
LIFE IN THE AMERICAN GULAG
Lasha Darkmoon/ Other Writers
Prisons are the prototypes for the future community at large. Life outside prison will soon resemble life in prison.
An edited abridgment by Lasha Darkmoon of Chris Hedges’ The Prison State of America.
Introductory note by Lasha Darkmoon
We all know that the economy of Stalin’s Judeo-Bolshevik terror state was based on slave labor in the Siberian gulags, with tens of millions of innocent people being incarcerated and worked to death.
We also know that Stalin’s Soviet Union was essentially a Jewish regime, and that not only top government officials but that those who ran and staffed the slave labor camps known as “gulags” were mostly Jews. Witness Lazar Kaganovich, the so-called “Wolf of the Kremlin”.
It would seem that the same system of cruel exploitation of the masses has now taken root in neo-bolshevik America, another country run by Jews, and that Jewish-owned corporations such as Goldman Sachs are helping to turn America into one vast gulag. This time it is a capitalist gulag, however, not a communist one.
There is another striking difference between the Soviet gulag system and its American counterpart: a concerted attempt is now being made in America not only to make life an exploitative hell for prisoners but to replicate those oppressive conditions within American society at large—by making life equally hellish for the teeming masses outside prison who are doing their best to survive in an Israelified police state.
We now have in America a totalitarian government, essentially run by Jews, in which the worst aspects of Communism have been combined with the worst aspects of Capitalism. Worse still, it has been cleverly disguised as a democracy. If there is one word to describe this system of misrule and organized chaos, based on the methodical enslavement of the masses in a vast prison state where even torture is freely practiced, it would be “hellocracy” — the rule of Satan.
(Piranesi)
“Life outside prison walls will soon resemble life in prison.”
Prisoners must pay the state for a 15-minute deathbed visit to an immediate family member. New Jersey forces a prisoner to reimburse the system for overtime wages paid to the two guards who accompany him or her, plus mileage cost. The charge can be as high as $945.04. It can take years to pay off a visit with a dying father or mother.
Corporations have privatized most of the prison functions once handled by governments. They run prison “commissaries” or stores. And since the prisoners have nowhere else to shop, they often jack up prices by as much as 100 percent. These corporations, some of the nation’s largest, pay little more than a dollar a day to prison laborers who work in for-profit prison industries. They feed like jackals off the prisoners.
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Our prison-industrial complex, which holds 2.3 million prisoners, or 25 percent of the world’s prison population, makes money by keeping prisons full. It demands bodies, regardless of color, gender or ethnicity.
Prisons are no longer a black-white issue. Prisons are a grotesque manifestation of corporate capitalism. Slavery is legal in prisons under the 13th Amendment of the US Constitution.
Note. Jews in the Soviet Union ran the gulags. In the United States, Jews are again prominent in the exploitation of the goyim masses through companies such as Goldman Sachs and other bankster corporations. (LD)
The three top for-profit prison corporations spent an estimated $45 million over a recent 10-year period for lobbying that is keeping the prison business flush. Private prison companies often sign state contracts that guarantee prison occupancy rates of 90 percent. If states fail to meet the quota they have to pay the corporations for the empty beds.
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The United States, from 1970 to 2005, increased its prison population by about 700 percent.
Prisoners earn, on average, $28 a month. Those incarcerated in for-profit prisons earn as little as 17 cents an hour.
A bar of Dove soap in 1996 cost New Jersey prisoners 97 cents. Today it costs $1.95, an increase of 101 percent. The white Reebok shoes that most prisoners wear, shoes that last about six months, cost about $45 a pair. Those who cannot afford the Reebok brand must buy, for $20, shoddy shoes with soles that shred easily.
In addition, prisoners are charged for visits to the infirmary and the dentist and for medications.
When strong family ties are retained, there are lower rates of recidivism and fewer parole violations. But that is not what the corporate architects of prisons want: high recidivism, now at over 60 percent, keeps the cages full. This is one reason, I think, why prisons make visitations from relatives humiliating and difficult. It is not uncommon for prisoners to tell their families—especially those that include small children traumatized by the security screening, long waits, body searches, clanging metal doors and verbal abuse by guards—not to visit.
Prisons are the prototypes for the future community at large—for the world outside the prison gates. They are emblematic of the disempowerment and exploitation that corporations seek to inflict on all workers. If corporate power continues to disembowel the country, life outside prison will soon resemble life in prison.