Skip to main content
  • air jordan 1 low outlet
  • Jordan 10 Retro Light Smoke Grey310805-062 , 602 Release Date - Verse 555088 - Air Jordan 1 Origin Story Spider - IetpShops
  • Sydney Thomas, Paul-Tyson ring girl, reacts to viral fame in hilarious video
  • Blazers Predicted to Land M Star For Anfernee Simons
  • una Jordan auténtica
  • Air Jordan 4 GS Where The Wild Things Are DH0572 264 Release Date Price 4
  • Womens Air Jordan 1 Denim DM9036 104 Release Date 4
  • 1574 nike air jordan 1 blancas y negras
  • adidas yeezy boost 350 turtle dove
  • nike air max 1 travis scott cactus jack baroque brown do9392 200
  • Home
  • Calendar
  • About Us
  • Watch/Listen
  • FOIL Docs
  • Editorial Policy
  • Log in
  • Publish Article

Upcoming Events

No upcoming calendar events.

YOU MAY ALREADY BE A SLAVE... recognizing 21st Century Peon Camps

Primary tabs

  • View
  • Devel(active tab)

Secondary tabs

  • Load(active tab)
  • Render
  • ... (Object) stdClass
    • vid (String, 5 characters ) 62599
    • uid (String, 3 characters ) 485
    • title (String, 65 characters ) YOU MAY ALREADY BE A SLAVE... recognizing 21st ...
      • YOU MAY ALREADY BE A SLAVE... recognizing 21st Century Peon Camps
    • log (String, 0 characters )
    • status (String, 1 characters ) 1
    • comment (String, 1 characters ) 2
    • promote (String, 1 characters ) 1
    • sticky (String, 1 characters ) 0
    • nid (String, 5 characters ) 51744
    • type (String, 17 characters ) drupalimc_article
    • language (String, 3 characters ) und
    • created (String, 10 characters ) 1342224099
    • changed (String, 10 characters ) 1345213746
    • tnid (String, 1 characters ) 0
    • translate (String, 1 characters ) 0
    • revision_timestamp (String, 10 characters ) 1345213746
    • revision_uid (String, 3 characters ) 485
    • body (Array, 1 element)
      • und (Array, 1 element)
        • 0 (Array, 5 elements)
          • value (String, 5262 characters ) <p>"That's silly! I'm not a peon and I don't li...
            • <p>"That's silly! I'm not a peon and I don't live/work in a camp," you say. "I'm an American with guaranteed rights of citizenship, free to buy stuff and come and go as I please whenever and wherever I want to."</p><p><strong>How many people do you come in contact with each day who are actually enslaved?</strong> Whose daily actions reflect things they are compelled to do, though they are nonetheless American citizens just like you, who appear to be free to come and go as they please? <strong>How long will it be until the choices you make are restricted, just like theirs, </strong>though you think YOU are free right now?</p><p>[[{"type":"media","view_mode":"drupalimc_small_right","fid":"5431","attributes":{"alt":"","class":"media-image media-image-right","style":"float: right; ","typeof":"foaf:Image"}}]]I'm going to show you how the Peon Camp is present in your city and influences your life, though you may not realize it.</p><p>The phrase "<a href="http://www.digitalhistory.uh.edu/social_history/15new_slavery.cfm">peon camp</a>" cannot be found on Wikipedia or other popular online search engines, but the practice of convict leasing was popular in the American South for over 60 years. Convict leasing is a double euphemism: A convict is&nbsp;<a href="http://www.thefreedictionary.com/convict">someone who has transgressed moral or civil law or has been found guilty of an offense or crime</a>, whereas a peon (historically Black or Latino) is <a href="http://www.thefreedictionary.com/peon">an unskilled laborer or any very poor person bound in servitude to a landlord creditor</a>.&nbsp;<strong><span style="line-height: 24px; ">Euphemisms are dangerous in the English language when you fail to see yourself in the situation represented.&nbsp;</span></strong>It is certainly no crime to be poor or unskilled, though at&nbsp;points in history it's been a crime to owe someone money... the concept of debtor's prison will come into play here.</p><p>The word "leasing" suggests that the individual being compelled to render service is somehow in control of his or her servitude or is the ultimate beneficiary of his or her labor, whereas <strong>the word "camp" suggests that the worker is</strong> confined to the location where his or her labor is performed, i.e., <strong>confined or imprisoned</strong>.