I love everyone, but especially you.
A Visit with James and Jeanette Gurney
Autumn on the East Coast is revered as an artist’s heaven. Brisk weather, changing fall leaves, and brilliant sunsets offer ever-stunning scenes to paint, sketch, and find inspiration. Being a California native, I’ve never really understood the concept of “Fall”. While we have the Japanese Maples that burst into bold, rich reds and Valley Oaks that shed their leaves, it’s a stark difference compared to the blanket of orange, crimson, and gold that grace every corner of the Eastern United States.
In late October…
Read MoreConnections between ICE and PIC
At the most basic level, the criminal punishment and immigration enforcement systems are fully intertwined: Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) collaborates with local police to target immigrants for deportation and subcontracts with county jails to incarcerate them. Over the past several years, many state-level criminal justice reform efforts have led to an increase in empty prison and jail beds that ICE has then used to detain immigrants. The number of immigrants incarcerated in the federal prison system for immigration crimes continues to grow (many “immigrants” being Indigenous folks to Turtle Island). It is estimated that 4 out of 5 people in ICE detention are held in private detention facilities (ACLU, 2019). Today, private prison corporations like the GEO Group, CoreCivic, LaSalle Corrections, and the Management and Training Corporation (MTC) own or operate facilities that hold the overwhelming majority of detained by ICE.
Efforts to reform the criminal punishment system and decarcerate state prisons have thankfully gained considerable traction in recent years. But as prisons reduce their populations, ICE has filled the beds with detained immigrants.
We’ve seen this all over — in New Jersey, Hudson County, and Louisiana to name a few.
In 2017, Louisiana passed significant criminal justice reforms aimed at reducing the prison population by ten percent over ten years. In the years that followed, the state prison population decreased, leaving thousands of empty prison beds. Much like in New Jersey, ICE decided to swoop in. Over the course of a year, ICE contracted with seven additional facilities in the state, securing new contracts to detain 6,000 more immigrants — the exact capacity by which the prison population had decreased. While the intention in Louisiana was to reduce the rate of incarceration, without considering the intrinsic connection between ICE and the prison systems, those beds were filled by ICE.
For years, we have heard criminalizing language that reinforces stereotypes about “good”immigrants who deserve relief versus “bad” ones who are disposable. Not only has this hurt our ability to challenge racist and xenophobic immigration laws and policies, but it is also coded in anti-Black racism, intentionally dividing the movements for immigration reform and prison abolition.
It is critical that we connect local efforts to defund the police and the prison-industrial complex (PIC) with the broader call to defund ICE and Border Patrol. ICE is one of the largest police agencies in the country, and private prison corporations continue to benefit from its increase. Understanding the relationships and similarities amongst all law enforcement agencies is vital to both abolitionist movements and immigrant advocacy.
In order for all of our communities to thrive, we must view the entire prison industrial complex as interconnected, unable to be disentangled, and work to abolish all racist and oppressive systems.
But...Why Are the Women Green?
But…why are the women green?
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There are many themes that arise in my artwork—women, nature, nudity, identity, and candidness being a few—and yet, the theme I am questioned most about is the consistent presence of the color green as a replacement for a typical skin color…
Read MoreThoughts and Ramblings on Valentine's Day
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Over the last few years, I’ve pondered the idea of heteronormativity and it’s presence in our culture. Heteronormativity, or the belief that people fall into distinct and complementary genders (male and female) with natural roles in life, assumes that heterosexuality is the norm or default sexual orientation, and that sexual and marital relations are most (or only) fitting between people of opposite sex. It excludes individuals who do not fall into the heterosexual and cisgender category (i.e. members of the LGBTQ+ community)…
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