The Dirty South: GA Prisoners on Lockdown for Liberty

13th Amendment: Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for a crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction.
On December 9th, courageous inmates at 10 Georgia state prisons staged a peaceful protest in which they locked themselves down voluntarily and refused to work. Their demands are simple:

· A living wage for work

· Educational Opportunities

· Decent Healthcare

· An end to cruel and unusual punishments

· Decent Living Conditions

· Nutritional meals

· Vocational and self-improvement opportunties

· Access to families

· Just parole decisions

Since initiating their protest, prisoners have been subjected to violence, been deprived of food, heat and hot water.

We stand in solidarity with these prisoners, because we understand the prison industrial complex to be a modern day iteration of slavery. Why?

If you revisit the text of the 13th amendment, the famed Civil War amendment that supposedly granted us our freedom, you will find that slavery was not abolished. The amendment clearly states that slavery and involuntary servitude can be used as forms of punishment for convicted criminals.

However, we cannot understand the connection between criminality and slavery outside of the context of race. After the 13th amendment was passed and slaves were freed, many of those same formerly enslaved folks were rendered vagabonds, wanderers without a home. Although many of them chose to wander in order to find their families or simply to be free of their masters, they also became easy targets for town vagrancy laws. Many former slaves were locked up for exercising the freedom of movement just conferred upon them. To add insult to injury, towns then engaged in the dubious practice of convict leasing in order to earn revenue. Under the convict leasing system, a plantation owner would go to a prison, pay the prison official to “lease” the services of a convict and then use that prisoner to do work, often on the very same plantations from which they had just been freed.

The prison system in our country has therefore had a long-standing financial incentive to increase incarceration. In the 19th century, prisons could raise revenues and simultaneously punish folks who had the audacity to exercise constitutional freedoms and view themselves as full human beings.

Our modern-day prison system works very similarly. Over 50% of inmates are African American males. This is not coincidental but comes from a long history of using black male bodies to perform menial labor for minimal (or no) pay. Yes, there are many criminals who have done dangerous things, but the reality is that prison is often the end result of poor education and lack of access to unskilled job opportunities. Couple that with over-policing and a racially biased justice system and you have a recipe for disaster.


In today’s prisons, prisoners do all kinds of labor from making license plates, to telemarketing, to building the desks used in our college classrooms. The irony. In many cases they are paid a mere $.12 on the hour, and in Georgia prisoners are paid nothing. In some states where they are paid more ($.25/hr), they are taxed at 50%, because they are forced to use their own wages to contribute to their cost-of-living. Add to that the inflated costs of commissary items and the fact that basics like soap and toilet paper are often not provided, and the internal space of the prison functions very much according to the logic of 19th century systems of debt peonage, whereby families worked on plantations, made wages, but were subjected to exorbitant costs for basic necessities, leaving them always in debt to their plantation masters.

There is much more to say about the prison industrial complex and the way Black and Brown bodies are positioned within it. I’ll leave that work to CF Chanel, our  resident scholar in Critical Prison Studies, who will have more to say after her finals are over.

We simply want our readers to know that we understand the prison industrial complex as a social problem that occurs at the intersections of race, gender, and class, sexuality and ability. It is therefore a feminist issue.

We are heartened by the multi-racial coalitions of prisoners who have come together to do this important work; the strategic use of nonviolence in this instance exposes the utter fallacy of the social construction of prisoners as inherently violent and unreasonable human beings. In the most radical tradition of Dr. King, they demonstrate the guiding logics of the tactical aspects of nonviolence as a political strategy, namely that when you choose non-violence against folks who routinely use violence to subjugate you, you dramatize the disparity in the narratives being told, and demonstrate from which direction the violence actually flows. It’s utterly brilliant.

Ashe. Let’s move mountains.

Below is a list of prisons where prisoners are still on lockdown and where you can call to express concern.

Hays State Prison—706-857-0400

Macon State Prison—978-472-3900

Telfair State Prison—229-868-7721

Smith State Prison – 912-654-5000

The Georgia Department of Corrections is at http://www.dcor.state.ga.us and their phone number is 478-992-5246

13 thoughts on “The Dirty South: GA Prisoners on Lockdown for Liberty

    1. @Happy……… and that’s all I have to say about your ridiculous response.

      This post is such an important post precisely because oftentimes people like “Happy” want to dehumanize prisoners and make them the “bad guy” instead of understanding the historical narrative that supports the system that targets Blacks and Latinos for cheap or free labor. Thankfully, there are people like crunktastic, who are constantly putting current issues in historical context so that we know that this displacement of men and women of color and poor people is an attack on all of our communities. When we recognize that the injustices that prisoners are suffering also impact those of us who are not incarcerated then we know that we have to show solidarity with the prisoners, who, to be clear, are not demanding to be released. They are demanding their rights to safety, health, education, and fair wages for their labor as human beings.

      @Happy, when you get paid less and less for the work you do as a “free person,” remember that your boss gets to consider whether they should pay you a fair wage when they can contract with prisons and pay less than nothing. Whether you think about it or not, it effects you, so you might as well consider the rights of others while potentially considering your own self-interests.

      Crunktastic. Thanks for keeping us updated on pressing and interesting stories, and for providing actions that people can take to get involved.

  1. Its imperative to stand in solidarity with prisoners in their demands for human rights. To demonize prisoners and ignore the constitutional protections guaranteed in the 13th Amendment is reactionary politics. Let’s not forget that, prison construction is a growth industry in many rural white communities nationwide.

  2. You made several fine points there. I did a search on the subject and found a good number of folks will have the same opinion with your blog.

  3. Thanks for alerting us to the resistance down in Georgia! As someone who once was paid a $0.12/hour ‘wage’ in New York, I’m energized by their example. I have just one slightly critical comment to make, and that is that their conditions are–as you pointed out–no different than prisons around the country. So why single the south out as “dirty” (even if it is a turn of phrase people use)? If anything, it’s the defiant south!

    …well, that sounds like neo-confederate talk, but you get my meaning, yes?

    1. Indeed I do. It was creative license absolutely, and my attempt to point out the ways that the New South is still in many ways the same Old South. But prisons every where are indeed implicated. Thanks for reading.

  4. That is disgusting. In Australia prisoners can get degrees, are paid (admittedly small amounts of money) for work they do and still our prison system is problematic and flawed in ways it should not be. Violence is not acceptable just because someone has committed a crime.

    I’m always abhorred when I hear that somewhere has it worse. There should not be worse.

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