Interview with Eco-Anarchist Prisoner Daniel McGowan

Daniel McGowan was one of many round­ed up in late 2005 and charged with eco-ter­ror­ism charges in what has become known as the Green Scare in the US; a co-ordi­nat­ed FBI attack on sev­er­al groups of peo­ple for­mer­ly or cur­rent­ly involved in eco­log­i­cal and ani­mal rights direct action. Sev­er­al defen­dants co-oper­at­ed or agreed to tes­ti­fy against each oth­er, how­ev­er Daniel and a hand­ful of oth­ers refused to impli­cate oth­ers. He was sen­tenced to 7 years in 2007. Read more about his case or how to sup­port him at http://www.supportdaniel.org.

Daniel McGowan was one of many round­ed up in late 2005 and charged with eco-ter­ror­ism charges in what has become known as the Green Scare in the US; a co-ordi­nat­ed FBI attack on sev­er­al groups of peo­ple for­mer­ly or cur­rent­ly involved in eco­log­i­cal and ani­mal rights direct action. Sev­er­al defen­dants co-oper­at­ed or agreed to tes­ti­fy against each oth­er, how­ev­er Daniel and a hand­ful of oth­ers refused to impli­cate oth­ers. He was sen­tenced to 7 years in 2007. Read more about his case or how to sup­port him at http://www.supportdaniel.org.


Orig­i­nal­ly post­ed on http://www.lasthours.org.uk

Last Hours: Hi, can you tell us a bit about who you are?

Daniel: Well, I’m an Amer­i­can polit­i­cal pris­on­er cur­rent­ly resid­ing in USP Mar­i­on’s “Com­mu­ni­ca­tion man­age­ment unit” (CMU) in South­ern Illi­nois. I am serv­ing an 84 month sen­tence for my par­tic­i­pa­tion in arsons claimed by the Earth Lib­er­a­tion Front (ELF) in 2001. My home is Brook­lyn, New York, I’m 35 years old, and I grew up in Rock­away Beach, Queens, NY (yep-the same one in the Ramones song!).
[Not long now…]

After liv­ing in Ore­gon for two years, I moved back to New York and worked on many dif­fer­ent projects before I was arrest­ed at my work­place in Decem­ber 2005. I was employed as a web­mas­ter for http://WomensLaw.org at the time of my arrest – an organ­i­sa­tion that helps women nav­i­gate their way out of domes­tic vio­lence sit­u­a­tions. Pri­or to that, I worked at var­i­ous non-prof­its usu­al­ly focused on rain­for­est pro­tec­tion and indige­nous rights most­ly in an administrative/ tech­ni­cal capac­i­ty. Projects and cam­paigns that I worked on include: sup­port for eco-pris­on­er and friend Jeff ‘Free’ Luers; work­ing with a com­mu­ni­ty of polit­i­cal pris­on­er sup­port­ers in link­ing the old­er and younger gen­er­a­tions of pris­on­er sup­port­ers (many of these peo­ple became the base of my support/ defence com­mit­tee Fam­i­ly and Friends of Daniel McGowan) and lat­er, the NYC ABCF chap­ter (Anar­chist Black Cross pris­on­er sup­port); organ­is­ing Real­ly Real­ly Free Mar­kets; organ­is­ing against the Repub­li­can Par­ty’s con­ven­tion being held in NYC in 2004 (through the cre­ation of http://rncnotwelcome.org), and anti-war resis­tance – most­ly try­ing to cre­ate ways for anar­chists to par­tic­i­pate out­side the realm of the two Com­mie front groups – Answer and NION (Not in Our Name).

Last Hours: Tell us some­thing about what a typ­i­cal day looks like for you inside, what’s your dai­ly rou­tine?

