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tv   Watching the Hawks  RT  July 10, 2020 6:00pm-6:31pm EDT

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totally different. people watched a movie. with prison it's like but they don't know. what it is to be we have to take. a whole lot of things but mean to each other.
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when you. have to make do. we. take all clothes. put your clothes in a bag. and. you don't know which. you might it's. not good at all. in the prison it's coming through the wall you bring it to be inhaled. a lot of people. as bad. even though unit $29.00 is said to be the newest most modern unit
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it is still crumbling the infrastructure is crumbling and it's business to anybody who even walks into the normally when you go to a visit. it's going to be hot or it's going to be cold either it's going to be extremely cold out or is going to be extremely hot inside normally in temperatures excess of $100.00 degrees there's no at that there's no. there's no accusation for this in a ventilated area. and in the actual pods in the sales that whole guys they have no circulation at all which you normally would see is that you see. this and they're laying on the coal for because you know when that is in made out of cinder block sender blots they hold in their cool air they hold so dear and. they're holding in all the cool air so the gas just lay bare just like bare chested on the floor it's not uncommon to see 5 or 6 guys just laid out in
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a sale on the floor vironment visible in the visiting. rats roaches spiders. and little fire fighters mosquitoes the size of. walls. that you want to see in the corners of the facility and these are areas where the public are allowed. i mean there's nothing new about what's happening in march and i would say in very recent history i think 2 summers ago in august there was basically every other day most of them. in a little bit further back history if we look at the 1970 s. there's this successful suit that they. are sort of people win against the state that leads to the end of the trustee system and that was around cruel and unusual punishment so as long as the prison has existed there have been these sort of. cruel inhuman conditions and what we're going to continue to see and have seen in
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the past is these. periods where the state violence is sort of most apparent to us but for people who are incarcerated that state violence every day. i would never drink the water or i don't want to wash my hands in the bathrooms because when you turned water on it's literally the color of my water fountains when they were the same way they were they come on the water fountains you're too scared to drink the guards will tell you not to drink i've had guards give me about water because i didn't have any they went to water but my clients want that water all the time so the water varies between 2 ways it's either to chlorinate it or it smells like sewage and so all the pipes leak right so the gas had their socks around the leaky pipes and so if the sites are brown they know not to drink the water if the sox are why they know koreans in the water we can wash our clothes and that if you don't enter into water you're going to drink it at that time if there is a border notice in the area you guys don't get bottled water they're still forced
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to drink that water they take their medication what water that smells like sewage they take medication in water that visibly if you put it in a cup and they think as well take it they let the water sit and they let the soil and all of the particles go to the bottom and then they just drink the water that is clarified on top. conditions at parchin have been. behind me is the mississippi state penitentiary known locally as parchment prison where an astounding 9 individuals have died in the past month alone since the start of the new year reports of everything from fights and fires and suicides to insufficient food and water supplies power outages and individuals sleeping on the floors have been reported and a mountain of human rights abuses are allegedly going on behind these walls we traveled here today to speak with locals activists politicians celebrities and
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everyone in between and to try and figure out why these things are happening here parchment and what can be done to fix the problem in order to understand the current crisis inside parchment you have to go way back in history and understand the prison's roots of former governor of mississippi and open my supra mrs james k. vardaman was instrumental in creating the mississippi state prison he believed that the money made from convict leasing and chain gang should go to the state instead of private entities and thus the mississippi state penitentiary was born the prison itself is a reform so parchment prison comes about at the turn of the last century as a as a way to sort of. undo what some people are see as the problems of the comically system and in particular governor the governor at the time james vardaman who is an unapologetic white supremacist actually runs on the campaign of white supremacy. believes that the problem with comically scene was not really the sort of. human
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rights abuse that it was but rather that he saw it as sort of lining the pockets of the plantation class that he was a white supremacist populist and believed that this sort of state run plantation style prison would instead be a way of sort of socializing african-americans to their place which he saw as. manual labor the reform that led to the establishment of parchment was also white supremacist in its intent. as i mentioned james james vitamins the person who established. parchment and he's actually incarcerated people on the grounds of parchment with bloodhounds for sport so if you think about that kind of context in which this place is born there's really no some training white supremacy. initially. after the timeline of the so there were about 4 or 5 it's within 3 or 4
