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Subject: "The Largest Prison Strike in History Is Being Ignored By Major Media." Previous topic | Next topic
thegodcam
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Sun Sep-25-16 05:46 PM

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"The Largest Prison Strike in History Is Being Ignored By Major Media."


  

          

http://wearechange.org/largest-prison-strike-ignored/

The Largest Prison Strike in History Is Being Ignored By Major Media.
avatar by Danny F. Quest | Sep 19, 2016
Did You Know We Are Having the Largest Prison Strike in History? Probably Not, Because Most of the Media Have Ignored It

The prison strike didn’t merit a single mention in NYT, Washington Post, NPR, CNN or MSNBC.

By Adam Johnson / AlterNet September 16, 2016

Thousands of prisoners in over 24 states began a labor strike on September 9, the 45th anniversary of the Attica prison uprising, to demand better conditions and healthcare, the right to unionize and what one organizing group calls an “end to slavery in America.” But one would hardly know it watching major U.S. media, which has mostly ignored the largest prison labor strike in history. One week on, the New York Times, Washington Post, NBC News, ABC News, MSNBC, Fox News, CNN, and NPR have not covered the prison strikes at all.
In the same time period since the strike began, CNN has run stories on Clinton’s “body double,” the New York Times ran a piece on women getting buzzcuts and ABC News had an “exclusive trailer” for its parent corporation Disney’s upcoming film. There was certainly enough airtime and column inches to mention that workers had coordinated a national strike of unprecedented scale, but for these outlets the coverage has been nonexistent.
A handful of national outlets have covered the strike: The Nation, City Lab,Engadget, Money Watch, Buzzfeed, and as of Thursday, the Wall Street Journal, but every other major publication, network news and cable network has thus far been silent.
When we spoke by phone, Azzurra Crispino, media co-chair of Incarcerated Workers Organizing Committee, one of the strike organizers, was hesitant to be too hard on the press out of hope the strikes would lose coverage in the future. But after some prompting, the four-year prison abolitionist veteran listed a few measured grievances at the media. Her most consistent theme was that to the extent the strikes were being covered, the focus was on spectacle over substance, and in doing so the media was making nonviolent resistance all but impossible.
“I’m a pacifist, I would like to see the strikes remain nonviolent,” Crispino told AlterNet. “Yet in terms of the mainstream press coverage when there’s blood on the ground the prisons have to fill out reports that guards were hurt so then they can’t deny strikes occurred,” she said in reference to the stonewalling of prison officials. The few reporters Crispino had spoken to said most prison spokespeople denied any strikes were taking place. “Between prisoners and TDCJ , who do you think reporters are going to believe?” she asked.
The power asymmetry and the media’s default position of siding with government officials over those seen as criminals creates just one more barrier to coverage. At its core, coverage of the prison strikes, as with any protest action, has an inherently perverse incentive structure that puts a premium on acts of violence and property damage and overlooks non-telegenic peaceful activity, such as hunger strikes and labor stoppages.
This dynamic was seen in the Standing Rock incident on September 3, when private security sicced dogs on Native American activists protesting an oil pipeline, and pictures of injured protesters went viral on social media. At the time, only Democracy Now, a relatively small left-wing news show, and AP and UPI filed original reports on the incident. Days after what the media called “clashes,” articles appeared with far greater frequency, including in major outlets like New York Times, CNN and NBC.
This warped incentive structure is even more pronounced in prisons, which are by definition cut off from society. The only time anyone bothers to notice prisons is when demonstrably violent action takes place.
“Which of the strikes are getting the most attention? Florida because they’re violent,” Crispino says, in reference to the September 7 uprising at Homes Correctional facility in the Florida panhandle. “They can’t deny in Florida because prisoners are setting things on fire and there’s been so much structural damage they can’t deny strikes are occurring.”
A similar dynamic is at work when prisoners are in solitary confinement or engage in body mutilation or destruction of property, often by flooding their cells or covering them with feces or blood. Similarly, Crispino contends, each time the media ignores peaceful activities, it tips the scales further in the direction of fires, property damage and rioting.
But this reason doesn’t fully explain the lack of mainstream coverage. A few outlets, as noted, have covered the strike to the extent they could, especially in the buildup to the protest, so it’s not as if there wasn’t enough information to compile a story.
One possible reason is that some of corporate media’s biggest advertisers use prison labor, so the disincentive to shine a light on the problem is high. AT&T, Bank of America, Chevron, Eli Lilly, GEICO, McDonald’s, and Walmart all use prison labor and all are sponsors of corporate media so much we can recite their commercials by heart. One corporation that uses prison labor, Verizon, even owns major media outlets Yahoo and Huffington Post.
Russia Today, a Moscow-funded media outlet, was the only cable news network to speak with Crispino, and to the best of her knowledge, the only one to cover the strikes. When Donald Trump appeared on RT last week, there was a frenzy of outrage by mainstream pundits, with some questioning why Trump would give credence to “Russian government-controlled propaganda.” RT’s position has always been that it covers stories the mainstream press doesn’t, and while some may see this as a cynical marketing ploy, in the case of the prison strikes it also happens to be true.
Another issue for IWOC is that all the coverage thus far, even in sympathetic outlets, has ignored their broader political aims, which is prison abolition, not reform.
“The IWOC is an abolitionist organization,” Crispino said. “Abolition is pretty much completely ignored. It’s interesting because people ask questions about that and they ask what would you do instead, but no one wants to hear that and they never write about it.” That the media is allergic to ideology, to having deeper discussions about our society’s core axioms and why the U.S. has 25% of the world’s prison population but 5% of the total population, is perhaps too knotty for a 800-word writeup but for those working in the trenches it can be frustrating.
As the strike enters its second week, perhaps major media outlets and cable news will take a cue from activist media and the Wall Street Journal (whose report is worth reading) and shine a light, if only briefly, on the largest prison strike in history. If not, Crispino feels other tactics will eventually become more commonplace.
“I almost want to say, the mainstream media is complicit if there’s violence. The message they are sending to striking workers is, we will only give you coverage if things turn ugly.”
Adam Johnson is a contributing analyst at FAIR and contributing writer for AlterNet. Follow him on Twitter @AdamJohnsonNYC.