Daniel: Apolo­gies if I send you to sleep with this one. Pris­on­ers will tell you their rou­tine is what saves them and helps the day pass. In that way, prison is like a ‘bizarro world’ – in here, I val­ue rigid unchang­ing rou­tines and hate week­ends – go fig­ure! I wake up at 6am, eat break­fast while catch­ing the ear­ly news on cable TV. From 7am till lunch (absurd­ly served at 10.30am), I either go back to sleep or most days, read the news­pa­per, write some let­ters and check email (almost all fed­er­al pris­on­ers in the US now have access to email! We pay for it of course but it’s a plus). After lunch, I go out­side, shoot bas­ket­ball or play a lit­tle hand­ball and then study for my para­le­gal course or go to Span­ish class. After that it’s mail call which is just the best time of day for me – even after 2 years I always get mail and I’m incred­i­bly thank­ful for that. I work out around 2pm most days, catch a snack after­wards and when we’re locked in our cell to be count­ed, I read. Then it’s din­ner, more time out­side, more let­ters and read­ing and before I know it, it’s time to lock in our cells. Most nights I read for one or two hours but like tonight, I catch up on let­ters. Sprin­kled through­out the day is the impor­tant task of mak­ing cof­fee, my prison job of sweeping/ mop­ping a hall­way and writ­ing arti­cles, doing legal research and plain old hang­ing out. It cer­tain­ly isn’t excit­ing and there is much less to do here than at a ‘normal’/ gen­er­al population/ non-iso­la­tion prison.

Last Hours: How do you keep your spir­its up and your mind still crit­i­cal in this envi­ron­ment?

Daniel: This is a dai­ly focus of mine: how to not slip into depres­sion and inac­tiv­i­ty. Most­ly, I keep as busy as I can and heed the wis­dom of for­mer and cur­rent pris­on­ers who advise me that a busy rou­tine is the best way of doing your time. I live with some men who have been locked in their cells, 23 hours a day, and have sur­vived through the relent­less main­te­nance of a busy sched­ule. By keep­ing busy, I don’t have a lot of time to feel shit­ty. Of course, one must deal with those feel­ings and I do, but I try to remind myself of a few key points: 1) I got 7 years, which is not only below the aver­age sen­tence for fed­er­al pris­on­ers but pales in rela­tion to what I faced at indict­ment (life plus), 2) A lot of peo­ple care about me and my well being; that is some­thing I am remind­ed of dai­ly with thought­ful let­ters, cards and notes (I espe­cial­ly appre­ci­ate the beau­ti­ful cards I get peri­od­i­cal­ly from Euro­pean activist gath­er­ings!), 3) That mil­lions of peo­ple have done time, got released and are okay – includ­ing a grow­ing num­ber of eco-activists and long serv­ing polit­i­cal pris­on­ers (who have been faced with much worse con­di­tions than I have). Friends have been kind enough to send me many pho­tos – of them­selves, of places they’ve been, and events I would have liked to attend and my pho­to album acts as a shot in the arm for me. When I’m sad, I allow myself to be sad but I try not to wal­low. If all goes well, I have three and a third years left before release, which com­pared to my fel­low CMU res­i­dents is a tiny amount.

Main­tain­ing a crit­i­cal view is tough. I am inun­dat­ed with main­stream news cov­er­age and it tends to dis­tort one’s view of the world, watch­ing cov­er­age of Israel’s bomb­ing of Gaza or the nar­row debate on Michael Vick (an Amer­i­can foot­ball play­er recent­ly released from prison after serv­ing a 23 month sen­tence for fund­ing dog-fight­ing) has remind­ed me how dis­tort­ing and absurd the cor­po­rate news is – whether it’s CNN, Fox, MSNBC or I sup­pose BBC. It’s a point raised by for­mer polit­i­cal pris­on­er Rob los Ricos in a let­ter to (Amer­i­can rad­i­cal pub­li­ca­tion) Rolling Thun­der. When most of your news of the out­side world comes from the idiot box, it can real­ly warp your ideas. The prob­lem is, we are see­ing the death of print pub­li­ca­tions in the US (and I guess all over – if I’m cor­rect, Last Hours was a print pub­li­ca­tion?). So many rad­i­cal pub­li­ca­tions have bit­ten the dust since 2004 that I tend to over-rely on main­stream sources. It’s not rare for me to ask friends, “What are anar­chists and rad­i­cals say­ing about the econ­o­my, Oba­ma, coal, NATO, protests etc.?” Luck­i­ly I’m spoiled with a load of peo­ple will­ing to print me ana­lyt­i­cal arti­cles off web­sites such as counterpunch.org, http://infoshop.org and the Port­land, Ore­gon and NYC Indy­medias. Still, one must main­tain crit­i­cal thought while watch­ing TV or else you’ll start think­ing coal can be clean or the hand­wring­ing “both sides are at fault” type lib­er­al think­ing.

