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Title: Prison, Prison, Everywhere! Author: Anonymous Date: October, 2012 Language: en Topics: prison, anarchy, insurrection Source: Scanned from original
There is a place in this society where one is perpetually under
surveillance, where every movement is monitored and controlled, where
everyone is under suspicion except the police and their bosses, where
all are assumed to be criminals. I am speaking, of course, of prison..
Within the walls of prison there is no freedom of choice, no illusion of
democracy. There is only prison. Daily actions are regulated by strict
schedules and enforced by armed guards, the choice of when, where and
with whom to spend time completely taken away. Every action is
surveilled with suspicion. All individuality, all identity is destroyed
and replaced by that of prisoner, of criminal. Prison is the complete
realization of this societyâs need to isolate all of us from any real
interactions and force us into predefined roles. So long as the masses
are exploited and forced to submit to the laws of the few in power,
prison in some form will remain a necessary institution.
Prison exists to enforce the law, a set of regulations we are told
represent the values of society. We are forced to adopt these values as
our own when in reality they represent the behaviours required to
maintain the current social order. Existing laws are expanded and new
laws are created, intent to control our actions and gain more power over
our lives. If in acting on our desires we come into conflict with the
law, we are labelled as criminals.
For those of us struggling to create a different type of world in the
face of what this society offers, breaking the law may be a part of our
projects, forcing us to become outlaws and rebels.
For individuals who live on the margins of society, breaking the law may
be a necessary part of life. Every day people are arrested for stealing,
drug dealing, prostitution, sleeping outside and other acts of survival,
and this process is intensified in attempts to âclean up the streetsâ.
These individuals may or may not make a conscious choice to oppose this
society, but these illegal acts always put them at odds with those in
power.
Whether it is by consciously engaging in actions against the state and
capital, acts of survival or both, for an increasing number of us,
prison â the place where the outcasts of society are sent â is becoming
a reality.
But itâs still easy to think of prison as a separate place, something
that doesnât affect us when we arenât experiencing it directly. At worst
itâs a looming threat, something to avoid at all costs. And itâs true,
prison is a different place, a different kind of existence. I canât
pretend to know what prison is like. But in order to to ensure that we
donât deviate from our prescribed roles, this society must control and
monitor our behaviour. Prison is the most obvious and totalitarian form,
but it isnât the only one.
The mechanisms of control imposed on us are constantly expanding, and
they arenât hard to find. CCTV cameras monitoring public spaces, set
hours of operation in public parks, internet sites that collect our
personal information to hand over to whoever wants it, and the increase
of security and cops are just a few examples of how prisons are
expanding outwards, becoming a normal part of society. As control
expands, prison in itâs current physical form becomes less necessary â
house arrests and ankle transmitters used to monitor our arrested
comrades show that prison is quite capable of moving beyond four walls.
In Vancouver, the addition of fare gates and the huge increase of armed
cops and security cameras along public transit lines are obvious
manifestations of state control extending into our daily lives. The
gentrification of Woodwards in East Van, the transformation of community
space into commercial stores patrolled by security is another example.
Everything needs to be monitored or replaced by structures that can be.
This is all said to be for our protection, but in reality it is what
protects this society from us. We are all potential criminals in their
eyes. Any deviation from the set of social roles that maintain order,
any attempt to create our lives on our own terms need to be repressed by
this system. So control is expanded, externally in the form of
surveillance, data collection and policing, but also internally. When we
uphold laws as if they were our own values the state achieves the
ultimate form of control. When we have completely internalized the rules
of this society, when we we donât act on our desires because to do so
would cause us to break the law, when we form âcommunityâ watch and
policing programs that do the copsâ job for them (and when we blatantly
snitch on our family and friends with encouragement from the cops, as
happened after the Vancouver hockey riots in 2011), we are complicit in
the re-creation and expansion of prison in our daily lives. This is why
establishing alternative forms of law enforcement and punishment cannot
be a part of a radical and revolutionary response to prison. Such
institutions will never eradicate prison because they are based on the
same fundamental value â control. Even if prison were to be abolished,
without overturning the society that necessitates it it would just be
prison by another name and only benefit those in power by creating the
illusion of a more just society. As the revolutionary group Os
Cangaceiros wrote, âreform is repression by other means.â
I have chosen to place myself at odds with this society. I attempt,
whenever possible, to live my life on my own terms and this involves a
rejection of both the state and capital. This has put me in conflict
with the current social order and as such, the threat of prison is
always a possibility. For those of us who refuse to submit to the rule
of law, as well as for the individuals for whom it is not a choice,
prison is not just a distant place. It is a necessary condition of this
society that we experience every day.
My struggle against prison cannot be separated from my struggle against
the totality of this society and the cages that exist all around me.