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  1. “We Are Striking a Blow at the State:” The Alabama Prisoners Work Strike

    by Michael Kimble February 24, 2026

    When prisoners rebel and demand to be treated as human beings, we are not just fighting inhumane living conditions and shitty food. We are striking a blow at the state, which maintains the situation of slavery and super-exploitation—by which each of us are robbed of the fruits of our labor every day.

    Work strikes or “shutdowns,” as we like to call them down here in Alabama, are also geared toward consciousness-raising of prisoners as an oppressed class; and by refusing to work for free (which is slavery), we are asserting our power as workers and as human beings, thereby challenging the view that prisoner labor is free and exploitable.

    The 13th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution made slavery and involuntary servitude illegal unless one has been duly convicted of a crime and ratified by Congress on December 6, 1865, which merely removed the ownership of slaves from the province of the individual citizen to that of the state, which then became the sole owner of other human beings (or slaves).

    Alabama was the last state in the South to end convict leasing in 1928. Before ending convict leasing, the state hired out prisoner labor to the lumber yards, mines, and cotton mills. In 1883, about 10 percent of Alabama’s total revenue came from convict leasing. In 1898, almost 73 percent. In 1922-1926, net profits from leasing and state-run mines exceeded $3 million.

    In order to continue to exploit Black prisoner labor and profit from it, Thomas E. Kilby, the governor of Alabama, ordered the construction of the Kilby prison and even named it after himself. This new prison was to be the most advanced prison in the South, with the exception of the federal prison in Atlanta, styled as an industrial prison.

    It was intended to house prisoners from the lumber yards, mines, and cotton mills, which would all eventually be moved inside the prison itself. The prisoners manufactured cotton to make shirts that would then be sold on the market.

    Just as slaves in the 16th, 17th, and 18th centuries challenged their dehumanization and exploitation via work stoppages and slowdowns, letting the crops rot in the fields, so too do prisoners in this day and time. Alabama has a long history of shutting shit down! In the 1970s, we had Inmates for Action (IFA), which organized a number of work stoppages to demand an improvement to their conditions.

    We see work strikes as a weapon to be used to hit ’em where it hurts. There are many different strategies and tactics that prison rebels use, and work stoppages are just one of them. We organize around the knowledge that prison is slavery and super-exploitation of our labor power. Work stoppages are often violent due to the arena and conditions that prisoners are forced to maneuver in.

    Prisons are, by nature, violent places. The guards are armed to the teeth with pepper spray, batons, sticks, knives, handcuffs, gas, and guns, and they use extreme violence as a mechanism of control. Moreover, organizers of work stoppages must navigate the different groups: gangs, shot-callers, influencers, and dope boys—and believe me, each of them has their own agendas.

    Alabama has a long history of shutting shit down!

    You have to get past the “pig thinking” in some of these guys who see any challenge to their captors as merely a provocation for the guards, riot squads, and CERT teams to search and confiscate their cell phones, drugs, and weapons—and to incite further harassment and beatings.

    That’s how they ultimately control prisoners: through their fear of losing something. And it can get violent for those who attempt to break the strike and report to their slave jobs. These people are regarded as strike-breakers (scabs), and rightfully so.

    For those out there in minimum custody, you can play a part by doing what’s in your capacity to do. You can make donations and phone calls demanding that slavery, the death penalty, and life without the possibility of parole be abolished. You can take to the streets. Or you can get creative and do what the George Jackson Brigades did in the mid-1970s in support of striking prisoners.

    Check out the radical histories in the U.S. and you just may find yourself. Here in Alabama prisons, we are going on a work strike starting February 8, 2026, to protest forced labor (slavery), the Habitual Offender Act (three strikes law), Life Without the Possibility of Parole, and ultimately call for the total abolition of the system of caging people.

    We are exercising our agency and our right to fight back. What’s wrong with that?

    Donate to Michael Kimble here.

    Follow Michael Kimble and get involved in supporting him here.

    Print and distribute flyers uplifting the strike here, and access the list of demands, action items, and a syllabus on the history of resistance in Alabama here.

    Source: https://scalawagmagazine.org/2026/02/we-are-striking-a-blow-at-the-state-the-alabama-prisoners-work-strike/

    abolitionmedia.noblogs.org/?p= #alabama #AnarchistPrisoners #michaelKimble #northAmerica #PrisonAbolition #prisonStrike #prisonStruggle #slavery
  2. “We Are Striking a Blow at the State:” The Alabama Prisoners Work Strike

    by Michael Kimble February 24, 2026

    When prisoners rebel and demand to be treated as human beings, we are not just fighting inhumane living conditions and shitty food. We are striking a blow at the state, which maintains the situation of slavery and super-exploitation—by which each of us are robbed of the fruits of our labor every day.

