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How Inmates Tried To Coordinate A Nationwide Prison Strike

Note: On the 45th anniversary of the Attica Prison Uprising, a nationwide prison strike began with organizers calling for a nationwide protest against “modern-day slavery.”  The Attica uprising was about the better conditions at the Attica Correctional Facility in New York.

Cell walls don’t keep them from posting on Facebook and Twitter.

Mother Jones reported: “This is a call to end slavery,” reads the official call for the strike, which coincides with the 45th anniversary of the Attica prison uprising. “They cannot run these facilities without us.” Though there have been prison strikes in the past, including one in Texas in April and one in Alabama in May, this will be one of the first times that inmates have tried to coordinate a strike on a national level.

Noelle Hanrahan of Prison Radio said at the beginning of the strike: “Today all across America, in at least 24 states, prisoners have called for a work strike. It might not be obvious, but the fact is that prisons are actually run by prisoners. Prisoners do the vast majority of the work it takes to run the facilities. If they slow down or stop providing labor — the actual caging of humans would be impossible. Today prisoners all across the country will express their self determination with a historic show of ‘convict class solidarity’ in a nationwide coordinated work strike.”

Today is symbolic for an oft-forgotten group of Americans: Prisoners. 45 years ago, those locked away in the Attica Correctional Facility in western New York state went from protesting for more rights to a full-blown riot put down by force. In recognition, the incarcerated across America are rallying to protest the injustice of prison labor, which could become the largest mass-strike in US prison history. But how did they coordinate so many people using only written letters and telephones as restricted by law? Answer: they got around it and connected with each other  and the outside world  over Facebook, Twitter and YouTube.

The main obstacle is obvious: Organizing protests from within is against every prison’s rules, as Wired reports. It’s also pretty difficult to sneak by any facility’s staff, since letters and phone calls can be read and reviewed. But communicating online is far more private, and try as they might to stop the flow, prisons can’t keep internet-connected cell phones from being smuggled in by visitors and guards. Despite policies preventing inmates at many facilities from having a social media presence or computer access entirely, some manage themselves or get their families to post for them.

This lets prisoners connect directly with folks, like members of the Free Alabama Movement are doing on Facebook and Twitter to rally support against prison labor exploitation, reports Wired. But that presence is also visible to prison staff, who can submit takedown requests to the social media titans. Sometimes, it’s the victims of crimes alerting correctional facilities of an inmate’s online activity. Whether prisoners’ pages are taken down is up to the social media companies, which, as private organizations, have the power to decide whether prisoners should be able to use their networks.

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