&nbsp;Wherever you see the phrase "convict leasing" "forced labor" or "unfree labour" below or in the links I've embedded in this essay, mentally replace them with the words "peon camps"--here, YOU try it:</p><blockquote><p><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Convict_lease">Convict leasing</a> was a system of penal labor practiced in the Southern United States, beginning with the emancipation of slaves at the end of the American Civil War in 1865, peaking around 1880, and ending in the last state, Alabama, in 1928.</p></blockquote><p>Peon camps initially began as&nbsp;<a href="http://blackcommentator.com/142/142_slavery_2.html">a way to control the Black labor force</a> in the South post-emancipation, and even though they were made&nbsp;<a href="http://www.laurajames.com/clews/2007/06/post.html">illegal in Florida in 1923</a> and&nbsp;discontinued in&nbsp;<a href="http://www.southernhistory.net/index.php?name=News&amp;file=article&amp;sid=1782">Tennessee mines in 1966 (<em>if you click on this link, scroll all the way down past the codes</em>)</a>,<strong> <a href="http://www.workers.org/2011/us/pentagon_0616/">major U.S. and international corporations contract with state and federal prisons today for "the cheapest possible labor"</a>. Convict labor is rumored to be one reason why <a href="http://www.infoplease.com/ce6/society/A0813396.html">goods imported from China are so inexpensive</a>, and even&nbsp;<a href="http://www.guestworkeralliance.org/2012/06/walmart-supply-chain-workers-hit-nyc-to-expose-forced-labor-cover-up/">WalMart has profited in Louisiana</a>&nbsp;in the past few years from <a href="http://www.change.org/petitions/walmart-stop-profiting-from-forced-labor-in-louisiana">forced labor</a></strong> (also called <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unfree_labour">unfree labour</a>).</p><p>[[{"type":"media","view_mode":"drupalimc_small_left","fid":"5430","attributes":{"alt":"","class":"media-image media-image-left","style":"float: left; ","typeof":"foaf:Image"}}]]In this series on 21st Century Peon Camps, we will be comparing <a href="http://www.counterpunch.org/2012/04/19/the-prison-labor-complex/">the privatization of U.S. prisons</a> with several local Rochester institutions supposedly designed to help the poor. Are they really exploiting low income Blacks, Latinos and whites by undermining their ability to buy and sell, thereby impoverishing local businesses?</p><p>Two of the organizations I will be investigating are:<a href="http://www.nywp.uscourts.gov/men.html"> Volunteers Of America Community Corrections Center</a><a href="http://www.mercyresidential.org/programs.html#emergency"> and Mercy Residential Services, Inc.</a></p><p>I am hoping to receive reader comments and suggestions on this series of articles. If we are going to <a href="http://reformrochesternow.wordpress.com/">reform Rochester now</a>, we can't do it alone, we must cooperate and work together.</p>
          • summary (String, 0 characters )
          • format (String, 13 characters ) filtered_html
          • safe_value (String, 6073 characters ) <p>"That's silly! I'm not a peon and I don't li...
            • <p>"That's silly! I'm not a peon and I don't live/work in a camp," you say. "I'm an American with guaranteed rights of citizenship, free to buy stuff and come and go as I please whenever and wherever I want to."</p> <p><strong>How many people do you come in contact with each day who are actually enslaved?</strong> Whose daily actions reflect things they are compelled to do, though they are nonetheless American citizens just like you, who appear to be free to come and go as they please? <strong>How long will it be until the choices you make are restricted, just like theirs, </strong>though you think YOU are free right now?</p> <p><div class="media media-element-container media-drupalimc_small_right media-float-right"><div id="file-5431" class="file file-image file-image-jpeg"> <h2 class="element-invisible"><a href="/file/5431">chain-gang.jpg</a></h2> <div class="content"> <a href="http://rochester.indymedia.org/sites/default/files/chain-gang_0.jpg?width=500&amp;height=500" class="colorbox-load" alt="" style="float: right; "><img typeof="foaf:Image" src="http://rochester.indymedia.org/sites/default/files/styles/drupalimc_small/public/chain-gang_0.jpg?itok=RJZN5vQy" alt="" title="" /></a> </div> </div> </div>I'm going to show you how the Peon Camp is present in your city and influences your life, though you may not realize it.