    Work strikes or “shutdowns,” as we like to call them down here in Alabama, are also geared toward consciousness-raising of prisoners as an oppressed class; and by refusing to work for free (which is slavery), we are asserting our power as workers and as human beings, thereby challenging the view that prisoner labor is free and exploitable.

    The 13th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution made slavery and involuntary servitude illegal unless one has been duly convicted of a crime and ratified by Congress on December 6, 1865, which merely removed the ownership of slaves from the province of the individual citizen to that of the state, which then became the sole owner of other human beings (or slaves).

    Alabama was the last state in the South to end convict leasing in 1928. Before ending convict leasing, the state hired out prisoner labor to the lumber yards, mines, and cotton mills. In 1883, about 10 percent of Alabama’s total revenue came from convict leasing. In 1898, almost 73 percent. In 1922-1926, net profits from leasing and state-run mines exceeded $3 million.

    In order to continue to exploit Black prisoner labor and profit from it, Thomas E. Kilby, the governor of Alabama, ordered the construction of the Kilby prison and even named it after himself. This new prison was to be the most advanced prison in the South, with the exception of the federal prison in Atlanta, styled as an industrial prison.

    It was intended to house prisoners from the lumber yards, mines, and cotton mills, which would all eventually be moved inside the prison itself. The prisoners manufactured cotton to make shirts that would then be sold on the market.

    Just as slaves in the 16th, 17th, and 18th centuries challenged their dehumanization and exploitation via work stoppages and slowdowns, letting the crops rot in the fields, so too do prisoners in this day and time. Alabama has a long history of shutting shit down! In the 1970s, we had Inmates for Action (IFA), which organized a number of work stoppages to demand an improvement to their conditions.

    We see work strikes as a weapon to be used to hit ’em where it hurts. There are many different strategies and tactics that prison rebels use, and work stoppages are just one of them. We organize around the knowledge that prison is slavery and super-exploitation of our labor power. Work stoppages are often violent due to the arena and conditions that prisoners are forced to maneuver in.

    Prisons are, by nature, violent places. The guards are armed to the teeth with pepper spray, batons, sticks, knives, handcuffs, gas, and guns, and they use extreme violence as a mechanism of control. Moreover, organizers of work stoppages must navigate the different groups: gangs, shot-callers, influencers, and dope boys—and believe me, each of them has their own agendas.

    Alabama has a long history of shutting shit down!

    You have to get past the “pig thinking” in some of these guys who see any challenge to their captors as merely a provocation for the guards, riot squads, and CERT teams to search and confiscate their cell phones, drugs, and weapons—and to incite further harassment and beatings.

    That’s how they ultimately control prisoners: through their fear of losing something. And it can get violent for those who attempt to break the strike and report to their slave jobs. These people are regarded as strike-breakers (scabs), and rightfully so.

    For those out there in minimum custody, you can play a part by doing what’s in your capacity to do. You can make donations and phone calls demanding that slavery, the death penalty, and life without the possibility of parole be abolished. You can take to the streets. Or you can get creative and do what the George Jackson Brigades did in the mid-1970s in support of striking prisoners.

    Check out the radical histories in the U.S. and you just may find yourself. Here in Alabama prisons, we are going on a work strike starting February 8, 2026, to protest forced labor (slavery), the Habitual Offender Act (three strikes law), Life Without the Possibility of Parole, and ultimately call for the total abolition of the system of caging people.

    We are exercising our agency and our right to fight back. What’s wrong with that?

    Donate to Michael Kimble here.

    Follow Michael Kimble and get involved in supporting him here.

    Print and distribute flyers uplifting the strike here, and access the list of demands, action items, and a syllabus on the history of resistance in Alabama here.

    Source: https://scalawagmagazine.org/2026/02/we-are-striking-a-blow-at-the-state-the-alabama-prisoners-work-strike/

    abolitionmedia.noblogs.org/?p= #alabama #AnarchistPrisoners #michaelKimble #northAmerica #PrisonAbolition #prisonStrike #prisonStruggle #slavery
  3. #music #musicsky #BestOf #Top100 #BestOf2024 🎶🎸🥁😎🔊🔊🔊 #powerpop #indiepop #indierock 100 Days of sharing my Favorite Songs Released In 2024! (Day 43 🎶) – "The Eraser" by The Midnight Callers youtu.be/KfOoEXh59VU

    "The Eraser" | The Midnight Ca...

