yego.me
💡 Stop wasting time. Read Youtube instead of watch. Download Chrome Extension

“Made in Prison” Is the New “Made in China” | Liza Jessie Peterson | Big Think


4m read
·Nov 3, 2024

Why should people be concerned with the issue of mass incarceration? People should be concerned with the issue of mass incarceration because it is a human rights crisis that is happening right in front of our face, and it's being cloaked with crime and punishment.

So, “These people are bad people, they've committed a crime so we can ignore them, we can lock them up, we can throw them away and we can basically ignore a large swath of our population because they've been criminalized as bad people. They're disposable.” Human beings are not disposable. We have value. We have traumas, we have hearts, we have families, we have the communities, so we're not disposable. No matter what we've done, we're not disposable.

Well, so you have prisons that are privatized but in addition to private prisons, even state-run prisons you have corporations who are profiting from people's incarceration. So what does that mean? Ok. The 13th amendment in the Constitution, in the United States Constitution, it says that slavery is illegal. So we can't have slavery anymore, except for punishment of a crime.

So everybody get your constitution out, look up the 13th amendment and you see the clause that says “except for punishment of a crime.” So if you are convicted of a crime, then you're exempt from that 13th amendment saying that slavery is abolished. So that means that you're allowed to work as a slave, slave labor, slave wages.

So you have people working for ten cents an hour, 11 cents an hour who are doing agriculture, working for huge corporations. I don't want to name them because there's so many, but a lot of the goods and services that we take for granted—clothing lines, computer parts, airplane parts, military equipment, food that we buy organically grown—these things are being manufactured in prisons, in prison farms, in prison factories by inmates.

So, y'know, we talk about “buy American,” yeah—okay, I have this line in my play The Peculiar Patriot and it says “made in China, made in prison is now the new China” because China, people were outraged about the slave labor and all these sweat shops in Taiwan, in China, all these unfair labor practices overseas. Well, it's happening right here in America, being “made in prison.”

So you have corporations, companies, who are profiting off of people incarcerated. So there is an incentive for hyper-criminalization of a population to keep capitalism running on a well-oiled machine of slave labor, which is the foundation for this country. Let's not forget that the fabric, the very fabric of this country is rooted in slavery, slave labor for hundreds of years.

So there is huge capital that was amassed, systems and industries that were created from slave labor. So how does this system continue to operate? Well, it just kind of shifted and now we have mass incarceration, we have people who are literally working for five cents, seven cents, ten cents an hour. No labor unions, no workers comp, you know what I mean? So it's a corporation's wet dream.

And I think that if we were to examine the slave industry, because that's what this country was built on, we can't ignore that it did not come out that this country was not born out of slavery, the industry of slavery, and you have people say, “Oh my God how do we have slaves for 400 years and just the violence and the atrocities and the trauma and it was just oh that was so horrible!”

Right? Okay. So that happened. But there were people who said, “No this isn't right this is not how human beings are supposed to be treated and human beings shouldn't live this way.” So if we had abolitionists who fought against the system of slavery, chattel slavery, I think that the issue that was just as important during the—was it the 19th century?—I think it's just as important now that we are faced with the same human rights issue of the day.

Now mind you, now, remember during slavery you had people who thought “Oh well, this is just the way things are” and they went to cotillions and they went to parties and they went to little business as usual, and people just kind of ignored the stench of the plantation and what was happening to other human beings.

And you had some people who were like, “Hmm, this is not right. This is not right.” And the people who said “this is not right,” they were a small section of society, and that voice got louder and bigger and stronger. So I think that we're at the precipice of another great shift in society where you have a small group of people who say this prison industrial complex is a human rights crisis.

Something needs to be done. You have a large swath of people saying “Oh they're just criminals we have to have prisons, right?” But I have faith in that small voice of people who believe in humanity, of people who believe in a world without prison becoming louder and louder and louder just like the abolitionists did it back in the day.

More Articles

View All
YOU LIVE IN THE PAST
Hey, Vsauce, Michael here, and today we are going to be talking about the past. But not like history—in fact—we will be talking about what we call now. This very newest moment in time, and the fact that we can never really be aware of or live in what we c…
Intermolecular forces and vapor pressure | Intermolecular forces | AP Chemistry | Khan Academy
So we have four different molecules here, and what I want you to think about is if you had a pure sample of each, which of those pure samples would have the highest boiling point, second highest, third highest, and fourth highest? Pause this video and try…
It Started: The Worst Housing Crash In 40 Years
What’s up, Graham? It’s guys here, and it finally happened! U.S. housing prices just saw the largest single-month acceleration in 40 years, leading analysts to believe that housing prices have officially hit a tipping point. Month over month, national hom…
Morgan DeBaun on Reaching 20M Millennials - With Kat Manalac at the Female Founders Conference
And now I’m really, really excited to introduce you to our next speaker, Morgan DeBon. She’s the founder of Blabbetty. So, Blabbetty has, you know, grown into the largest media company and lifestyle brand for Black Millennials. Morgan started Blabbetty in…
Desire Is a Contract You Make to Be Unhappy
Desire is a contract you make with yourself to be unhappy until you get what you want. You start becoming disturbed because you want something, and then you work really hard to get that thing. You’re miserable in the meantime, and then when you get that t…
Why Laminar Flow is AWESOME - Smarter Every Day 208
Hey, it’s me Destin, welcome back to Smarter Every Day. I love laminar flow. And people send me tweets about laminar flow all over the internet. It’s time to do the laminar flow video. Check this out, big pool. We’re going to see if we can make laminar fl…