Saturday, July 25, 2020

Don’t End up in a San Quentin


Practice Prevention and Self preservation without Offense
Stay Focused on Constructive Pursuits
Chose Friends Carefully
Beware media Exploiters  


A
dvice to the Young and Impressionable

NEVER put yourself in the path of, or in any way up against the power, processes and personnel of the US criminal justice or judiciary criminal divisions—not out of weakness or irrational fear but as a practical matter of self preservation.

Stay focused on life.  Spend time constructively. If you are born into a broken or otherwise dysfunctional home and manage to grow to school age, go to school, pay attention and do your lessons diligently, ask for help when you don’t understand (don’t be afraid or ashamed to ask). Focus not on awards offered by others but focused on the reward of the diligent doing—doing a job well (to the best of your ability), whether in school, during the school day, or in some other decent labor after the school day.

In that constructive time, plan ahead—plan to have a better job and live a better life, not compared with others; but just adequate for yourself, a decent life in decent surroundings.

Save your money—decent money. Prostitution money, drug money, casino money are not examples of decent money. Such moneymaking portends a path toward entry into the arms of US criminal divisions. In the developmental years, take a little job and save little by little.  

Mind your choice of friends. Be selective, discriminating (discriminating is a good word in this context). Use your instincts. If a person’s behavior seems questionable (if her or his associates appear dodgy), steer clear, no matter how attractive they may seem; no matter how much you’d like to have friends. The world is vast with potential friends and associates.

B
eware media personalities.

One of the problems I have with major media (left and right) is that they use people, often encouraging the wrong kind of behavior, even illegal behavior aimed at attracting (shocking or misinforming) listeners or viewers.

The Democracy Now! program is such an exploiter. While its principals seem to employ no American Negroes (an old term but more accurate than the contemporary terms) among their broadcasting anchors, they seem tireless in dragging Negroes into their features on “black stuff,” “black” issues or “black” problems as if America’s problems are color coded and separate or segregated.

One radio program comes out and uses the words “Black America,” framing a separate America in the minds of listeners—as also separate blue, red, black, left, right, white, “of color” (the divisions are unlimited) Americas.

Democracy Now’s Amy Goodman gave prominent air space to a young student, a young female student, who was committing a crime of vandalism by climbing on to and attempting to tear down a historic statue. Goodman is still doing this with women injured in Portland. She is aiding and abetting criminal behavior that these young women—not Amy Goodman—will pay for as they will inevitably come into contact, even collide, with US criminal justice or judiciary criminal divisions and their processes, personnel, and prisons.

No moment or quest for fame or infamy, no instance of reducing oneself to the hand of an exploiter or the mendacious mind of a manipulator—is worth putting one’s life and opportunities jeopardy; and, even worse, losing one’s life and future entirely.

These two women, one in Portland, Oregon, another at UNC Chapel Hill, North Carolina will pay for their bad judgment and criminal acts.  I say this not as a person who opposes protests; but as one who opposes lawlessness (violence, criminal or undisciplined behavior, irrational thinking and acting out), no matter who commits it—whether president or plumber, politician or pauper, regardless to color, creed or any number of superficial variations one might present or impose.

Often a desired end or rather a constructive end is a matter of means chosen to achieve that end.

T
hese thoughts congealed into an essay as I was listening to “Outbreak at San Quentin,” Snap Judgment’s July 23, 2020 edition:
the story of the devastating COVID-19 outbreak at San Quentin State Prison, as told by people on the inside.”

At the time of this recording, 13 people from San Quentin have died due to coronavirus, bringing the total number of lives lost in California prisons to 40.

While people inside San Quentin and other detention facilities across the country are faced with the threat of coronavirus, it is not just them who are affected. This piece is made up of a collection of letters from people on the outside trying to reach their loved ones currently behind bars.”

S
an Quentin
  •  A court-ordered report released in 2005 found that San Quentin was ‘old, antiquated, dirty, poorly staffed, poorly maintained with inadequate medical space and equipment and overcrowded.’
  • In 2020, San Quentin became the center of a COVID-19 outbreak, after a group of prisoners were transferred to San Quentin from the California Institution for Men in Chino, California. Initial reports suggested that San Quentin officials were told that the new inmates had all tested negative. However, few of them had been tested at all.
  • By June 22, 2020 at least 350 inmates and staff had tested positive, in what a federal judge called a ‘significant failure’ of policy.
San Quentin minimum–maximum prison opened July 1852
Managed by California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation
  • Death row capacity (2015): 715 prisoners
  • Capacity: 3,082
  • Population total (April 2020): 3,776
Women sentenced to death in California are driven to San Quentin to be executed.

California’s Top Men: Governors in the recent era
  • November 17, 2003 – January 3, 2011: Arnold Alois Schwarzenegger
  • Former Austrian (US immigrant) professional bodybuilder, actor, businessman, and January 22, 1990 – May 27, 1993 US presidents George H. W. Bush and William Jefferson Blythe Clinton’s Council on Physical Fitness and Sports Chairman
  • January 3, 2011-January 7, 2019: Edmund Gerald Brown Jr
  • Former Attorney General of California, January 9, 2007 – January 3, 2011; and Mayor of Oakland January 4, 1999 – January 8, 2007
  • January 7, 2019 – present: Gavin Christopher Newsom
  • Former Lieutenant Governor of California January 10, 2011 – January 7, 2019; Mayor of San Francisco January 8, 2004 – January 10, 2011
D
on’t end up in a San Quentin.
Don’t depend on papas and mamas or let them misguide you away from your better interests. Beware the Browns, Goodmans, Newsoms, and Schwarzeneggers.
Don't depend or be beholding 
“Mama may have, Papa may have
But God bless the child that’s got his own”…
Them that’s got shall get / Them that’s not shall lose…
Rich relations give Crust of bread and such /
You can help yourself / But don’t take too much
“Mama may have, Papa may have
But God bless the child that’s got his own…”
Respect yourself and respect others.
Learn without internalizing the rough stuff, the vile, vulgar, and vicious, the violent.  
Learn reflective thought and critical judgment; practice these always. 
Kneel to no one.



Sources

Snap Judgment Season 11 – Episode 24 “Outbreak at San Quentin” Contributors: Chanthon Bun, a producer now living on the outside; Greg Eskridge and Thanh Tran, multimedia journalists currently incarcerated at San Quentin; Rasheed Lockheart, narrator; Ant, Eric Phillips, and Alex Simon, storytellers; James King from the Ella Baker Center and Adnan Khan from Restore Justice. Overall program producer: Pat Mesiti-Miller and Ninna Gaensler-Debs; Original score by Pat Mesiti-Miller; Artwork by Teo Ducot; Letters from Uncuffed. Broadcast July 23, 2020 (archived) https://snapjudgment.org/episode/outbreak-at-san-quentin/


Wikipedia

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/San_Quentin_State_Prison
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arnold_Schwarzenegger
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gavin_Newsom
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jerry_Brown

 Written and performed by American legend Billie Holiday from the 1940s on 
God Bless the Child written by Billie Holiday and Arthur Herzog, Jr. in 1939, first recorded on May 9, 1941 under the Okeh label. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z_1LfT1MvzI



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