cross-posted from: https://lemmy.zip/post/2287070

Incarcerated people work for cents on the dollar or for free to make goods you use.


Brittany White, 37, was arrested for marijuana trafficking in Alabama in 2009. She went to trial to contest the charges — after all, just a year prior the United States president had admitted, cheekily, that inhaling was “the point.”

She was sentenced to 20 years. But her sentence was meted out in portions, based on good behavior, and she, posing no discernable public safety risk for selling a plant increasingly legal in states all across the U.S., was allowed to work on the outside.

She got a job at a Burger King.

But the state of Alabama took a significant portion of her paltry minimum wage. “They charged me $25 a week for transportation,” she tells Truthdig. “And they take away 40% of your check. It’s egregious to be making minimum wage, and then to have so much taken away by the state.”

Minimum wage in Alabama is $7.25.

Still, White considers herself lucky. Even her paltry earnings were better than nothing. She was able to purchase soap from the commissary. The prison-provided soap is full of lye, she says, which you definitely do not want near your private parts.

Many stuck behind bars are forced to work for cents per hour, or for nothing. While corporate culprits are commonly blamed for exploiting the labor of incarcerated people, it’s actually primarily states and the federal government who take advantage, and make the public unwittingly complicit.

Got a car? Your license plate was likely made by inmates. In New York, inmates make the trash cans. High school desks are often made on the inside; so are glasses for Medicare patients.

Many stuck behind bars are forced to work for cents per hour, or for nothing, for corporations, states and the federal government.

Companies like CorCraft in New York manage labor in the state’s prisons. They’re funded by the state’s budget, and boast they’re New York state’s preferred choice for “office chairs, desks, panel systems, classroom furniture, cleaning, vehicle, and personal care supplies, and more.”

“Summer Sizzles with Classroom Furniture from Corcraft,” their website declares.

They also claim to help in “the department’s overall mission to prepare incarcerated individuals for release through skill development, work ethic, respect and responsibility.”

The people behind the “sizzling” furniture beg to differ.

In the 12 years he was incarcerated in New York state, Dyjuan Tatro was forced to work a variety of jobs, from making desks to license plates. “At the end, I didn’t have a resume,” he tells Truthdig. “I didn’t get one thing to help me be successful on the outside from the prison. No resume, no job experience… Just $40 and a bus ticket — from 12 years of prison labor, I couldn’t use any of it to get a meaningfully paying job.”

Bianca Tylek, the executive director of Worth Rises, an organization devoted to eradicating unjust prison practices, goes further. “It’s slavery,” she tells Truthdig.

The 13th Amendment, which ended slavery, left an important exception: it’s still legal to garnish wages, or more commonly, refuse to pay incarcerated people for forced labor. “As a result, incarcerated people live in slavery-like conditions,” Tylek adds.

Of course, there are nuances. For example, trading community service, like, say, picking up trash, in exchange for not serving time, is one example of a noncarceral approach. But incarceration changes the equation. Tylek notes that it’s not just about the miniscule (or nonexistent) wages. It’s compelling people to work, with the alternative being a stint in solitary and other punishments, like refusing to let them see relatives, consequences that are meted out by guards. She also notes that they have to work in dangerous trades they may not be trained for, including industrial-sized laundries or ovens.

Despite what someone did or did not do, to end up behind bars, coercing them into performing free labor is wrong, Tylek notes. “I like to ask people the question, ‘Under what circumstances is slavery OK?” she tells Truthdig.

“If you can’t answer that question, the answer is, slavery is never OK.”


  • CombatLiberalism [he/him]
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    1110 months ago

    To put this further into perspective, the United States currently has the highest prison population per capita in the world, and the second largest prison population in the world, with people of color making up over two thirds of that population. Roughly 1/5 of the world’s population are in American prisons, a vast portion of those being private prisons.

    • admiralteal
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      10 months ago

      ~2,068,000 prisoners in the US right now. Total world prison population estimated at around 10,688,045 (am amusingly precise number since there are a bunch of tiny nations like the Faroe Islands with single digit prison numbers). ~19.3%. Neat. Terrifying.

      Here’s the top ten numbers I found:

      Country Prisoner Population Incarceration Rate
      United States 2,068,800 629
      China 1,690,000 119
      Brazil 811,707 381
      India 478,600 35
      Russia 471,490 326
      Thailand 309,282 445
      Turkey 291,198 347
      Indonesia 266,259 97
      Mexico 220,866 169
      Iran 189,000 228

      Thailand is really killing it. Good work over there, trying to catch up to those US numbers.

  • asg101 [none/use name, comrade/them]
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    810 months ago

    The U.S. was born of genocide, grown on slavery, and enshrined the oligarchy in their constitution. They have tried very hard to obfuscate the fact that all those principles remain in place. For Profit Prisons are the modern slave plantations.

    • HubertManne
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      510 months ago

      Yeah you really don’t need any examples given the amendment against slavery specifically calls out an exception for prisoners. Its crazy that has not been amended out.

  • terwn43lp
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    210 months ago

    once we start treating convicts like humans, we’ll be slightly more empathetic as a species

    • @bakachu@lemm.ee
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      210 months ago

      I read somewhere that the US has one of the largest, if not THE largest, percentage of population incarcerated. I feel like there’s overall more people who know someone, at least some distant relative, who served time than not, so it’s shocking to see such a large outcry on even super liberal social media sites, like reddit, for prisoners to get raped, assaulted, killed and/or generally mistreated. So that empathy may be a long ways away.