strikes. No union organizing. No unemployment insurance
or workers com-pensation to pay. No language problem, as in a foreign country.
New leviathan prisons are being built with thousands of eerie acres of facto-
ries inside the walls. Prisoners do data entry for Chevron, make tele-phone
reservations for TWA, raise hogs, shovel manure, make circuit boards,
limousines, waterbeds, and lingerie for Victorias Secret. All at a fraction of
the cost of "free labor." Prisoners can be forced to work for pennies because
they have no rights. Even the 14th Amendment to the Constitution which
abolished slavery, excludes prisoners from its protections. And, more and
more, prisons are charging inmates for basic necessities from med-ical care,
to toilet paper, to use of the law library. Many states are now charging "room
and board." Berks County jail in Pennsylvania is charging inmates $10 per day
to be there. California has similar legislation pending. So, while gov-ernment
cannot (yet) actually require inmates to work at private indus-try jobs for
less than minimum wage, they are forced to by necessity. Some prison
enterprises are state run. Inmates working at UNI-COR (the federal prison
industry corporation) make recycled furniture and work 40 hours a week for
about $40 per month. The Oregon Prison Industries produces a line of "Prison
Blues" blue jeans. An ad in their catalogue shows a handsome prison inmate
saying, "I say we should make bell-bottoms. They say Ive been in here too
long." Bizarre, but true. The promotional tags on the clothes themselves
actually tout their operation as rehabilitation and job training for
prisoners, who of course would never be able to find work in the garment
industry upon release. Prison industries are often directly competing with
private industry. Small furniture manufacturers around the country complain
that they are being driven out of business by UNICOR which pays 23 cents/hour
and has the inside track on government contracts. In another case, U.S.
Technologies sold its electronics plant in Austin, Texas, leaving its 150
workers unemployed. Six week later, the electronics plant reopened in a nearby
prison.

WELCOME TO THE NEW WORLD ORDER

The proliferation of prisons in the United States is one piece of a puzzle
called the globalization of capital. Since the end of the Cold War, capitalism
has gone on an interna-tional business offensive. No longer impeded by an
alternative socialist economy or the threat of national liberation movements
supported by the Soviet Union or China, transnational corporations see the
world as their oyster. Agencies such as the World Trade Organization, World
Bank, and the International Monetary Fund, bolstered by agreements like NAFTA
and GATT are putting more and more power into the hands of transnational
corporations by putting the squeeze on national governments. The primary
mechanism of control is debt. For decades, developing countries have depended
on foreign loans, resulting in increasing vulnerability to the transnational
corporate strategy for the global economy. Access to international credit and
aid is given only if governments agree to certain conditions known as
"structural adjust-ment." In a nutshell, structural adjustment requires cuts
in social services, privatization of state-run industry, repeal of agreements
with labor about working conditions and minimum wage, conversion of multi use
farm lands into cash crop agriculture for export, and the dismantling of trade
laws which protect local economies. Under structural adjustment, police and
military expenditures are the only government spending that is encouraged. The
sovereignty of nations is compromised when, as in the case of Vietnam, trade
sanctions are threatened unless the government allows Camel cigarettes to
litter the countryside with billboards, or promises to spend millions in the
U.S.-orchestrated crackdown on drugs.

The basic transnational corporate philosophy is this: the world is a single
market; natural resources are to be exploited; people are con-sumers; anything
which hinders profit is to be routed out and destroyed. The results of this
philosophy in action are that while economies are growing, so is poverty, so
is ecological destruction, so are sweatshops and child labor. Across the
globe, wages are plummeting, indigenous people are being forced off their
lands, rivers are becoming industrial dumping grounds, and forests are being
obliterated. Massive regional starvation and "World Bank riots" are becoming
more frequent throughout the Third World.

All over the world, more and more people are being forced into illegal
activity for their own survival as traditional cultures and social struc-tures
are destroyed. Inevitably, crime and imprisonment rates are on the rise. And
the United States law enforcement establishment is in the fore-front,
domestically and internationally, in providing state-of-the-art repression.

