Green Party of Santa Clara County

Author Archives: Matthew Sahagian

Injustice for All

Category : blog , Politics

The United States incarcerates ~25% of the world’s prison population despite only having ~5% of the world’s population.  In the 35 years between 1972 and 2007, the rate of incarceration has ballooned from 161 to 767 per 100,000.

The historical circumstances which have led to these frightening figures are wide and varied.  From increases in the number of for-profit prisons, to the excesses of our military-industrial complex fueling local police departments, we have seen how the profit motive, just as in healthcare, has eroded institutional barriers previously aimed at securing the public interest.  Compounding this further is the simple fact that the United States still reserves the right to enslave those convicted of a crime under the 13th amendment to our constitution.  The result is not merely an increase in the number of incarcerated individuals, but an increase in the brutality employed by the system that aims to incarcerate them.

As prison populations increase, the physical constraints both in terms of living conditions and protocols increase alongside it.  Solitary confinement, though always a means of punishment and torture becomes mere economics.  The shackling of pregnant women while giving birth becomes a savings in the cost of labor for a system with fewer guards dispersed across larger inmate populations.  And the use of violence as a means to suppress any behavior which does not exactly correspond to the daily regiments of transport, feeding, and labor is little more than an application of the age-old techniques of the assembly line.

All of these facts, whether admitted to or not, attest not merely to the social crises which are endemic to capitalist systems, but also the economic ones.  In a system which requires some portion of the population to constitute a reserve army of the unemployed, lest the worker demand for even the most meager wages were to disappear, some number of that population is forced to turn towards different forms of employment.  Enter the war on drugs, the continuing criminalization of sex workers, and, of course, undocumented immigrant labor.

In periods of prolonged economic stagnation, however, it becomes increasingly difficult to rely on the past divides in our social fabric to justify such a system.  The correlation between poverty and crime is well known.  With stagnating wages, more frequent attacks on social services, and growing wealth inequality, it’s not enough that black and brown people face disproportionate numbers of arrests or such wide disparities in sentencing.  Instead, society must also assure a larger and larger percentage of the population that they are not like “the other.”

We must dehumanize.

Whether it’s a first lady referring to black youths as “super predators” or the commander-in-chief telling a nation that it’s “OK to take away the hand,” the need to portray those most heavily targeted by our legal system as something not human or not deserving of fundamental human rights is essential to the maintenance of a prison system at the scale and scope of the United States’.  Only by continuing to remind those outside of the system that those inside the system “deserve it,” can it continue to go unchecked.  As soon as we recognize our common humanity, it becomes possible to see “the other” as us.  It becomes possible to demand change.

For this reason as well as for all the detailed criminal justice reforms supported in the Green Party platform, members of the Santa Clara County Green Party will be joining California Prison Focus and Rise Up for Justice on Saturday, August 19th to join in the Millions for Prisoners Human Rights March.  For more information, see: https://www.facebook.com/events/441574739560568/


Providing Some Context in the Age of Trump

Category : blog , Politics

In the wake of the election of Donald J. Trump as President of the United States of America, one of the first executive memorandums to don the signature of The Don was the one that gave express support to the previously stalled Dakota Access and Keystone XL (TransCanada) pipelines.  In any other context, any foreign power which threatened to poison the water supply of millions of people would be labeled a terrorist organization and rightly so.  And even in the case of the Dallas, Texas headquartered Energy Transfer Partners, one has to ask, what power could be more foreign to working and oppressed people than the power of transnational capital?

Terrorism, indeed, goes by another name in this country—business.

Today, many of us stand strongly united in our opposition to the president, but let us not so quickly forget the crimes of the old.  When water protectors from all over this country rose up in North Dakota, it was Obama who held that office.  He watched and sat silent for weeks on end while police and private security forces brutalized native people and their allies in what, at times, mimicked the suppression of black activists fighting for civil rights in the south.  When finally the pressure had risen to a boiling point, he did just enough to assuage the immediate concerns of those on the ground; just enough to make thousands of people believe they could break from their resistance;  just enough to buy the time required for Energy Transfer Partners and the state of North Dakota to fortify their offensive.

It is time we recognize that “just enough” is no longer enough.

The system of global capital and its requisite political institutions have fallen into near complete decay.  While it has always been a system of profit over planet, profit over peace, and profit over people, neither the people, nor the planet, nor the relative peace in which we live can continue to bear the weight of it.  The human race is on a collision course with its own self-extermination and global capital has the wheel.

However much Trump may seek to accelerate us along that path, the tracks were laid at the very founding of this nation.  We are a nation birthed in genocide and slavery.  The dominance of our country on the international stage arose not from the cooperative and ingenious nature of its population, but in the crucibles of two great imperialist wars.  Today, that dominance is sustained through never ending war and a political system which convinces millions of people that their only choices are between the party of wall street and the party of big oil.

These problems are not the product of the last 70 days. The last 70 days is the product of these problems.  We have a system so failed and so rapidly decaying that in order for working people to feel like they were no longer handing their money to conmen, they thought they’d give the mob boss a try.  It is for these reasons that although many of us stand united in opposition against Trump, we must go further.  Insofar as people continue to accept that we must vote for the lesser of two evils, not only will we always get evil, but there will always be an incentive for the lesser evil to fan the flames from which the greater evil is born.

Featured Image Source: https://www.flickr.com/photos/donkeyhotey/25977579392


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