Last Hours: Have you been able to main­tain con­tacts to move­ments on the out­side? What do you think has changed since you were jailed?

Daniel: Main­tain­ing con­nec­tions to move­ments on the out­side (such as the envi­ron­men­tal and polit­i­cal pris­on­er sup­port com­mu­ni­ty) has been a chal­lenge dur­ing the two years I have been inside – and much hard­er since I’ve been here in the CMU. I think it’s hard for peo­ple to under­stand just how depen­dent we are in here on peo­ple on the out­side, keep­ing up with what’s going on in our move­ments is very dif­fi­cult as it requires peo­ple on the out­side cor­re­spond­ing with us and copi­ous amounts of copies, arti­cles and inter­net post­ings being sent in. Even with that, which I am lucky enough to have, I am still woe­ful­ly behind on what’s going on, the dis­cus­sions peo­ple are hav­ing, cam­paigns that are being devel­oped. It’s cer­tain­ly under­stand­able as peo­ple on the out­side have so much on their plates and it’s hard to trans­mit the nuance of these dis­cus­sions. Also, there are dis­cus­sions I can’t be part of for obvi­ous rea­sons – I am in prison where my every con­tact with out­side is heav­i­ly scru­ti­nised so there’s a lot of dia­logue that can’t occur. I do my best to engage in dia­logue with the move­ment via let­ters to activists and organ­i­sa­tions. Much of my focus for the last eight years has been on polit­i­cal pris­on­ers, prison reform etc. The New York City ABCF is a group I dia­logue with often about ideas and projects they work on. My own sup­port group is heav­i­ly involved with organ­is­ing around the CMU and pas­sage of a bill that will increase the ‘good time cred­it’ for fed­er­al pris­on­ers (http://www.goodtimebill.info). My con­tact with the rad­i­cal envi­ron­men­tal move­ment has been spot­ty, at best. After I report­ed to prison, I sub­mit­ted quite a few pieces to the (Amer­i­can) Earth First! Jour­nal but after an aggres­sive per­son­al attack (to which I was not offered a con­cur­rent response) by a co-defen­dant, I opt­ed to not sub­mit more to that pub­li­ca­tion. I am in con­tact with pre­cise­ly one Earth First! Group in the US, which I find dis­ap­point­ing but I have good dia­logue with a few move­ment pub­li­ca­tions, polit­i­cal pris­on­er sup­port­ers and inter­na­tion­al eco, polit­i­cal pris­on­er and ani­mal activists. Main­tain­ing com­mu­ni­ca­tion with the move­ment is a two way street – if I had a nick­el for every let­ter I’ve writ­ten that has­n’t been respond­ed to…

Unlike some polit­i­cal pris­on­ers, I have opt­ed not to write big ana­lyt­i­cal pieces on hap­pen­ings in soci­ety due to my rel­a­tive iso­la­tion and thus igno­rance. To be able to write such pieces would require me to have some­thing more than what I do, name­ly, the afore­men­tioned over­whelm­ing access to mainstream/ cor­po­rate sources of news, a smat­ter­ing of inde­pen­dent pub­li­ca­tions and the opin­ions of my cor­re­spon­dents. I ask friends con­stant­ly what is new out there – in NYC, Amer­i­ca, beyond, but it’s hard to real­ly get a grasp on it.

