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Antwort in : /alt/activism/d
Absender   : rich@pencil.math.missouri.edu  (Rich Winkel)
Betreff    : Prisons For Profit: Nation Editorial
Datum      : So 19.04.98, 15:54  (erhalten: 20.04.98)
Groesse    : 3851 Bytes
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## Nachricht am 20.04.98 archiviert
## Ursprung : /misc/activism/progressive
/** justice.usa: 201.0 **/
** Topic: Prisons For Profit:Nation Editorial **
** Written  2:20 PM  Apr 18, 1998 by mphillips in cdp:justice.usa **
/* Written  8:01 PM  Apr 17, 1998 by labornews@labornet.org in igc:labr.newsline */
/* ---------- "Prisons For Profit:Nation Editorial" ---------- */
PRISONS FOR PROFIT, CONT
The Nation 5/4/98
Alex Friedmann doesn't look like the kind of guy who would
incite a prison riot. Slight and bespectacled, Friedmann
measures his words carefully and is quick to point out his
own biases. So it came as a bit of a surprise a few weeks
ago when Corrections Corporation of America, the largest
private prison company in the world, abruptly transferred
Friedmann from its medium-security lockup in Clifton,
Tennessee. According to Friedmann, the company accused him
of "efforts to degrade C.C.A. with negative articles and
outside sources."
Among those "outside sources" was The Nation, in which I
quoted Friedmann in my January 5 cover story on C.C.A.,
"Prisons for Profit." Company officials refused to let
Friedmann see the article, as he explained in the March 16
Nation Letters column, on the grounds that it "could incite
disobedience to law enforcement officials or prison staff."
Friedmann appealed the decision with the support of Nation
publisher Victor Navasky, who urged state prison officials
to heed the First Amendment, "which teaches us that the way
to combat ideas and information we don't like is not through
censorship but rather with better ideas and information."
A state prison official overruled C.C.A. But before
Friedmann could see the story, the company transferred him
to a prison run by the state. Tennessee officials upheld the
move, describing Friedmann in an official document as making
"a deliberate effort to disseminate material which is
negatively oriented to the prison operating company."
The C.C.A. campaign to silence Friedmann underscores one
reason private prisons are able to profit so handsomely at
the expense of inmates and taxpayers. By "picking
jackets"--guarding only the healthiest and most docile
inmates--prison firms keep costs down and dividends high.
When a prisoner falls ill or proves troublesome, C.C.A.
simply ships him back to a state-run prison, where the bill
is picked up by taxpayers instead of company shareholders.
Unlike the state, private prisons enjoy the luxury of
banishing anyone who threatens the bottom line.
The day Friedmann was notified that he was being
transferred, he was attempting to send material about C.C.A.
to state lawmakers considering a bill that would hand over
most of the state prison system to private companies. On
April 14, activists fighting the measure won a victory: The
sponsors tabled the proposal, effectively killing it for the
remainder of the legislative session.
For those discouraged by the rapid trend toward
privatization, the campaign against Friedmann indicates just
how deeply corporate executives fear information in the
hands of a determined activist. "Alex is intelligent,"
C.C.A. warden Kevin Myers conceded this past fall. "But once
he gets in his mind that something's wrong, he's going to
hit it with a vengeance forever and ever, amen."
Amen.
Eric Bates
------------------------------------------------------------
Eric Bates is a staff writer at The Independent in Durham,
North Carolina.
** End of text from cdp:justice.usa **
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