top
Indybay
Indybay
Indybay
Indybay
Indybay
Regions
Indybay Regions North Coast Central Valley North Bay East Bay South Bay San Francisco Peninsula Santa Cruz IMC - Independent Media Center for the Monterey Bay Area North Coast Central Valley North Bay East Bay South Bay San Francisco Peninsula Santa Cruz IMC - Independent Media Center for the Monterey Bay Area California United States International Americas Haiti Iraq Palestine Afghanistan
Topics
Newswire
Features
From the Open-Publishing Calendar
From the Open-Publishing Newswire
Indybay Feature

CHARGES DISMISSED!

by Jonah Zern (jzern1 [at] yahoo.com)
JEREMY AND JONAH'S CHARGES HAVE BEEN DISMISSED!
I want to make sure that my arrest helps to shine a spotlight on the bigger issues of the prison industry and how it is destroying our communities. I saw how much me being in prison hurt those close to me. I can't even imagine how much it destroys communities of color, about 2/3 of the people in prison were black, very, very few were white, no-one I met were even middle class - when I ask students who I teach in Oakland, "how many of you know someone in prison?" without fail 3/4 of the class raises their hands.

Letter About a San Francisco Jail

My name is Jonah Zern. I am a substitute teacher in Oakland and the co-coordinator of the Peace and International Relations Committee of the Oakland Education Association and was one of two protestors falsely arrested on Saturday, January 18, 2003 at the anti-war rally of 200,000 people in San Francisco. I want to thank all those who came to my aid and state how important people’s calling the District Attorney, jail and Mayor’s office and the rally organized outside the jail was in both our release and in today’s dismissal of our charges.

I want to make sure that my arrest helps to shine a spotlight on the bigger issues of the prison industry and how it is destroying our communities. I saw how much me being in prison hurt those close to me. I can't even imagine how much it destroys communities of color, about 2/3 of the people in prison were black, very, very few were white, no-one I met were even middle class - when I ask students who I teach in Oakland, "how many of you know someone in prison?" without fail 3/4 of the class raises their hands.

There are many more political prisoners than just Jeremy and I. Most people who I met were in fact there because of non-violent crimes of poverty, such as using drugs or taking money for a place to sleep, or because they had been profiled as a black male. My cell-mate was going to be in jail for a year for taking money from a Wal-Mart, a company that has sweatshops all over the world and viciously fights unions within its own doors. People I met were brilliant, caring, and being deeply hurt; a large portion of people I met talked matter-of-factly about the last few times they had been in prison. One was 18 and talked about how much more difficult the conditions were in jail than his multiple times in Juvie. There are much deeper doors that we need to open, to know that just because two community leaders supported by a massively popular movement are freed of our charges that we cannot rest or put this behind us.

There are so many people suffering in our own community from intolerable government oppression; oppression that continues a cycle of poverty, sadness, and hopelessness. We cannot shed tears for the millions of Iraqis suffering from our government's sanctions and war-mongering without also taking to heart the call to stop incarcerating Black and Latino children. We cannot fight for justice abroad and ignore what amounts to the genocide of a people within our own nation. The total number of inmates in local, state and federal prisons has quadrupled in the past 20 years to more than two million. Two-thirds of all nonwhite adult males are arrested and jailed between the ages of 18 and 30 nationally. On any average day in America, one of every four African Americans between the ages of 20 and 29 is in jail, prison, or on probation or parole.

If my community was so hurt by my two days in jail, where I received much media support, phone calls from political and community leaders, how much does it hurt whole communities of poor people of color who are only told that their brothers, husbands, boy-friends, girl-friends, sisters, mothers, uncles, aunts, friends are in jail because they are “no good”. How can a community lift itself up, when the institution of power is pushing it down with all its might.

It is time that we say “NO WAR ON THE PEOPLE OF IRAQ! NO WAR ON THE PEOPLE OF THE UNITED STATES! BOOKS NOT BOMBS, SCHOOLS NOT JAILS!” It is essential that our anti-war movement also become a civil rights movement.

* (prison is data from Platt, in Social Justice Journal, Vol. 28, No.1, 2001)




Add Your Comments

Comments (Hide Comments)
by Kevin
California Prison Focus is doing / has been doing the work you speak of for over 10 years.

All who want to fight for the rights of prisoners and tear down the Prison Industrial Complex should consider joining.

Kevin
by fernan
well said.

it's great that people got your back, and thanks for putting it into perspective that it ain't good enough to just get you out....there are many more wasting away.
by eliot
Excellent article, Jonah... I was wondering your views on current prison rights groups and their effectiveness of communicating this message (or doing anything about it after communicating). Are there any organizations on the right track that need assistance?