*******************************************************
i will not let finite disappointment undermine infinite hope
- Cory Booker

Football is a simple game; 22 men chase a ball for 90 minutes, and at the end the Germans always win
- Gary Lineker

  

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Topic Outline
Subject Author Message Date ID
And by this board as well, it seems.
Sep 25th 2016
1
:-(
Sep 28th 2016
2
Found out about it today. Messaged three "in the know" people
Sep 28th 2016
4
Guards in Alabama joined the strike. (swipe)
Sep 28th 2016
3
lol...we're in trouble
Sep 28th 2016
5
alabama co's join strike
Sep 29th 2016
6
Wow...
Sep 29th 2016
7
where can i find a list of prisons striking?
Sep 29th 2016
8
I'm hopeful that one outcome of this strike is...
Sep 29th 2016
9
you really think that will change their view?
Sep 29th 2016
10
Not everyone or even most people but...
Sep 29th 2016
11
I wasn't aware of that until recently
Sep 29th 2016
12

KiloMcG
Member since Jan 01st 2008
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Sun Sep-25-16 09:10 PM

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1. "And by this board as well, it seems. "
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

  

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thegodcam
Member since Oct 22nd 2004
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Wed Sep-28-16 04:09 PM

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2. ":-("
In response to Reply # 1


  

          

*******************************************************
i will not let finite disappointment undermine infinite hope
- Cory Booker

Football is a simple game; 22 men chase a ball for 90 minutes, and at the end the Germans always win
- Gary Lineker

  

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MEAT
Member since Feb 08th 2008
22257 posts
Wed Sep-28-16 04:20 PM

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4. "Found out about it today. Messaged three "in the know" people"
In response to Reply # 1


  

          

They had only heard murmurs and didn't know the scope. It's been off the radar like shit.

------
“There is no fate that cannot be surmounted by scorn.” -Albert Camus

  

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Cornbread
Member since Jul 21st 2006
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Wed Sep-28-16 04:20 PM

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3. "Guards in Alabama joined the strike. (swipe)"
In response to Reply # 0
Wed Sep-28-16 04:21 PM by Cornbread

  

          

https://www.buzzfeed.com/coralewis/guards-join-striking-prisoners-in-alabama?utm_term=.qswVnrMdr#.itwE85wj5

http://www.al.com/news/birmingham/index.ssf/2016/09/department_of_corrections_conf.html

The Department of Corrections said Monday that a number of guards at William C. Holman Correctional Facility in Atmore failed to report to work on Saturday.

Bob Horton, a spokesman for the department, emailed a statement to AL.com that seemingly confirmed reports by inmate advocacy groups that a strike took place at the prison over the weekend.

But it stopped short of giving credence to the groups' claims that guards were still on strike Monday.