</p> <p>The phrase "<a href="http://www.digitalhistory.uh.edu/social_history/15new_slavery.cfm">peon camp</a>" cannot be found on Wikipedia or other popular online search engines, but the practice of convict leasing was popular in the American South for over 60 years. Convict leasing is a double euphemism: A convict is <a href="http://www.thefreedictionary.com/convict">someone who has transgressed moral or civil law or has been found guilty of an offense or crime</a>, whereas a peon (historically Black or Latino) is <a href="http://www.thefreedictionary.com/peon">an unskilled laborer or any very poor person bound in servitude to a landlord creditor</a>. <strong>Euphemisms are dangerous in the English language when you fail to see yourself in the situation represented. </strong>It is certainly no crime to be poor or unskilled, though at points in history it's been a crime to owe someone money... the concept of debtor's prison will come into play here.</p> <p>The word "leasing" suggests that the individual being compelled to render service is somehow in control of his or her servitude or is the ultimate beneficiary of his or her labor, whereas <strong>the word "camp" suggests that the worker is</strong> confined to the location where his or her labor is performed, i.e., <strong>confined or imprisoned</strong>. Wherever you see the phrase "convict leasing" "forced labor" or "unfree labour" below or in the links I've embedded in this essay, mentally replace them with the words "peon camps"--here, YOU try it:</p> <blockquote><p><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Convict_lease">Convict leasing</a> was a system of penal labor practiced in the Southern United States, beginning with the emancipation of slaves at the end of the American Civil War in 1865, peaking around 1880, and ending in the last state, Alabama, in 1928.</p> </blockquote> <p>Peon camps initially began as <a href="http://blackcommentator.com/142/142_slavery_2.html">a way to control the Black labor force</a> in the South post-emancipation, and even though they were made <a href="http://www.laurajames.com/clews/2007/06/post.html">illegal in Florida in 1923</a> and discontinued in <a href="http://www.southernhistory.net/index.php?name=News&amp;file=article&amp;sid=1782">Tennessee mines in 1966 (<em>if you click on this link, scroll all the way down past the codes</em>)</a>,<strong> <a href="http://www.workers.org/2011/us/pentagon_0616/">major U.S. and international corporations contract with state and federal prisons today for "the cheapest possible labor"</a>. Convict labor is rumored to be one reason why <a href="http://www.infoplease.com/ce6/society/A0813396.html">goods imported from China are so inexpensive</a>, and even <a href="http://www.guestworkeralliance.org/2012/06/walmart-supply-chain-workers-hit-nyc-to-expose-forced-labor-cover-up/">WalMart has profited in Louisiana</a> in the past few years from <a href="http://www.change.org/petitions/walmart-stop-profiting-from-forced-labor-in-louisiana">forced labor</a></strong> (also called <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unfree_labour">unfree labour</a>).</p> <p><div class="media media-element-container media-drupalimc_small_left media-float-left"><div id="file-5430" class="file file-image file-image-jpeg"> <h2 class="element-invisible"><a href="/file/5430">prison labor.jpeg</a></h2> <div class="content"> <a href="http://rochester.indymedia.org/sites/default/files/prison%20labor_0.jpeg?width=500&amp;height=500" class="colorbox-load" alt="" style="float: left; "><img typeof="foaf:Image" src="http://rochester.indymedia.org/sites/default/files/styles/drupalimc_small/public/prison%20labor_0.jpeg?itok=sULeU3ti" alt="" title="" /></a> </div> </div> </div>In this series on 21st Century Peon Camps, we will be comparing <a href="http://www.counterpunch.org/2012/04/19/the-prison-labor-complex/">the privatization of U.S. prisons</a> with several local Rochester institutions supposedly designed to help the poor. Are they really exploiting low income Blacks, Latinos and whites by undermining their ability to buy and sell, thereby impoverishing local businesses?</p> <p>Two of the organizations I will be investigating are:<a href="http://www.nywp.uscourts.gov/men.html"> Volunteers Of America Community Corrections Center</a><a href="http://www.mercyresidential.org/programs.html#emergency"> and Mercy Residential Services, Inc.</a></p> <p>I am hoping to receive reader comments and suggestions on this series of articles. If we are going to <a href="http://reformrochesternow.wordpress.com/">reform Rochester now</a>, we can't do it alone, we must cooperate and work together.</p>
