home.social

#prisonstrike — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #prisonstrike, aggregated by home.social.

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

    "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."

    scalawagmagazine.org/2026/02/w

    #FreeMichaelKimble #AnarchistPrisoner #Alabama #PrisonStrike

  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. “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
  4. "It’s been more than three days since Texas prisoners across the state began a hunger strike to protest indefinite solitary confinement, and the Texas Department of Criminal Justice has confirmed at least 72 people are still starving themselves.

    An activist working with the protesting men believes the number is closer to 120, down from the more than 300 she estimated began refusing food on Tuesday. Striking prisoners are medically evaluated daily, and doctors can force feed a prisoner whose condition worsens, according to prison spokesperson Amanda Hernandez."

    #Texas #PrisonStrike

    texastribune.org/2023/01/13/te

  5. "The strike has now entered its third week, and at least five facilities, each with around 7,000 prisoners, continue to participate. Alabama Department of Corrections (ADOC) has punished prisoners by drastically reducing their meals, essentially attempting to starve them off the strike." #PrisonStrike #ShutDownADOC2022 itsgoingdown.org/statements-al

  6. CW: prisons, politics

    The warzone is in every city and state: the front lines are in amerikan jails, prisons, detention centers, in the criminalization of poverty and homelessness.
    Everyone taking sides on #Iran but when it comes to battles for freedom in the US, which side are you on?
    #prisonstrike

  7. CW: prisons, politics

    TODAY!
    ---
    RT @[email protected]
    ⚡MONDAY ⚡ROUND 2⚡ for the hungerstrikers in solitary in NC
    Mon is Day 6!
    Get ur people. Make some calls!

    No sleep deprivation torture!
    Mandated rec time!
    Supply mandated notaries for legal filings!

    #prisonstrike

    incarceratedworkers.org/phone-
    twitter.com/IWW_IWOC/status/11

  8. CW: prisons, politics

    ⚡MONDAY ⚡ROUND 2⚡ for the hungerstrikers in solitary in NC
    Mon is Day 6!
    Get ur people. Make some calls!

    No sleep deprivation torture!
    Mandated rec time!
    Supply mandated notaries for legal filings!

    #prisonstrike

    incarceratedworkers.org/phone-

  9. CW: prisons, politics

    Alabama!
    "They're preparing for your future prisons to be filled with your children."
    ---
    RT @[email protected]
    youtu.be/ym-2z6k5k2c Check out this video made with the help of @freeworldnikos to spread the message of Alabama's prison struggles.
    #prisonstrike #SwiftJusticeInc #FAM #TimesUpADOC #TimesUpDOJ #UnheardVoicesOTCJ #UnheardVoicesOTCJ
    twitter.com/UNHEARDVOICES16/st

  10. CW: prisons, politics

    DAY 13 of the foodstrike inside Corcoran 3C.
    Anywhere from 900-1000 of the 1000 capacity unit are still refusing trays from the kitchen until GP/mainline prisoners get the kitchen jobs back.

    #prisonstrike

    ---
    RT @[email protected]
    UPDATE: Today is Day 5 of nearly 1000 ppl inside Corcoran 3C refusing food trays in protest of kitchen jobs being taken from GP prisoners and given to Protective Custody yard.

    BACKGROUND: 3 unit saw a ma…
    twitter.com/IWW_IWOC/status/11

  11. CW: prisons, politics

    mobile.twitter.com/IWW_IWOC/st
    ---
    RT @[email protected]
    CORCORAN 3C FOOD STRIKE
    Parallel to the above 2017 agreement was a deal struck btwn mainline reps and admin that all kitchen jobs would be theirs & they would cooperate with the move of +/- 1800 ppl

    This is the deal 3C is upholding and the warden is breaking 2/
    #prisonstrike
    twitter.com/IWW_IWOC/status/11

  12. CW: prisons, politics

    CORCORAN 3C FOOD STRIKE
    Parallel to the above 2017 agreement was a deal struck btwn mainline reps and admin that all kitchen jobs would be theirs & they would cooperate with the move of +/- 1800 ppl

    This is the deal 3C is upholding and the warden is breaking 2/
    #prisonstrike

  13. CW: prisons, politics

    "Everyone is refusing. Southerners,crips,bloods,woods,Asian, everyone"

    They want their jobs back and PCs not be allowed to prepare or possibly sabotage their food.

    All Corcoran 3C is surviving on one sealed "bag lunch" per day: bologna sandwich, 6 oz milk, fruit

    #prisonstrike

  14. CW: prisons, politics

    BREAKING: Approx 1000 ppl inside Corcoran 3C, a max unit in CA, enter their 3rd day refusing tray. A food strike across all racial lines.

    All their kitchen jobs were taken from them and given to Protective Custody prisoners.

    #prisonstrike

  15. CW: prisons, politics

    "Everybody deserves love, so why should you look at people different for who they love" says Melanie Quick, a prisoner at Shakopee who wore blue in solidarity with her trans and queer fellow prisoners.

    #Solidarity
    #PRIDE
    #prisonstrike

  16. CW: prisons, politics

    CALIFORNIA - In CDCr's Dept Operations Manual...

    The section on "inmate civil rights"? 1/2 of a page.

    The section on how to properly display a flag - 6 pages.

    #abolition
    #prisonstrike

  17. CW: prisons, politics

    Another "not-guilty" verdict in the Vaughn uprising.

    "...appeals to the state's "humanity" don't work, they aren't meant to work."

    #Vaughn #Vaughn17
    #prisonstrike

  18. CW: prisons, politics

    "Austerity" regimes intensifying in the US may well drive the rise of the chaingang again.

    #prisonstrike
    ---
    RT @[email protected]
    “There’s no way we can take care of our facilities, our roads, our ditches, if we didn't have inmate labor,” a former Gulf County commissioner said. “We could not tax our citizens enough...” public.tableau.com/views/Workf
    twitter.com/conarck/status/113

  19. CW: prisons, politics

    Important story.
    Good work by @[email protected] on the largely unstudied and unrecognized reliance on prisoner labor for public works projects and maintenance.

    Poor rural counties basically forcing prisoner labor to combat austerity.

    #prisonstrike
    ---
    RT @[email protected]
    THREAD: Florida prison labor d@[email protected] to the days of emancipation. Some things hardly change. Teams of incarcerated men — disproportionately black —…
    twitter.com/conarck/status/113

  20. CW: prisons, politics

    LESSON: When the sheriff offers y'all a tour of the jail to contain the outrage and protest.

    THREAD
    #prisonstrike
    ---
    RT @[email protected]

    twitter.com/AtlantaIWOC/status