How­ev­er, there are some things that have changed in the US that even I can see. The first would be the Oba­ma cam­paign and pres­i­den­cy. While I won’t deny the his­toric event that the elec­tion of a black man to pres­i­dent­cy is, I am dis­mayed by the trance that has seem­ing­ly fall­en over many facets of the left regard­ing Oba­ma. Peo­ple who know bet­ter (many of us who had gone through this in 1992 with Clin­ton) have become entranced by the man’s charis­ma, intel­lec­tu­al capac­i­ty and rhetoric about ‘hope and change’. After 8 years of Bush, it’s under­stand­able. The top­i­cal dif­fer­ence between the two is immense but we need to remem­ber the nature of the Pres­i­den­cy (and of cap­i­tal­ism, for that mat­ter). It mat­ters lit­tle who is at the top and while cer­tain poli­cies may sound great – the attempt­ed clo­sure of Guan­tanomo, troop with­draw­al of Iraq – oth­er poli­cies are even worse than Bush, e.g. 17,000+ new troops into Afghanistan, or the sup­pres­sion of tor­ture pho­tos. Oba­ma will not dis­man­tle cap­i­tal­ism and he is obvi­ous­ly not a social­ist. He is behold­en to Wall Street and 90% of his staff is inher­it­ed from the Clin­ton era. He does­n’t chal­lenge US excep­tion­al­ism and impe­ri­al­ism and on many fronts, is the same of Bush, or worse.

Now that said, like Clin­ton, US social move­ments have more wig­gle room to push hard for what we want, or min­i­mal­ly, to grow our move­ments with­in a slight­ly less repres­sive regime (that point is debat­able con­sid­er­ing the res­o­lu­tion of at least three high-pro­file ter­ror­ism cas­es thus far in the Oba­ma era plus a typ­i­cal, infor­mant-induced, ‘bomb­ing plot’ in NYC where four black Mus­lim men were recent­ly indict­ed). Ide­al­ly, we would use these next three and a half or eight years to expand our move­ments and win con­ces­sions with­out devolv­ing into absurd cam­paigns against vot­ing (which to me, are a colos­sal waste of time).

Anoth­er change I’ve noticed is how ‘green’ is now remark­ably trendy. Every­where I look there are arti­cles about ‘how to be green’, or what green, eco prod­ucts, there are etc. In some ways, this is great – it shows how the work of envi­ron­men­tal­ists over the last 40 years has paid off. Envi­ron­men­tal con­scious­ness is, with­out a doubt, high­er. The prob­lem is, that there often isn’t, if at all, mon­ey to be made by liv­ing sim­pler lives, con­sum­ing less and pre­serv­ing or pro­tect­ing wilder­ness. Thus, the creep­ing act of recu­per­a­tion takes place which is almost an act of, ‘If you can’t beat em, join em’ on the part of busi­ness. While many of the prod­ucts made have a place in an eco­log­i­cal­ly aware soci­ety, much of what is made is crap or wid­gets and is more to do with mar­ket­ing or green­wash than any­thing. It’s remark­able to see the accep­tance of cli­mate change as fact by vast sec­tors of soci­ety but we need to help peo­ple get past the paral­y­sis that occurs from the accep­tance of cli­mate change as occur­ring. Also, now that this very small bat­tle has been won, we need to ‘leap-frog’ the argu­ment. The next bat­tle is the one against false alter­na­tives to com­bat­ing cli­mate change. That is: bio­fu­els, ‘clean’ coal, the resur­gence of nukes as well as the very real dis­as­ters we will see more of in the next 20 years (the sub­mer­gence of islands, big­ger and more fre­quent hur­ri­canes and tor­na­does, species like the polar bear slip­ping towards extinc­tion, the destruc­tion of indige­nous peo­ple’s home­lands etc). From my van­tage point, the world has cer­tain­ly changed but being in an envi­ron­ment seem­ing­ly frozen in time, it’s hard for me to pro­vide great analy­sis. One fun­ny thing I tell my friends is that my main goal is to leave prison not in 2007 but in 2012!

Last Hours: What do you know about more recent devel­op­ments in the Green Scare repres­sion in the US?