"Some correctional officers assigned to William C. Holman Correctional Facility did not report for the third shift on Saturday," Horton said. "As a result, officers from other correctional facilities augmented Holman's security staff. Prison officials have not reported further incidents."

Horton sent out a new statement Tuesday afternoon stating that the reports of a strike by Holman corrections officers were "erroneous" and that the DOC only confirmed that they missed work.

"Prison officials are acknowledging that nine officers did not report for the facility's third shift on Saturday. In response, and as standing operating procedure, officers from other ADOC facilities were assigned to the shift to augment the security staff," the statement said.

"Authorities say most officers assigned to the facility's third shift reported to work the following day. At no time did the officers state that they were participating in a strike, nor did they express any demands or grievances."

Horton went on to explain that the "unofficial reports" of a strike by corrections officers "came from inmate advocate groups and not from department officials."

The failure by the correctional officers to report to work Saturday comes on the heels of two weeks of strikes by inmate laborers across the country. The striking prisoners are protesting what they describe as inhumane living conditions and unfair employment practices in prisons.

The Free Alabama Movement (FAM) issued a statement Saturday about the strike.

"Last night at Holman prison an emergency situation developed as ALL of the officers assigned to the second shift waged a historic work strike for the first time in the history of the Alabama Department of Corrections," the group wrote.

The statement went on to claim that a Department of Corrections (DOC) official "was dispatched to the prison," and that he brought in supervisors from another correctional facility "just to be able to serve meals."

The Incarcerated Workers Organizing Committee issued a tweet Monday morning that was cited by Buzzfeed News and followed up on FAM's statement.

"The guards are refusing to work," the tweet said. "THE GUARDS. ARE. REFUSING. TO. WORK. AT. HOLMAN."

Prisoners at Holman went on strike for 24 hours earlier this month, the DOC confirmed, while advocacy groups say the strike was far broader.

https://freealabamamovement.wordpress.com/2016/09/26/press-release-inhumane-conditions-in-alabama-prisons-leads-to-strikes-by-incarcerated-men-and-now-guards/

*America's Favorite*

  

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auragin_boi
Member since Aug 01st 2003
20939 posts
Wed Sep-28-16 04:54 PM

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5. "lol...we're in trouble"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

The lights are turning on. Big brother is exposing faulty policing, truly intelligent in-the-know folk are shedding light on (not so) modern slavery (excessive imprisonment and targeting of specific groups) and now the prisoners are saying 'nope'.

THEY see it coming, that's why Trump is their candidate.

What happens when the prisoners stop working? Oh boy...do we really wanna find out?

They about to make blinking while black illegal fam. lol

____________

  

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aolhater
Member since Oct 14th 2002
1332 posts
Thu Sep-29-16 09:37 AM

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6. "alabama co's join strike "
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

http://www.democracynow.org/2016/9/28/alabama_guards_stage_work_strike_months

*professional lurker*

  

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soulfunk
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Thu Sep-29-16 10:03 AM

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7. "Wow..."
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

  

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legsdiamond
Member since May 05th 2011
79620 posts
Thu Sep-29-16 10:27 AM

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8. "where can i find a list of prisons striking? "
In response to Reply # 0


          

****************
TBH the fact that you're even a mod here fits squarely within Jag's narrative of OK-sanctioned aggression, bullying, and toxicity. *shrug*

  

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Moonlit_Force
Member since Oct 10th 2005
8643 posts
Thu Sep-29-16 12:46 PM

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9. "I'm hopeful that one outcome of this strike is..."
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

...more people drawing parallels between prisons and plantations.

  

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legsdiamond
Member since May 05th 2011
79620 posts
Thu Sep-29-16 12:53 PM

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10. "you really think that will change their view? "
In response to Reply # 9


          

****************
TBH the fact that you're even a mod here fits squarely within Jag's narrative of OK-sanctioned aggression, bullying, and toxicity. *shrug*

  

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Moonlit_Force
Member since Oct 10th 2005
8643 posts
Thu Sep-29-16 01:03 PM

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11. "Not everyone or even most people but..."
In response to Reply # 10


  

          

... I think it could serve as a wake-up call to some folks who would otherwise appear incapable of making the comparison.

I suspect some folks are just ignorant to this particular issue because it deals with criminals.

  

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Ted Gee Seal
Member since Apr 18th 2007
10091 posts
Thu Sep-29-16 01:29 PM

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12. "I wasn't aware of that until recently"
In response to Reply # 9


  

          

Free Market takes on an even more sinister meaning.

Just IMO though.

  

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