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days between december 29th and jane where 2nd either on january 2nd in the o.c. issued a statement stating that everything was under control however on january 3rd 2 more people died as a result of the incidents have occurred within one of the indio see it was still it throughout the state we did a timeline breakdown of everything that was occurring once we did that time last week we deployed the article on twitter facebook all of our platforms and certainly it began to go really viral we posted a video image of that was sent of several mean being housed in unit 32 of parchment unit 32 of question has been condemned closed down since 2009 says 2000 that suffered for over 10 years and that was closed down when
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a.c.l.u. entered in agreement with mississippi state prison for parchment to close it down the reason it was closed down was because it was a hellhole the essential it was it was a place where where 6 of the people that were being housed there it was the different facility it was the place where where people who were very sick was also being housed but it was also a. place that was a violent place to say the least essentially the a.c.l.u. decided. this facility should no longer be open so for 10 years this this place had been closed down and this was the place that. these these incarcerated people were moved to this facility now is flooded it has black mold in it they have no mattresses it basically has not been maintained in 10 years it was continue to be able to years ago but we have video surfaces of these men inside of this facility and we had already told the story that no other new site was telling with regard to
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those men being in unit 32 nobody else had disclosed because they didn't have the inside information once we got it we shared it and we shared their video on the video went viral on twitter it was shared by. many hip hop artists and it's heinous on twitter and instagram include people like t.i. david banner and big create i think even so a lot of rappers have really been vocal about it parchment is located at least 2 hours away from many major cities making it difficult for lawyers family members and having kids to visit in recent months incarcerated people have used contraband cell phones to share videos and photos of their conditions on social media. and incidents of forced transparency in a deadly situation one of the prison officials allege that prison gangs are to blame for the mounting death of the merged and many are pushing against that narrative stating that the inhuman conditions are driving people beyond sanity i
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think now with all of that. technology that now we're going to have people are now going to be able to see inside and i think that's what's threatening to. do the people that are supposed to be in charge of the prisoners not disappoint i think this is was threatening to warm because you can't you've got so many people and so much of that is around so much controversy and they were going there you can't you can't really control of the out who word a get rich see this from whom and so it's going to continue to leak we're going to teens and no more things that continue to slip because people are getting bold. but now people are also coming up get the main way their prisons have been able to skirt any type of regulation authority around issues involving prisoners and litigation pretty much came out of the night and if i'm in congress passed the prison litigation reform act and what that was is that at that time congress was saying in prisons we're seeing a large number of prisoners filing suits about the conditions that they lived in
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and it was causing a backlog and a backlog. in the system and so congress wanted a way to limit the rights of prisoners to bring federal lawsuits about the conditions that they were being complied and so what the p.l.r. a does is that it basically calls for prisoners to allow their captors time and knowingness to fix issues that are conditions based so basically which you have to do is that you have to say you have to say to the people who are holding you in these conditions hey. this water smells like or this water tastes like corey and then you have to give those people a reasonable amount of time to address the issue before you can move on. to even file a lawsuit against the prison. thank
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. the past 3 presidential election cycles demonstrate voters are against reforms and one nation building nonetheless remain high priority for the elites why is this our voters and i say foreign policy any exactly why should us and no one forced to stay. so we have inherited a brain we comparing itself to others. for a monkey we better food it compares itself to others and it seems that it's weaker when it doesn't reach for the banana because it's afraid of getting it sees that
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it's stronger saratoga in his release and it goes for it and it feels good so we will patterns when we're young of comparing ourselves to others and making decisions about when you feel one hour anyone will feel one down and it's easy to feel one down all the time if you're in need to think that way and then you end up with this cortisol all the time and that's the root of depression. during the vietnam war u.s. forces also bomb to neighboring laos there was a secret war. and for years the american people did not know. how much it is officially the most heavily bombed country per capita in all human history millions of unexploded bombs still in danger lives in this small agricultural country.