  4. In honour of his birthday, let this EPIC speech by the late great Charlie Chaplin - a speech that is almost 85 YEARS OLD - perfectly captured the state of our rapidly deteriorating nation.

    From The Great Dictator - Oct. 1940
    youtu.be/J7GY1Xg6X20?si=pPbs_j

    #unite #resist #antifascist #maga #trump #peace #charliechaplain #democracy

  5. In honour of his birthday, let this EPIC speech by the late great Charlie Chaplin - a speech that is almost 85 YEARS OLD - perfectly captured the state of our rapidly deteriorating nation.

    From The Great Dictator - Oct. 1940
    youtu.be/J7GY1Xg6X20?si=pPbs_j

    #unite #resist #antifascist #maga #trump #peace #charliechaplain #democracy

  6. In honour of his birthday, let this EPIC speech by the late great Charlie Chaplin - a speech that is almost 85 YEARS OLD - perfectly captured the state of our rapidly deteriorating nation.

    From The Great Dictator - Oct. 1940
    youtu.be/J7GY1Xg6X20?si=pPbs_j

    #unite #resist #antifascist #maga #trump #peace #charliechaplain #democracy

  7. In honour of his birthday, let this EPIC speech by the late great Charlie Chaplin - a speech that is almost 85 YEARS OLD - perfectly captured the state of our rapidly deteriorating nation.

    From The Great Dictator - Oct. 1940
    youtu.be/J7GY1Xg6X20?si=pPbs_j

    #unite #resist #antifascist #maga #trump #peace #charliechaplain #democracy

  8. 3 Things Blues Fans Should Be Thankful For in 2022

    It is that wonderful time of year in the United States when we gather together and give thanks for what we have been fortunate to receive over the last year. To look back on what has happened and find the good in what may even be the darkest of are...

    Read more:
    thehockeywriters.com/st-louis-

    #StLouisBlues #CalleRosen #DougArmstrong #JordanBinnington #ThomasGreiss
    #NHL #Hockey

  9. Does anyone know how to install drivers on ?

  10. #Signal should definitely implement blocking of unknown callers #imho. That would definitely enhance #security and minimize the risk of #zeroclick #attacks, afaik. @signalapp 🙏

    And Imho this should also be implemented macrumors.com/2025/10/17/whats

    Oh I forgot Signal already has a limit 😅

    Defcon demonstrated that the unseen spam can pose severe #privacy & #security issues.

    heise.de/en/news/What-WhatsApp

    Btw I'm aware that molly has this but not every regular user wants molly 💡

  11. Council issues warning after rise in dodgy landscape and roofing cold callers

    Officials say cold callers have been knocking on doors across the county in recent weeks, persuading some residents to hand over large sums of money for jobs that were either left unfinished or carried out to a poor standard.

    Residents urged to stay vigilant

    The council says the increase in complaints has prompted a fresh warning to communities, with householders advised to take their time before agreeing to any work and to be wary of high‑pressure tactics.

    Cllr Aled Vaughan Owen, Cabinet Member for Business and Consumer Affairs, said:

    “We want to ensure our residents are fully aware of the risks posed by rogue traders and are equipped with the knowledge to protect themselves. If you are approached by cold callers or have concerns about work being carried out on your property, please contact us or Citizens Advice immediately.”

    Trusted traders scheme

    The authority is encouraging residents to use its Buy With Confidence scheme to find vetted local businesses, and to report any suspicious activity to the Citizens Advice Consumer Service.

    Officials also reminded householders that contracts signed at home may carry a 14‑day cooling‑off period, giving people time to reconsider.

    Community response

    The council is asking residents to share the warning with family, friends and neighbours, particularly those who may be more vulnerable to doorstep scams.

    Related stories from Swansea Bay News

    Port Talbot trader branded ‘epitome of a rogue trader’ after probe
    Trading Standards investigation exposes dishonest practices in Port Talbot.

    Three rogue traders from same family prosecuted
    Family members sentenced after carrying out poor quality driveway and home improvement work.

    Carmarthenshire rogue builder jailed after £30k fraud
    Builder sentenced for defrauding customers of more than £30,000.

    Rogue trader jailed for 32 months after targeting pensioners
    Court hears how elderly residents were pressured into unnecessary roofing work.