Within the United States, structural adjustment (sometimes known as the
Contract With America) takes the form of welfare and social ser-vice cuts,
continued massive military spending, and skyrocketing prison spending. Walk
through any poor urban neighborhood: school systems are crumbling, after
school programs, libraries, parks and drug treat-ment centers are closed. But
you will see more police stations and more cops. Often, the only "social
service" available to poor young people is jail.

The dismantling of social programs, and the growing dominance of the right-
wing agenda in U.S. politics has been made possible, at least in part, by the
successful repression of the civil rights and liberation move-ments of the
1960s and 70s. Many of the leaders, Martin Luther King Jr., Malcolm X, Fred
Hampton, and many others were assassinated. Others, like Geronimo ji Jaga
Pratt, Leonard Peltier, and Mumia Abu-Jamal, have been locked up. Over 150
political leaders from the black

liberation struggle, the Puerto Rican independence movement, and other
resistance efforts are still in prison. Many are serving sentences ranging
from 40 to 90 years. Oppressed communities have been robbed of radical
political leadership which might have led an opposition move-ment. We are
reaping the results. The number of people in U.S. prisons has more than
tripled in the past 17 years from 500,000 in 1980 to 1.8 million in 1997.
Today, more than five million people are behind bars, on parole, probation, or
under other supervision by the criminal justice system. The state of
California now spends more on prisons than on higher education, and over the
past decade has built 19 prisons and only one branch university. Add to this,
the fact that increasing numbers of women are being locked up. Between 1980
and 1994, the number of women in prison increased five-fold, and women now
make up the fastest growing seg-ment of the prison population. Most of these
women are mothers leav-ing future generations growing up in foster homes or on
the streets. Welcome to the New World Order.

WHAT IS TO BE DONE?
Prisons are not reducing crime. But they are fracturing already vul-nerable
families and communities.
Poor people of color are being locked up in grossly disproportion-ate numbers,
primarily for non-violent crimes. But Americans are not feeling safer.

As "criminals" become scapegoats for our floundering economy and our
deteriorating social structure, even the guise of rehabilitation is quickly
disappearing from our penal philosophy. After all: rehabilitate for what? To
go back into an economy which has no jobs? To go back into a community which
has no hope? As education and other prison programs are cut back, or in most
cases eliminated altogether, prisons are becoming vast, over-crowded, holding
tanks. Or worse: factories behind bars.

And, prison labor is undercutting wages, something which hurts all working and
poor Americans. Its a situation which can only occur because organized labor
is divided and weak and has not kept step with organized capital.
While capital has globalized, labor has not. While the transnationals truly
are fashioning our planet into a global village, there is still little
communication or cooperation between workers around the world.

Only an internationally linked labor movement can effectively challenge the
power of the transnational corporations. There have been some wonderful,
shining instances of internation-al worker solidarity. In the early 1980s, 3M
workers in South Africa walked out in support of striking 3M workers in New
Jersey. Recently, longshore workers in Denmark, Spain, Sweden and several
other coun-tries closed down ports around the world in solidarity with
striking Liverpool dockers. When Renault closed its plant in Belgium, 100,000
demonstrated in Brussels, pressuring the French and Belgium govern-ments to
condemn the plant closure and compel its reopening. Here in the U.S., there is
a glimmer of hope as the AFL-CIO has voted in some new, more progressive
leadership. Well see how that shapes up, and whether the last 50 years of
anti-communist, bread-and-butter American unionism is really a thing of the
past. What is certain is that resistance to the transnational corporate agenda
is growing around the globe: In 1996, the people of Bougainville, a small New
Guinea island, organized a secessionist rebellion, protesting the dislocations
and ecological destruction caused by corporate mining on the island. When the
government hired mercenaries from South Africa to train local troops in
counterinsurgency warfare, the army rebelled, threw out the mercenaries, and
deposed the Prime Minister. A one day General Strike shut down Haiti in
January 1997. Strikers demanded the suspension of negotiations between the
Prime Minister and the International Monetary Fund/World Bank. They protested
the austerity measures imposed by the IMF and WB which would mean laying off
7,000 government workers and the privatization of the electric and telephone
companies. In Nigeria, the Ogoni people conducted a protracted eight year
struggle against Shell Oil. Acid rain, and hundreds of oil spills and gas
flares were turning the once fertile countryside into a near waste-land. Their
peaceful demonstrations, election boycotts, and pleas for international
solidarity were met with violent government repression and the eventual
execution of Ogoni writer leader Ken Saro Wiwa. In France, a month-long
General Strike united millions of workers who protested privatization, a
government worker pay freeze, and cutbacks in social services. Telephone,
airline, power, postal, educa-tion, health care and metal workers all joined
together, bringing business to a standstill. The right-wing Chirac government
was forced to make minor concessions before being voted out for a new
"socialist" administration. At the Oak Park Heights Correctional Facility in
Minnesota, 150 prisoners went on strike in March 1997, demanding to be paid
the minimum wage. Although they lost a litigation battle to attain this right,
their strike gained attention and support from several local labor unions.

