Throughout the
last ten years of being housed all over the country, I have
heard all of the 3rd world tales of prison life from
foreigners. Still, Is America
really civilized?
I did a count
today. Nine big screen TVs in the
building; 2 microwaves, and
state of the art gym equipment. New spinners.
A new elliptical, more to come.
In the federal prison system, the items I named above are
purchased from the
Inmate Trust Fund.
Part of the proceeds from the canteen profits are used to
benefit us. We do not
have any say-so in what is purchased, but everyone in the
building benefits.
How civilized. A roommate I had
from Honduras told me that
there is no televisions, workout equipment, or computers (I
am writing this blog
from a federal prison email, by the way). There is no beds,
clothing exchange, or
running hot water in Honduras prisons either. Many luxuries such as a balanced
diet, fruit and salad with the meals, and chicken on the
bone at least once a
week is unheard of in most countries. The flip side is that other countries do not
have a government that creates broad laws to capture even 65
and over populations
for cashing their dead husbands social security checks. "I needed it to pay my
house note, so that I wouldn't be a burden to my
children." A 68 year old grand-
mother recently told me before she was released, after
serving eight months.
For some women, the living conditions here are better than
home. Still, its
wrong for a government to incarcerate by the masses for 100s
of petty crimes.
We have been getting an influx of Asian women. A few of the women sold
fake, knockoff purses or wallets. They were sent to federal prison. It is a
federal crime because the designers copyright and trademark
their merchandise.
Is prison really necessary for these petty crimes?
If you ask a federal prosecutor, they will say,
'absolutely'.
What would I be doing if I were home today? First, lets talk about what I would
NOT be doing. I do
not drink out of plastic cups in my house.
I drink out of glass.
I also would not be using recycled plastic silverware. Plastic is not healthy. How
many times can you wash out a plastic commissary bowl, that
you also cook in,
that is not microwaveable?
I can answer that- hundreds of times.
If I were home, I would be sitting in front of a computer or
laptop, putting work
in or a grant, or job creation, or writing a book, or
marketing. I would be talking
to my grandkids. I
would serve dinner on real plates, with stainless steel silverware,
and we would drink something out of a glass. Ice would come out of the freezer,
and not a luxurious federal icemaker.
I would also be
on the phone or waiting on a phone call from the love of my
life if he was not sitting right next to me.
Well, the thing is,
I am not at home. I am stuck in federal
prison, surrounded by
small luxuries, financed by our families (canteen is very
expensive, and most of
the profit comes from money sent from the streets). I am about to go and listen
to my MP3 (another federal luxury), and research case law to
get the hell out of here
(another luxury, the feds pay a minimum of $3000 a month for
lexis nexus online
law library), then crawl under my freshly laundered white
sheets because the laundry
washes our clothing three times a week- read a book until I
get sleepy, using my
modern, florescent night light, and dream of home that may
be sometimes
uncivilized by federal standards.
Rhonda Turpin
author,
publisher, prisoner
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