Daniel: I try to keep up with recent cas­es – of activists like me indict­ed by the fed­er­al gov­ern­ment, fac­ing stiff sen­tences or sim­i­lar charges as mine. I would sug­gest that peo­ple inter­est­ed in these cas­es check out the fol­low­ing sites – http://www.cdlc.org (the Civ­il Lib­er­ties Defence Cen­ter in Eugene, Ore­gon – a stal­wart, tiny group of lawyers who defend eco-pris­on­ers amongst oth­ers); my site www.supportdaniel.org, and the list­serve dis­trib­uted by www.spiritoffreedom.org.uk. Most recent­ly, I have read about a 22 year sen­tence hand­ed down to a female envi­ron­men­tal activist, a 19 year sen­tence giv­en to a male envi­ron­men­tal activist entrapped by an FBI infor­mant, and the recent indict­ment of four activists in San­ta Cruz, Cal­i­for­nia on ‘Ani­mal Ter­ror­ism’ charges. This case is par­tic­u­lar­ly trou­bling as it’s the first use of the law, one that specif­i­cal­ly out­laws pre­vi­ous­ly pro­tect­ed free speech activ­i­ty – if direct­ed towards an ‘ani­mal enter­prise’ (e.g. a med­ical test­ing com­pa­ny). As usu­al, the gov­ern­ment lib­er­al­ly uses the grand jury to inves­ti­gate and com­pel tes­ti­mo­ny from activists against each oth­er and posts rewards for arrests. In that, there has been a “chill­ing effect” on aspects of the move­ment.

I can’t help to think the Green Scare is not about the arrest of peo­ple who have bro­ken the law, but real­ly about demon­s­ing envi­ron­men­tal and ani­mal activists who have the poten­tial for cur­tail­ing prof­its. On a pos­i­tive note, I have read that many of these cas­es are in appeal and this is a chance for some jus­tice. Also, some activists have been released or are close to release and are com­ing back to their com­mu­ni­ties. Final­ly, I am very excit­ed that my friend, Jeff ‘Free’ Luers, will be released in Decem­ber of this year – his sen­tence was thrown out and he plead­ed to a 10 year sen­tence (down from 22 years and nine months) last year. He will need help for a release fund upon his release and his sup­port group is work­ing towards that goal now. (see http://www.freefreenow.org)

Last Hours: How do you get on with oth­er pris­on­ers at Mar­i­on?

Daniel: Gen­er­al­ly I get on with peo­ple quite well. I find I have a lot more in com­mon with many of the men here at the CMU. Most of us have had sim­i­lar pros­e­cu­tions, been vil­i­fied in the media and receive a lot of com­mu­ni­ty sup­port. Unlike a lot of pris­ons, this one is rel­a­tive­ly qui­et and the pris­on­ers are stu­dious mak­ing for an eas­i­er envi­ron­ment to get to know peo­ple. The cul­tur­al dif­fer­ences in the CMU are huge and that requires a lot of under­stand­ing, dia­logue and tol­er­ance for peo­ple’s opin­ion. There are top­ics that are best not dis­cussed for the sake of peace. Gen­er­al­ly speak­ing, I try to relate to my fel­low pris­on­ers, on issues we share in com­mon – cri­tiques of the prison sys­tem, region­al affin­i­ty, even sports! Where this gets sticky is on points of con­tention, usu­al­ly the ram­pant sex­ism, racism and homo­pho­bia (and anti­semitism) in pris­ons. My stance is that I won’t ever par­take in con­ver­sa­tions on these top­ics unless I see a mean­ing­ful way to chal­lenge it. Often, whites in the sys­tem will, upon see­ing my skin­tone, launch into racist remarks, assum­ing I agree. It cre­ates awk­ward sit­u­a­tions and when I feel like they can hear me, I chal­lenge it. Late­ly, the issue that comes up often is same-sex mar­riage as more and more states in the US are mak­ing it legal. News cov­er­age is heavy and thus, there’s a lot of hate being thrown around. When you are the only per­son sup­port­ive of queer peo­ple, its hard to know where to begin! Do you start by chal­leng­ing the “homo­sex­u­al­i­ty as immoral act” the­o­ry or pro­mote equal pro­tec­tion for gay folks? At first, I chalked these beliefs up to the fact that this was a prison thing, but my cur­rent the­o­ry is these beliefs are more com­mon than I thought in US soci­ety. The rea­son I don’t see it is because I organ­ise in a rad­i­cal sub­cul­ture (which is prob­lem­at­ic, in many ways). Still, I look for­ward to being in an envi­ron­ment where I don’t feel hor­ri­bly pissed off hear­ing an absurd rhetoric about “Jews con­trol­ling the econ­o­my” or “the Holo­caust did­n’t hap­pen” and incred­i­bly con­ser­v­a­tive voic­es on social issues.

