Commentary from
death row
Texas leveling system shows rise in repression
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Via Workers World News Service
Reprinted from the Nov. 13, 1997
issue of Workers World newspaper
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By Harvey Earvin
Huntsville, Texas
The newly instituted leveling system on death row in Texas under
which prisoners are classified in one of three categories—supposedly
based on their disciplinary record—is nothing but heightened repression.
It masquerades as a means to provide uniform rules and regulations
in managing male prisoners sentenced to death. But in truth it is
a reactionary response to prisoners’ efforts over the years to organize
themselves against cruel and inhuman treatment.
The Endeavor Project, the Lamp of Hope Project, and now Panthers
United for Revolutionary Education are just three examples of prisoners’
efforts to protect themselves and resist.
Any time prisoners, and even people on the outside—unions, women,
people of color, gays—begin to organize themselves across color
lines, the system devises counter-schemes to bring it to a fast
and abrupt halt.
The Texas death row leveling system is another of these, out of
a huge bag of trickery designed to dominate, subjugate and divide
prisoners. It’s no different from when businesses divide workers,
colleges divide students, and the ruling class divides the poor
masses by establishing lines of antagonism.
Before the leveling system, all death-row prisoners in Texas—except
for those classified as work-capable—were already confined to "administrative
segregation" status. In other words: lock-down.
Among all the lock-down cell blocks, Cell Block J-21 has been
the scene of the most cruel physical torture—and therefore the scene
of the most intense prisoner rebellions. Of the three existing prisoner
organizations, two were formed on J-21.
In response to the executions and physical abuse by the guards
there have been floods; fires; shouting, cursing and rattling of
bars; whole recreation groups refusing to rack up; individual prisoners
refusing to vacate the visiting area; and other forms of spontaneous
resistance.
All of this—chaos, confusion, frustration and general feelings
of helplessness on the part of the prisoners—was fun and recreation
for the prison guards until someone shouted, "Let’s organize!"
What was once chaotic was becoming structured. The prisoners of
Cell Block J-21—Black, brown and white—were coming together. Until
the leveling system came.
The prison administration began classifying the prisoners of Cell
Block J-21—not in accordance with the written Death Row Plan, but
by race and ethnicity, it seemed. Black and Mexican prisoners cried
racism.
And just as the administration had anticipated and intended, some
of the anger and frustration was misdirected toward white prisoners
who had absolutely nothing to do with how the Black and Mexican
prisoners, or themselves, were classified.
However, members of PURE along with some others clearly see the
prison administration’s grand scheme. They are attempting to awaken
others to how the system manufactures racism and uses it to serve
its own interests—both inside prisons and outside in the "free
world."
Racist torture
In the 1930s, President Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal—which included
Unemployment Insurance, welfare, the National Labor Relations Law,
etc.—was in fact a package of gains won by the people. These were
concessions forced by mass unity.
In the 1960s and 1970s, civil-rights and affirmative-action laws
were also gains won by the people. But today’s criminalization of
affirmative action is a grand counter-scheme. The ruling class has
carefully nurtured the notion of "reverse discrimination,"
which is an example of government deception at its best.
On a smaller scale, the Texas prisoners’ movement of the 1970s—which
culminated in the class-action civil lawsuit Ruiz vs. Estelle—exposed
the barbaric treatment of prisoners and won gains. These too were
concessions forced by mass unity.
The grand counter-scheme here is the manufactured fear of crime.
Public paranoia about crime far outpaces the actual incidence of
crime. This in turn helps justify prison guards beating, disabling
and murdering prisoners.
The videotaped use of attack dogs, stun guns and clubs against
inmates in a Brazoria County jail 60 miles south of Houston, which
made national news last summer, was no aberration, although those
who uphold the system will swear it was.
Texas death-row prison guards consistently get away with assaulting
prisoners: slamming them to the floor while they are handcuffed
from the back and unable to catch themselves or break their fall.
Until the masses of people come to see and appreciate prisoners’
movements for what they truly are—legitimate human struggles, human
beings demanding to be treated as such in spite of their prisoner
status—prisoners will forever be helplessly tortured. And if released,
they will continue to return home more damaged and angrier than
ever.
Of all the symbols of power in the United States—the eagle, the
Capitol, the dollar bill, the Pentagon—prisons are the highest symbols
of power and repression. And the most corrupt and hypocritical of
all are the prison systems that hail themselves before the world
as humane examples of legal and moral fairness.
All along, behind closed doors and in secret, they beat and torture
their captives for sport.
The writer is a death-row prisoner and the prime minister
of Panthers United for Revolutionary Education.
The levels of hell
Some of the sharp distinctions among the new levels on Texas death
row:
Commissary:
Level 3 cannot purchase anything at all from the commissary. Not
soap, deodorant, toothpaste, shampoo. Nothing.
Level 2 can purchase one each of these items. Level 1 can purchase
the above items, plus canned goods, pastries, sodas, ice cream and
the like.
Visitation:
Level 3 is entitled to only one visit per month—zero visits if
the prisoner is in solitary confinement.
Level 2 is entitled to two visits per month. Level 1 is entitled
to a weekly visit.
Recreation:
Level 3 is entitled to one hour of recreation three days per week.
The prisoner must be alone during the recreation. There is no socializing.
Level 2 is entitled to one hour of recreation four days a week,
also alone, also without socializing.
Level 1 is entitled to two hours of recreation five days per week,
in small groups. An average of six per recreation group.
- END -
(Copyright Workers World Service: Permission to reprint granted
if source is cited. For more information contact Workers World,
55 W. 17 St., NY,NY 10011; via e-mail: ww@workers.org. For subscription
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