Thanks.
by Tim
While I agree with you that too many people are imprisoned, especially those who committed victimless crimes (drugs, prostitution), I am disheartened to see that you believe theft to be in the same class as these victimless crimes. Theft directly harms others and even if those others are "bad," such as Wal-Mart, we should not allow any theft to go unpunished. If theft from Wal-Mart is permissible, what would prevent Wal-Mart from breaking into your house and stealing your money? Theft is not a political crime, it is the violation of other's rights.

I also am saddened to see such an emphasis on race. To eradicate racism the concept of race must also be eradicated. Focusing on injustice along racial lines perpetuates the concept of race and thus racism. For example, you say Blacks and Latinos are being imprisoned unfairly - why not say PEOPLE are being imprisoned unfairly. An injustice is an injustice no matter the race of the victim or the person perpetrating the injustice.

Tim
by cp
That would be all great to dismiss race as a genetic concept, but to pretend it doesn't exist as a social construct would entirely ignore the fact that people who are black and latino have been statistically found to be many times more likely to receive longer sentences for precisely the same crime category, with precisely the same priors - look around on google. We aren't talking about 20% higher probability of being sent to prison for the same crimes, but 10-20X higher for some types of crime (such as drug dealing).

Also, please refer to this letter written by an ex bound together bookstore person describing the antagonistic racialized environment that the prison guards promote as a way to keep prisoners fighting each other rather than them.
http://www.indybay.org/news/2002/11/1540646_comment.php#1540777
by Luci Ernaga
Jonah said, "...and was one of two protestors falsely arrested on Saturday, January 18, 2003 at the anti-war rally of 200,000 people in San Francisco. "

Er, technically, they weren't arrested at the rally, they were arrested late in the march that left from the rally. And there weren't 200,000 people around at that point in the day. More like 200, 250 max, by then.

I wonder if he wrote it that way to distance himself from the black bloc?

Either way, I'm glad they were let off. It sucks when people get arrested, and it sucks that they got "punished" over charges that were dismissed. The way those cops attacked him was disgusting.
by Tag
So I get it. Zern spends three or four days in the brand new city JAIL in SF, and thinks he has an idea of what the PRISON system is all about. Go back to your UMC parents Jonah. Don't forget to tell all the kids about the time you spent in Pelican Bay.
by Sarah
Jonah didn't say that he knows what PRISON is all about; he just is shedding some light on it for those of us who haven't been and don't understand. I wonder where you are coming from on your attack...do you know Jonah?

While Jonah and I don't always agree on every issue, and have made some different choices in our lives, I have the utmost respect for his courage. He is not a wimp. He is not afraid to stand up for his beliefs, even though that has meant a huge departure from "what was expected of him." He is a full-time activist, which not only requires believing strongly in a movement, but believing strongly in yourself, too. This is also courageous.

You can intelligently debate Jonah's tactics or politics (and he welcomes this), but I won't buy an argument that Jonah is a wimp for speaking honestly about what he saw.

Sarah
by Sarah
Oh--you weren't really calling him a wimp, specifically. Whimp is your "title." Sorry that I misunderstood that part of your message, but my feelings about what you wrote still stand.

Sarah
by Uber-Nerd
Yanno...usually Underpants are stinky and filled with wierd looking body parts. But I kinda like this pair.

Drugs are a choice. Theft is a choice. Being a friggin moron and doing what you know you're not supposed to do is a choice. The law is the law. Live with it or vote to change it. If you don't like it and break it, I have no sympathy for you.

BTW...if there actually were political prisoners in Canada, or the US for that matter, they would be handled like all the political prisoners of the Soviets: shot or exiled to die in slavery in some place Siberia-esqe.

You're full of crap. You're a petty criminal who got convicted of a petty crime, served your petty time, and now you are free to roam around still act like a douche-bag.
§k
by Dumbguy
Your hella dumb
by Tag
Sarah what the hell are you trying to say? Maybe you should let Zern talk for himself. At least I can understand what he says even if I choose to dislike it.
by Tag
Oh by the way I am not calling you a wimp either.
by misstep
I don't know. Sounds like she is a wimp.
by Frederick the Hair guy
Take a look at what the facist deputy sheriffs have to say about locking up jonah:

SF Deputy Forum
We are 100% volunteer and depend on your participation to sustain our efforts!

Donate

$45.00 donated
in the past month

Get Involved

If you'd like to help with maintaining or developing the website, contact us.

Publish

Publish your stories and upcoming events on Indybay.

IMC Network