The unit I live in now is mixed in terms of secu­ri­ty lev­els – from low (me) to a few men who have been at the lone fed­er­al super­max. The pre­vi­ous prison I was at was a low secu­ri­ty prison and the envi­ron­ment was pet­ty. Peo­ple mind­ed their own busi­ness, it was crowd­ed and extreme­ly apo­lit­i­cal. Here, the con­ver­sa­tions are, at least, very inter­est­ing and all my books and pub­li­ca­tions are shared with about half the unit. No mat­ter how well you get on with peo­ple, even­tu­al­ly, peo­ple piss you off – it’s only nat­ur­al when liv­ing in a con­fined space with only 20+ peo­ple!

Last Hours: Tell us about some every­day stuff you enjoy/makes you hap­py!

Daniel: That’s a tough one, as my life is so ori­ent­ed towards prison life! Well, in here I enjoy read­ing a mix of ultra-seri­ous, polit­i­cal, non-fic­tion and fluffy fic­tion (I like the Twi­light series, Har­ry Pot­ter and spy nov­els!). I like bas­ket­ball, hand­ball, and lis­ten­ing to bad 90s ‘alter­na­tive’ on the satel­lite radio as well as shit­ty 80s films. I love mail call, get­ting mail and writ­ing as well as mak­ing a fan­cy prison cof­fee drink – instant cof­fee (Foldgers), ½ tea­spoon peanut but­ter, hot cocoa – then iced. More impor­tant­ly, on the out­side, I like hang­ing with my friends, hav­ing potlucks and drink­ing cold micro­brews, send­ing pris­on­ers huge let­ters and big pack­ets of arti­cles, cook­ing and bak­ing, rough­hous­ing and spoil­ing my nieces, chill­ing with my sweety and see­ing arte­facts of old, pre-gen­tri­fied NYC. I like read­ing about his­to­ry – espe­cial­ly of past social move­ments, both in the US, and around the world, and of resis­tance to the nazis dur­ing WW2. Late­ly, I’ve read all the books I can find writ­ten by rad­i­cals from the 60s/ 70s like Bill Ayers, Berna­dine Dohrn, Mark Rudd and Cathy Wilk­er­son (from the Weath­er Under­ground). Zines are some of my favourite – polit­i­cal ones most­ly, but I do love one per­son­al zine – like Mor­gen­muf­fel! Prob­a­bly the thing I like the most, and this may sound corny, is help­ing peo­ple and try­ing my hard­est to make a dif­fer­ence in their strug­gle against oppres­sion (of the nat­ur­al world, oth­er species and fel­low humans). On anoth­er lev­el, I enjoy teas­ing my friends, giv­ing goofy and unwant­ed nick­names and laugh­ing in the face of adver­si­ty.

Last Hours: What can peo­ple do to sup­port polit­i­cal pris­on­ers?

