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Re: violent protests by ecopilgrim 20 March 2001 16:56 UTC |
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On Sun, 18 Mar 2001 15:49:35 -0500 "Timothy Comeau" <tcomeau45@hotmail.com> writes: <Onca again, protests have occured over globalisation, and the police have been accused of using excessive violence. But as we all know, it's not just protests over globalisation where this occurs: it seems to occur whenever and wherever a protest happens in the so called Western world. What is going on? How come the cops always seem to overeact? What are they being told about left wing protestors?> With little awareness that it has happened, the U.S. has become a police state with our freedoms increasingly eroded in the name of globalization which benefits the elites. Local police forces are a part of the larger world police force. In the U.S. 25% of all African American men are now housed in prisons; many of them for minor drug infractions which harm no one except the user. At the same time, prison business has become 'big business' as it has become privatised. Prison construction brings in some money to local economies while at the same time putting the 'bucks' in private developer's pockets. The prisons also offer other opportunities for employment and income generating for local communities, e.g. prisoners must be fed and guarded and both tasks open up avenues for income generation. It is interesting to note that prison guards generally make more than do teachers and it costs anywhere from $40,000 to $60,000 annually to house a prisoner -- the same amount that it would cost to send someone to college for a year. Yet prison incarceration offers litle or no hope for education or rehabilitation, only punishment which may not even fit the crime. Increasingly, large manufacturers are also using 'prison labor' to manufacture products through contracting with prison management to pay prisoners as little as $0.50 an hour to work on assembly lines in the prisons. Thus allowing the undercutting of costs small businesses must pay in order to produce the same products. Prison management says it must do this in order to pay for 'housing' its inmates, but as tax payers foot the bill for prison upkeep and warehousing, this seems to be 'double-dipping' with the proceeds lining the pockets of prison management while at the same time competing with small business. One benefit of this practice to prisoners is that they may acquire skills training which they previously have not had access to and which may permit them outside employment upon release. But another factor here is that prisoners, under the 'Three Strikes Law,' may be serving lifetime sentences for what could amount to minor infractions. Nevertheless, it is incumbent upon the police force to keep the prisons full and the prison as a big business growing and expanding. This can only be done thru increasing the numbers of people incarcerated. Since protestors threaten the stranglehold of the elites on the economy and ability to push the American model forward thru globalization, they present good targets for imprisonment also. And yes, we may see some who become 'martyrs' like the students at Kent State who were gunned down while protesting. But I have also been told by some of these protestors that they are willing to lay down their lives in the name of freedom and democracy which is seriously being eroded around the world. If you read the few valid reports that are available on the protests that are increasingly taking place against the WTO, IMF, WB, you cannot help but know that the protestors have been demonstrating peacefully for the most part -- it is the police force that is becoming exceedingly brutal as the protests escalate in number and size. It is our duty, as citizens of the world, to seek the truth and to report it and support it -- not shy away from it in fear. If we do not, we will all become enslaved. marguerite Marguerite Hampton Executive Director - Turtle Island Institute EcoPilgrim@juno.com http://tii-kokopellispirit.org
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