Just as the prison industrial complex is becoming increasingly cen-tral to the
growth of the U.S. economy, prisoners are a crucial part of building effective
opposition to the transnational corporate agenda. Because of their enforced
invisibility, powerlessness, and isolation, its far too common for prisoners
to be left out of the equation of internation-al solidarity. Yet, opposing the
expansion of the prison industrial com-plex, and supporting the rights and
basic humanity of prisoners, may be the only way we can stave off the
consolidation of a police state that represses us all, where you or a friend
or family member may yourself end up behind bars.

Clearly, the only alternative that will match the power of global cap-ital is
an internationalization of human solidarity. Because, truly, we are all in
this together.


Samora Machel (1933-1986)
Leader of FRELIMO
First President of Mozambique
"International solidarity is not an act of charity.
It is an act of unity between allies fighting on differ-ent
terrains toward the same objective. The foremost
of these objectives is to aid the development of
humanity to the highest level possible."


References
Books:
o Burton-Rose, Daniel, Dan Pens and Paul Wright (eds)
The Celling of America: An Inside Look at the US Prison
Industry, Common Courage Press, 1998.
o Donziger, Stephen R. (ed), The Real War On Crime,
Harper Perennial, 1996.
o Rosenbaltt, Elihu (ed), Criminal Injustice, South End Press,
1996.
Print Articles:
o "A Matter of Fact," Prison Legal News, Dec. 1996.
o "Another Face of Neo-Liberalism: Drug Trafficking and
Commercial Banks," Bulldozer. Reprinted from "Report on
Canada�s Sixth Year in the OAS: Focus on Corruption,"
Canada - Americas Policy Alternatives.
o Bernstein, Dennis and Leslie Kean, "People Of The Opiate,"
The Nation, Dec. 16, 1996.
o "Coca Clashes: Colombia," The Economist, Aug. 17, 1996.
o Cooper, Marc, "Labor Deals a New Hand," The Nation,
March 24, 1997.
o Day, Christopher, "Neoliberalism and World Revolution,"
Love and Rage, Mar/Apr. 1997.
o Dunkel, G., "General Strike Shuts Haiti For a Day,"
Workers World, Jan. 30, 1997.
o Dunne, Bill, "The New Plantation", Prison Legal News, Feb.
1997.
o "Furniture Manufacturers Threatened by UNICOR,"
Prison Legal News, July 1996.
o Gillenkirk, Jeff and Brian Wilson, "Mexican Unrest The �80s
Parallels," San Francisco Chronicle, June 10, 1997.
The Prison Industrial Complex 20