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even today kids in laos fall victim to bombs dropped decades ago it is the us making amends for the tragedy and what help to the people needed in that little land of mines. the system is working. this big clear is not a broken criminal justice system the criminal justice system is doing what it was designed to do steal kill and destroy. people it's working what needs to happen with the system this terrorist system apart and. that's what needs to happen because if we don't repeal it put some lousy i'm going
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to keep this repetitive cycle. that only rubio will you bring different people to the table we do have to move and there will be mississippi you can always go bring the good old boy all. right but i believe this generation promo. the good old world won't work for them it's not the gang leaders who are feeding them only one meal a day it's not the gang leaders who are not repairing the. plumbing where they can get water i mean more than just one water bottle a day it's not the gang leaders who are leaving trash everywhere i mean this is obviously a problem with the state of mississippi when we think of prisoners we don't think humans we think criminals we think gang members we think murderers rapists we don't think that over half the population in prison are in there for victimless crimes we don't think that these are indeed humans who deserve human rights. we want to think that they're terrible people so whenever the state tells us they're terrible people
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we feel like it's ok and they get treated terribly and that's just not the case most prisoners are not in there for any other reason than possibly smoking a plant or doing some other victimless crime. for example you have the ip process and the administrative agreement. uscis and the way it's supposed to work is that there is supposed to be a box in each unit on each zone and it's 2 years and they're supposed to be these little forms that you can fill out in it and it has to if you can only bring up one issue at a time and it has to be so specific as to give everything else the reasonable notice to fix your problem before you can move on and so it's just as a 3 step process 1st you fill out the a.a.r.p. and you tell them which your complaint is and you put it in the box and you hope to get a response if you don't get a response within 30 days you move on to the 2nd step and the 2nd step is i did not
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get a response as they all want to respond you put that in the box they have 30 days to respond to it and then and only then if you have gotten no response in 60 days then if you can find somebody to file a lawsuit on your behalf against the o.c. to do so it makes it virtually impossible to file to get any kind of remedy legally for prisoners who don't have any. solutions to the problems of parchment are difficult but they do exist holding elected officials and prison officials accountable is on the lips of everyone i spoke with as well as creative solutions to addressing the issue people that are making decisions about what should happen with prisons. should be preserved have not a clue what's really going on you've got the wrong people at the table you know you need those people at the table that really care people that are connected to the issue at hand people who have had family members behind you know the bars how can
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you really connect how can you really see what you're willing to see and be human and see people as human if you have not been through the experience one way or the other whether you've been a family member if you had a family member in there or locked up to hold somebody accountable. for was happening now you almost have to dig of agree it's because it go back so far it didn't just or it didn't just happen you just keep getting people in position to not change and it is the problem but in order to deal with hold of somebody accountable you've gotta go way back so was ham you got to actually have legislators and people actually going to the facility actually talking to people like they're people and not just walking me and ignoring them like you're looking at the pain on the wall but actually human as i'm bring them me and you know find out that they ask a man name you know make them human because they can help you solve the problems
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they can tell you is needed they can fix it guess who gets to vote light on this not us not any other organization not even the state of mississippi the inmates the prisoners all 100 percent in charge 100 percent in show it out of the media attention has pressurize out the more the abuse the abnormal use behind the walls we live behind the wall and you're going to have offices this going to say oh. yeah really have made jamel today you get channel 3 for fat. guy washington whoever here and guess would they go now. and you last shower when asked say you can shall.