Daniel: I would say the best way to sup­port pris­on­ers in our move­ment is to engage them in a prin­ci­pled way about what they need. Dif­fer­ent peo­ple have strik­ing­ly dif­fer­ent needs and ways of doing their time. Some, like myself, aren’t in appeal and thus have much less of a need for fundrais­ing than oth­ers (although this was quite the oppo­site dur­ing my case). Oth­ers may choose to con­cen­trate on their men­tal well being and deal­ing with sur­vival, leav­ing less ener­gy or desire to write arti­cles, for instance. Treat peo­ple like indi­vid­u­als – ask them what they need and don’t treat them like stereo­types of what you think a polit­i­cal pris­on­er should believe etc. There are some gen­er­al com­mon­al­i­ties we share – a need for con­tact with our friends, fam­i­ly and com­mu­ni­ty, a desire not to be for­got­ten etc. but beyond that, I am hes­i­tant to be too spe­cif­ic.

Per­son­al­ly speak­ing, it was and is impor­tant for me to feel con­nect­ed to move­ments I was a part of on the out­side (such as polit­i­cal pris­on­er sup­port). Being in prison has felt like being “benched” (sor­ry for the sports ref­er­ence but it real­ly fits!). So, keep­ing up with what our move­ments are up to (cam­paigns, events, DNC and RNC mobil­i­sa­tions last sum­mer etc.) has been a huge pri­or­i­ty. Also, before I went in I had an idea of what I thought sol­id pris­on­er sup­port was. Of course, liv­ing it has changed my view some­what and I have a good dia­logue with those on the out­side engag­ing in pris­on­er sup­port. I try to advise peo­ple on those issues from my new­found per­spec­tive to the extent that I can. Extrap­o­lat­ing from my sit­u­a­tion to the broad­er group of polit­i­cal pris­on­ers I’d say, peo­ple can write to polit­i­cal pris­on­ers (or their sup­port com­mit­tees), see what needs aren’t being met and fill them. Be con­sis­tent and hon­est in your com­mu­ni­ca­tion with us and be open to what our needs may be.

As for my sit­u­a­tion, I am lucky enough to have real­ly sol­id sup­port from the move­ment, my fam­i­ly and NYC com­mu­ni­ty. There is nev­er a time I lack com­mis­sary funds, read­ing mate­r­i­al or a con­sis­tent stream of updates and love from the out­side. This is not the case though for many pris­on­ers. Specif­i­cal­ly we have a sit­u­a­tion in the States where there are 100 or so polit­i­cal pris­on­ers (recog­nised by the ABCF and the Jeri­cho Move­ment), many of whom have been in for over 20 years. While many have rein­vig­o­rat­ed free­dom cam­paigns – due to web­sites, young vol­un­teers etc. – they still face huge obsta­cles in their path for free­dom.

It’s been my goal going on eight years now to build bridges between the envi­ron­men­tal and ani­mal rights polit­i­cal pris­on­er move­ment and the broad­er polit­i­cal pris­on­er com­mu­ni­ty. I feel both sides have a lot to offer each oth­er and when there’s been mutu­al rela­tion­ships, such as joint protests against grand juries in San Fran­cis­co, CA by for­mer pan­thers and ani­mal rights activists, it’s been pow­er­ful. If you iden­ti­fy strong­ly as an eco or ani­mal rights per­son, branch out, check out the leftist/ anti-impe­ri­al­ist/ black nation­al­ist polit­i­cal pris­on­ers – you can find bios, move­ment his­to­ry and con­tacts at http://www.abcf.net or www.thejerichomovement.com. If social jus­tice is more your thing and you don’t hang with the tree hug­ger set, check out www.spiritoffreedom.org.uk, the links page on my site, www.suppportdaniel.org, http://www.ecoprisoners.org and www.cldc.org. (In fact, many eco/animal PPs have sites with the style www.support_.org so just google or plug in first names).

Thanks for giv­ing me the oppor­tu­ni­ty to share my thoughts on some real­ly good ques­tions. I am most appre­cia­tive of the sup­port shown to me by so many peo­ple – espe­cial­ly those in oth­er coun­tries, many of whom I’ll nev­er meet. I can be reached at

Daniel McGowan #63794–053

USP Mar­i­on

Post Office Box 1000

Mar­i­on, Illi­nois 62959

USA

http://www.myspace.com/danielmcgowan

http://www.supportdaniel.org

(for US read­ers) http://www.goodtimebill.info