          • safe_summary (String, 0 characters )
    • field_drupalimc_categories (Array, 1 element)
      • und (Array, 10 elements)
        • 0 (Array, 1 element)
          • tid (String, 2 characters ) 28
        • 1 (Array, 1 element)
          • tid (String, 2 characters ) 30
        • 2 (Array, 1 element)
          • tid (String, 1 characters ) 9
        • 3 (Array, 1 element)
          • tid (String, 2 characters ) 35
        • 4 (Array, 1 element)
          • tid (String, 2 characters ) 33
        • 5 (Array, 1 element)
          • tid (String, 2 characters ) 41
        • 6 (Array, 1 element)
          • tid (String, 2 characters ) 26
        • 7 (Array, 1 element)
          • tid (String, 2 characters ) 44
        • 8 (Array, 1 element)
          • tid (String, 2 characters ) 14
        • 9 (Array, 1 element)
          • tid (String, 1 characters ) 4
    • field_drupalimc_local_interest (Array, 1 element)
      • und (Array, 1 element)
        • 0 (Array, 1 element)
          • value (String, 1 characters ) 1
    • field_drupalimc_migrated_images (Array, 0 elements)
    • field_drupalimc_gallery (Array, 0 elements)
    • field_drupalimc_author (Array, 1 element)
      • und (Array, 1 element)
        • 0 (Array, 3 elements)
          • value (String, 17 characters ) Valerie K Lazarus
          • format (NULL)
          • safe_value (String, 17 characters ) Valerie K Lazarus
    • rdf_mapping (Array, 9 elements)
      • rdftype (Array, 2 elements)
        • 0 (String, 9 characters ) sioc:Item
        • 1 (String, 13 characters ) foaf:Document
      • title (Array, 1 element)
        • predicates (Array, 1 element)
          • 0 (String, 8 characters ) dc:title
      • created (Array, 3 elements)
        • predicates (Array, 2 elements)
          • 0 (String, 7 characters ) dc:date
          • 1 (String, 10 characters ) dc:created
        • datatype (String, 12 characters ) xsd:dateTime
        • callback (String, 12 characters ) date_iso8601 | (Callback) date_iso8601();
      • changed (Array, 3 elements)
        • predicates (Array, 1 element)
          • 0 (String, 11 characters ) dc:modified
        • datatype (String, 12 characters ) xsd:dateTime
        • callback (String, 12 characters ) date_iso8601 | (Callback) date_iso8601();
      • body (Array, 1 element)
        • predicates (Array, 1 element)
          • 0 (String, 15 characters ) content:encoded
      • uid (Array, 2 elements)
        • predicates (Array, 1 element)
          • 0 (String, 16 characters ) sioc:has_creator
        • type (String, 3 characters ) rel
      • name (Array, 1 element)
        • predicates (Array, 1 element)
          • 0 (String, 9 characters ) foaf:name
      • comment_count (Array, 2 elements)
        • predicates (Array, 1 element)
          • 0 (String, 16 characters ) sioc:num_replies
        • datatype (String, 11 characters ) xsd:integer
      • last_activity (Array, 3 elements)
        • predicates (Array, 1 element)
          • 0 (String, 23 characters ) sioc:last_activity_date
        • datatype (String, 12 characters ) xsd:dateTime
        • callback (String, 12 characters ) date_iso8601 | (Callback) date_iso8601();
    • signature (String, 0 characters )
    • spaminess (Float) 0
    • cid (String, 2 characters ) 42
    • last_comment_timestamp (String, 10 characters ) 1342581408
    • last_comment_name (String, 0 characters )
    • last_comment_uid (String, 3 characters ) 485
    • comment_count (String, 1 characters ) 2
    • name (String, 15 characters ) ValerieKLazarus
    • picture (String, 4 characters ) 5391
    • data (String, 4 characters ) b:0;
  • Krumo version 0.2.1a
    | http://krumo.sourceforge.net
    Called from /home/members/rochindymedia/sites/rochester.indymedia.org/web/includes/menu.inc, line 527  

