1970 Folsom Prison strike explained

Folsom Prison strike
Partof:Labor Unions
Date:November 3, 1970 – November 22, 1970 (ago)
Place:United States

The Folsom Prison strike was a prison strike at Folsom State Prison in Folsom, California, United States. The strike was declared the day prior to the 1970 California gubernatorial election and lasted for a total of 19 days. At the peak, it involved 2,400 incarcerated workers.[1] The strike was led by Martin Sousa, who worked in the prison print shop.

Manifesto

The organizing committee issued a manifesto, which begins:

"We the inmates of Folsom Prison have grown to recognize beyond the shadow of a doubt that because of our posture as prisoners and branded characters as alleged criminals, the administrators and prison employees no longer consider or respect us as human beings, but rather as domesticated animals selected to do their bidding in slave labor and furnished as a personal whipping dog for their sadistic, psychopathic hate.

We the inmates of Folsom Prison say to you, the sincere people of society, the prison system which your courts have rendered unto, is without question the authoritative fangs of a coward in power."[2]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Cummins . Eric . The Rise and Fall of California's Radical Prison Movement . 1994 . Stanford University Press . 978-0-8047-2232-2 . 199–201 . en.
  2. News: Folsom Manifesto for the California Statewide Prison Strike, 1970 . San Francisco Bay View . 26 October 2018.