o "Latin America�s Other Hostages," The Economist, Jan. 25,
1997.
o "Leftist Colombian Rebels Free 70 Troops After Army
Pullback," Chronicle News Services, San Francisco
Chronicle, June 16, 1997.
o "Minnesota Prisoners Strike for Minimum Wage,"
Prison Legal News, July, 1996. Reprinted from Workers
World, March 21, 1996.
o Mollins, Carl "Prisons For Profit," Maclean�s, June 5, 1995.
o Parenti, Christian, "Inside Jobs," New Statesman, Nov. 3, 1995.
o Parenti, Christian, "Making Prisons Pay," The Nation,
Jan. 29, 1996.
o Parenti, Christian, "Pay Now, Pay Later," The Progressive,
July 26, 1996.
o "Second Circuit Rejects Prison FLSA Claim, Modifies
Standard," Prison Legal News, Jan. 1997.
o "Standing guard for Uncle Sam: Colombia," The Economist,
Jan. 14, 1995.
o Webb, Gary and Pamela Kramer, "Drug Dealer Told of
Reltionship With CIA," Knight-Ridder/Tribune News
Service, Oct. 5, 1996.
o Wisely, Willie, "The Bottom Line: California�s Prison
Industry Authority," Out Of Time, Feb. 1996.
Internet Articles:
o Dropkin, Greg, "Worldwide Action In Support of Mersey,"
LabourNet Report.
o Haq, Farhan, "U.S.-Vietnam: McDonald�s �Happy Meals�
Make Workers Sad," Inter Press Service.
o Lowry, Suzanne, "French Strikers Win First Round,"
LaborNet Report.
o Tran, Dr. Ho, and Takano, Mark, "Just Don�t Do It Say No
To Labor Exploitation," Open Letter, Nov. 18, 1996.
The Prison Industrial Complex 21

Resource List
Out of Time
3543 18th St. Box 30
San Francisco, CA 94110
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Newsletter of the Out of Control Lesbian Committee to
Support Women Political Prisoners and Prisoners of War
Libertad
2607 W. Division
Chicago, IL 60622
Libertad carries news and information from the National
Committee to Free Puerto Rican Prisoners of War
Prison Legal News
2400 NW 80th St. #148
Seattle, WA 98117
The Fire Inside c/o California Coalition for Women Prisoners
100 McAllister St.
San Francisco, CA 94102
http://wwwigc.org/justice/prisoners/women
Coalition for Prisoners Rights
Box 1911
Santa Fe, NM 87504
Walking Steel / Can�t Jail the Spirit
Box 578172
Chicago, IL 60657
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Walking Steel carries written materials including a collection of
bios on some of the current political prisoners in the U.S.
California Prison Focus
2489 Mission St. #28
San Francisco, CA 94110
This Just In
103 Bartlett Ave.
Pittsfield, MA 01201
The Prison Industrial Complex 22

Transformation
c/o Women�s Project 2224 Main St.
Little Rock, AR 72206
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
A quarterly newsletter for social and economic justice by groups
working with women prisoners since 1989
PWA RAG inc
1626 N. Wilcox Ave #537
Las Angeles, CA 90028
ragnews@aolcom
A quarterly published by Prisoners with AIDS Rights Advocacy
Group Inc.
RAZE the WALLS
Box 720418
Orlando, FL 32872
Provides prisoner support and abolition work
Prison Activist Resource Center
PO Box 339
Berkeley, CA 94701
Tel: 510-845-8813
Fax: 510-845-8816
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
www.prisonactivist.org
Anarchist Black Cross Federation
NJ ABC -BG
P.O. Box 8532
Patterson, NJ 07508-8532
http://burn.ucsd.edu/~abcf
Critical Resistance: Beyond the Prison Industrial Complex
Box 339 o Berkeley, CA 94701
[EMAIL PROTECTED] o www.igc.org/justice/critical
A national conference and strategy session
September 25-27 at UC Berkeley, California
The Prison Industrial Complex 23

Eve Goldberg (left) is a writer, film maker, and solidarity and
prisoners� rights activist. She lives in Santa Monica, California.
Linda Evans (right) is an anti-imperialist political prisoner
serving a 40 year sentence for actions against the US govern-ment.
She has been incarcerated at the Federal Correctional
Institute in Dublin, California for the past 12 years.
Write to her: Linda Evans #19973-054
5701 8th Street, Dublin, CA 94568
-----
Aloha, He'Ping,
Om, Shalom, Salaam.
Em Hotep, Peace Be,
Omnia Bona Bonis,
All My Relations.
Adieu, Adios, Aloha.
Amen.
Roads End
Kris

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CTRL is a discussion and informational exchange list. Proselyzting propagandic
screeds are not allowed. Substance�not soapboxing!  These are sordid matters
and 'conspiracy theory', with its many half-truths, misdirections and outright
frauds is used politically  by different groups with major and minor effects
spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought. That being said, CTRL
gives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and always suggests to readers;
be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no credeence to Holocaust denial and
nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
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