Search form

Local News

“Family Trouble”: The 1975 Killing of Denise Hawkins and the Legacy of Deadly Force in the Rochester, NY Police Department
CBA between the City of Rochester, NY and the Rochester Police Locust Club, 1974 - 1976
CBA between the City of Rochester & the Rochester Police Locust Club, 2019 - 2024
Did District Attorney Sandra Doorley Violate Ethics Guidelines While Attending a Local Republican Fundraiser in May?
Jim Goodman - Sleeper Cell for the Revolution!
The Press as Powdered Donut with Blue Badge in the Middle
Blueprint for Engagement: Evaluating Police / Community Relations Final Report (2017)
The Police-Civilian Foot Patrol: An Evaluation of the PAC-TAC Experiemnt in Rochester, New York (June 1975)
Police Killing of Denise Hawkins (1975)
Complaint Investigation Committee Legislation (1977)
Race Rebellion of July 1964
Selections Regarding the Police Advisory Board (1963-1970)
Prelude to the Police Advisory Board
A.C. White (January 26, 1963)
Police Raid on Black Muslim Religious Service (January 6, 1963)
Rufus Fairwell (August 12, 1962)
Incarcerated Worker sheds light on Prison Labor Conditions during Pandemic
Police and Political Commentary
BWC video indicates Mark Gaskill was holding his phone as police shouted "gun"
How the NY Attorney General's defended the police who killed Daniel Prude

Recent Comments

Any status on FOIL request?
Media's Goebbels
Related
Related
USA as NAZI criminals
oops
PS
A message of Truth from Geral
Fyi
See related data...

Syndication

  • Feature Stories
  • Local News

Account Creation Policy Change

Rochester Indymedia is now requiring editor approval for account creation.

We came to this decision after we had repeated spam posted to our website that caused difficulty with the website's functioning.  We will still have open publishing and keep our site as nonrestrictive and accessible as possible.

If you have any questions or concerns, please feel free to contact us.  As before, we will continue to be Rochester's grassroots news and education site.  Thank you for your continued support and remember, "Don't hate the media, be the media!"

Editorial Meeting Times / Locations

The Rochester Independent Media Center (R-IMC) is no longer meeting regularly.
We will set up meetings by necessity and appointment. Please contact us at rochesterindymedia@rocus.org.
Our home is still the Flying Squirrel Community Space at 285 Clarissa St. Occasionally, we hold meetings at RCTV located at 21 Gorham Street.

Global IMC Network

To be downloaded