    Ammanford building and landscaping rogue trader prosecuted
    Council takes action against trader offering poor quality building and landscaping services.

    #Carmarthenshire #CarmarthenshireCouncil #CarmarthenshireCountyCouncil #CitizensAdvice #coldCaller #cowboyBuilder #doorstepScam #landscaper #rogueTrader #roofingContractor

  12. How would you suggest fighting robocalls and phone spam?

    Friends in the US are reporting that over 45 of the past 50 calls they've received are robocalls, telemarketers, hang-ups, misleadingly-identified, or otherwise smell strongly of fraud.

    STIR/SHAKEN was rolled out two years ago and has quite obviously failed. See: theverge.com/2021/6/30/2255753

    I'm looking for systemic solutions here, not personal mitigations. "I've stopped using the phone and am now only communicating by Ansible" may suit you very well, but it doesn't address the billions of people who do have directly-addressable voice coms as mobile or landline service.

    Examples of systemic solutions:

    Think regulation, making global changes to software or hardware, changing switching and call handling systems, or market-based interventions, such as:

    • Bonding callers and telcos. Spam calls would generate compensation from the telco to the subscriber. Telcos would bond for network interconnects, failure to maintain low-spam-call SLAs would forfeit bond.
    • Direct reporting from all phone systems (mobile, VOIP, or landline) of spam calls.
    • Expanded phone numbers. A sparsely-populated address space would make random war-dialing less viable, individuals might provide distinct numbers to each individual contact. (Organisations couldn't fully rely on this but might in part.)

    Things of that nature.

    NOT "I downloaded this app and use it on my pocket spy device."

    Boosts very much welcomed.

    #tobocalls #PhoneSpam #DeathOfTelephony #regulation

  13. How would you suggest fighting robocalls and phone spam?

    Friends in the US are reporting that over 45 of the past 50 calls they've received are robocalls, telemarketers, hang-ups, misleadingly-identified, or otherwise smell strongly of fraud.

    STIR/SHAKEN was rolled out two years ago and has quite obviously failed. See: theverge.com/2021/6/30/2255753

    I'm looking for systemic solutions here, not personal mitigations. "I've stopped using the phone and am now only communicating by Ansible" may suit you very well, but it doesn't address the billions of people who do have directly-addressable voice coms as mobile or landline service.

    Examples of systemic solutions:

    Think regulation, making global changes to software or hardware, changing switching and call handling systems, or market-based interventions, such as:

    • Bonding callers and telcos. Spam calls would generate compensation from the telco to the subscriber. Telcos would bond for network interconnects, failure to maintain low-spam-call SLAs would forfeit bond.
    • Direct reporting from all phone systems (mobile, VOIP, or landline) of spam calls.
    • Expanded phone numbers. A sparsely-populated address space would make random war-dialing less viable, individuals might provide distinct numbers to each individual contact. (Organisations couldn't fully rely on this but might in part.)

    Things of that nature.

    NOT "I downloaded this app and use it on my pocket spy device."

    Boosts very much welcomed.

    #tobocalls #PhoneSpam #DeathOfTelephony #regulation

  14. How would you suggest fighting robocalls and phone spam?

    Friends in the US are reporting that over 45 of the past 50 calls they've received are robocalls, telemarketers, hang-ups, misleadingly-identified, or otherwise smell strongly of fraud.

    STIR/SHAKEN was rolled out two years ago and has quite obviously failed. See: theverge.com/2021/6/30/2255753

    I'm looking for systemic solutions here, not personal mitigations. "I've stopped using the phone and am now only communicating by Ansible" may suit you very well, but it doesn't address the billions of people who do have directly-addressable voice coms as mobile or landline service.

    Examples of systemic solutions:

    Think regulation, making global changes to software or hardware, changing switching and call handling systems, or market-based interventions, such as:

    • Bonding callers and telcos. Spam calls would generate compensation from the telco to the subscriber. Telcos would bond for network interconnects, failure to maintain low-spam-call SLAs would forfeit bond.
    • Direct reporting from all phone systems (mobile, VOIP, or landline) of spam calls.
    • Expanded phone numbers. A sparsely-populated address space would make random war-dialing less viable, individuals might provide distinct numbers to each individual contact. (Organisations couldn't fully rely on this but might in part.)

    Things of that nature.

    NOT "I downloaded this app and use it on my pocket spy device."

    Boosts very much welcomed.

    #tobocalls #PhoneSpam #DeathOfTelephony #regulation