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you go eat when i say you can eat and gas would ask they take your reckon take it now that's the reality it was going on for hanover while in prison with large data and a lockdown in this in a state but especially in mississippi is the time for the o.c. out of more to allow staff of our rate of being overworked to have time off. is a lot. this going on even more pressure rises a pressure situation. we want you to 29 should we want any brothers or sisters as inside you need 32 to be our unit 32 we want partially shut down in the interim. immediately what we want is for those brothers and sisters aside to have better food better health care better mental health care we want to be treated like human beings we want them to be able to have access to their family existed to their representation because these are things that they're being deny right now just as
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here value of which you have to try and do in the here man a time and amount of money that it takes to even to file any litigations about conditions we can take the alabama department of corrections case as an example that's a 6 year lift. you know organizers and have attorneys 6 years to even get it to a point to where they can bring alabama department corrections to the table in mississippi. question when he let the health department last week the reason is the health department is can the before. but since that time they refused to allow those brothers access to to the necessary beings and we want people out of the ultimately we want them to mediately reinstate parole for those who have the ability to have access to the roe we want them to a media only released those who have been hailed on the love on the faces on drug offenses to de coster rate this system also billy
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i'll be honest with your goal is to abolish this system started over you know what i mean like reboot because we never had a say in this process rather this is that nobody had a say in this process but this process has always come down on us is very disagree we to me that whatever changes come in a transformative way the the problem of the prison and prison organizing has remained the same over time which is visibility it's how do you draw attention to these dark sites across the country when they're specifically designed to sort of prevent the public from understanding and empathizing in and knowing how to. address the problem so i think a starting point for all of these campaigns is greater connectivity between people outside and inside so we make sure that we are responding to people's needs inside and also aware of the conditions and creating sort of networks. so that when we
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have these episodes of extreme violence were able to better address the sort of everyday violence as well as it gets more and more attention and we get more and more leaders stepping up who are using their voices and using their their power 70 or their power to create a voice for. for the incarcerated we're still trying to be centric on the voices of the actual prisoners i know they're they're bringing in celebrities who are taking their own actions and what not but our thing is we're talking directly right now to incarcerated people and to direct family members of people who are incarcerated because when we look at the root cause and the root solutions of what needs to be done these are the people who are closest to the issue they're going to know what they need done a thing a lot of time people have. to speak almost who didn't have a wall. because they have time knowledge or heard someone else speak about it they may feel it was deliverable voice book them to you want to march. argue you
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were in the right it's hard to explain to people. you it expert if you went to school to learn criminal justice reform or you went to law school or you now been elected june june now this you you want to be the expert you want to have the answers you pay this price of educating yourself to be the expert and then when you have some magic come allow you did the time in prison. now tell you what you need this is what you need and that's a lot of. the criminal justice system in what's happening here in mississippi is happening because we have deafen our sadness the voices of the people they need to be heard because here we are 30 plus years in the gang and we still haven't been hurt although i hope that we have being heard you heard this
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year here but if our state has heard us desta key because we can have people come from all over the world even local give media attention to it but the only way we know that we've been hurt is because chang starts to care. but it's a cause for pride pressure conditions that's what makes this a pressure like water. a water pipe if you put too much pressure on it and. everything is happening right now and disappoint. the. lobster loss. for no reason. people in sales was supposed to be. good. sound good it's called is this cause of death. to prison and they want to go to
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prison in. prison. but not to disc a pass to. this is the worst ever heard. of the sickness . your pain. we have a stout from the day we. took a current moment and we just asked him stand down is strict in the was. there a week in areas where you can stop valid yes you can encouraged. just like you would embrace want with low. i.q. if you want. unlike you desirable means. and to know that you have people are here working. for you.
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leg. length.
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ah no team no crowd. no shots no. action just felt. really strong no arrests. quench your thirst for action.
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hello everyone 2 let's take a look at today's menu to see what we're serving up on the press following a holiday weekend of shootings and deaths in america's cities cnn's don lemon and chris cuomo yuk it up and mock fox news for calling the situation serious crime has right i mean it's right on polo my gosh it's so bad it's got e-mail use in line no way and these people actually hate america tucker carlson under fire for questioning the patriotism of democrat senator tammy duckworth who lost both legs serving in iraq are politicians who are war heroes immune from such criticism former fox news host john gibson will give his take.

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