Black Agenda Report
Black Agenda Report
News, commentary and analysis from the black left.

  • Home
  • Africa
  • African America
  • Education
  • Environment
  • International
  • Media and Culture
  • Political Economy
  • Radio
  • US Politics
  • War and Empire

Atlanta Journal-Constitution and New York Times Twist GA Prison Strike into a Scare Headline & Profit Opportunity
Hugh Esco
05 Jan 2011
🖨️ Print Article

Where most of us saw poor people reaching across lines that divided them to take a courageous stand against long odds, corporate media see something else....

Atlanta Journal-Constitution and New York Times Twist GA Prison Strike into a Fearful & Profitable Opportunity

by Hugh Esco

The Prison industry and their corporate media seem to be paying attention to the lessons to be drawn from last month's strike action in Georgia's prisons. They're just the wrong lessons. Where most of us are inspired by the idea of folks standing up together in solidarity for their own human rights, the media see a chance to jack the fear, and assist the prison industry in creating yet another new profit center.

Last week a commercial advertisement masquerading as a get-tough-on-prisoners op-ed appeared on the Editorial page of the Cox Communications's Atlanta area daily, the Atlanta Journal Constitution. It called smart phones in the hands of prisoners, “the most lethal weapon” inside the walls. The op-ed's author, a Mr. Bittner, is part of ITT Defense, a vendor that peddles cell-phone countermeasures to prisons, and which would like to expand its market. It was of course immediately picked and redistributed by the advertising supported prison industry CorrectionsOne.com website. That site exists to "provide Correctional officers with information and resources that enable them to keep their facility a safe and controlled environment"

This weekend, the New York Times joined the chorus, employing Mr. Bittner's “most lethal weapon” metaphor, and explaining that the system Bittner sells is being used in state prisons in Mississippi. Twisting the nonviolent strike of Georgia prisoners into a fearful threat to public security is quite a stretch, by the NY Times did just that. They barely acknowledge the economic interests of their sources for selling monopolized phone service which contraband cell phones compete with. The Times is nothing, if not about business, and this is, as the article says, "a pure business opportunity".

Prisons are accustomed to operating in the dark, abusing their captive population with impunity. If contraband cell phones in the hands of prisoners raise the possibility of bringing the abuses of the prison state to light, they are indeed a threat to business as usual. But it's bad business. The prisoners in this case are whistle blowers, exposing governmental wrongdoing that takes place in the name of all Georgia citizens, and standing up for their own human dignity in the bargain. The prisoners are challenging us to be more human, not less humane.

They stood up against fearful odds, reaching across lines of race and religion. The Atlanta Journal-Constitution and the New York Times would divide us along the same old lines. But it's not working as well as they'd like. More and more ordinary people are coming to see the Georgia 37, the prisoners identified by the state as possible leaders of the strike, as courageous whistleblowers. The state earlier agreed to grant access to these prisoners, and we hope they keep their word.

Where the Atlanta Journal-Constitution and the New York Times see a get-tough, crackdown opportunity to reinforce the ideology of mass incarceration, and where contractors see bigger profits, we can choose to see the humanity of prisoners and the growing inhumanity of mass incarceration. The prisoners, with their limited freedom of movement, of speech, and of action, with their limited education and means, did what they could. They are challenging us on the outside to be as courageous, as humane, as far-sighted as they are. The question is, whether we're up to it.

Hugh Esco is secretary of the Georgia Green Party, and one of the principals of Campaign Foundations, an internet telephony and strategic communications firm. He can be reached at hesco(at)greens.org.

Do you need and appreciate Black Agenda Report articles? Please click on the DONATE icon, and help us out, if you can.


More Stories


  • NY Panther 21
    Dhoruba bin-Wahad
    55th Anniversary of the NY Panther 21 Case
    03 Apr 2024
    The trial of the New York Panther 21 was the moment in the Black liberation movement that ushered in an era of intensified state repression and violence and increasingly aggressive tactics…
  • Uhuru
    Penny Hess
    Chairman Omali Yeshitela, Uhuru 3 put state on trial in fightback against bogus charges
    03 Apr 2024
    Three members of the Uhuru Movement were recently indicted on charges related to operating as "unregistered foreign agents." This attack has huge implications for free speech everywhere.
  • Bassirou Diomaye Faye
    Abayomi Azikiwe
    Senegal Elects New President
    03 Apr 2024
    After months of social unrest, the youngest leader in the West African state’s history will take office pledging a progressive program.
  • Chicago Alliance Against Racist and Political Repression
    Black Agenda Radio with Margaret Kimberley
    Black and Brown Coalition for Palestine Meets with South African Foreign Minister
    29 Mar 2024
    We hear from a Black and Brown coalition in Chicago about their meeting with minister Naledi Pandor of South Africa and their mobilizations for solidarity with Palestine.
  • Black Agenda Radio
    Black Agenda Radio with Margaret Kimberley
    Black Agenda Radio March 29, 2024
    29 Mar 2024
    This week we hear about how the latest round of sanctions are harming the people of Cuba, and how they are responding. But first we talk to members of a Chicago Black and Brown coalition about…
  • Load More
Subscribe
connect with us
about us
contact us