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  • Home
  • About
    • Project Description
    • The Team
    • Working Principles
    • Press Release
    • Broken On All Sides
  • Study Groups
    • Description
    • Organizing 101
    • Transcripts
    • Regional Gatherings
  • Discussions & Feedback
  • Movement Announcements
  • Contact

MISSION: To create a national organ that weaves together the most politically-advanced organizers in the movement against mass incarceration, through which we can explore and unite our strategies, tactics, and histories.

***Unfortunately due to a lack of funding this project is on hold after 2 pilot episodes.***

We are now on iTunes and Soundcloud. Subscribe there, or listen here.
EPISODE 2: Reform vs. Revolution, Methods for Transformation, & Getting Political on the Inside
July's episode of The Thread features interviews with Maya Schenwar, author, activist, and the editor-in-chief of Truthout, as well as the second part of our interview with Kinetik Justice, a leader of the Free Alabama Movement and the recent Alabama prison strike.

​Maya talks extensively with Matt about how to approach prison and criminal justice reforms. They discuss the long-term vision of transformation from a system of isolation, confinement, and marginalization to a new vision for justice that would include rebuilding our communities and restructuring the economy and budgets. Maya Schenwar is an author and activist who has written for multiple publications including the New York Times, The Guardian, and is the editor in chief for Truthout. In addition to the articles that she has written, Maya wrote Locked Down, Locked Out: Why Prison Doesn’t Work and How We Can Do Better and edited Who Do You Serve, Who Do You Protect?: Police Violence and Resistance in the United States. Maya’s writing focuses on the prison industrial complex, law enforcement reform, US defense policy, and budget policy in the United States. To keep up to date with Maya and her writing you can go to truth-out.org or find her on Twitter @mayaschenwar.

Kinetik Justice is currently incarcerated at Holman Correctional Facility, and because of his involvement with the prison strike, is being held in solitary confinement. Kinetik and Matt talk about the proposed reforms to the Alabama state prisons, the same that Maya discusses, that would have cost $800 million and vastly expanded the prison system. The prison workers went on strike in part to kill this bill, which they did on day 3 of the strike. Kinetik also shares how he became political after going to prison, his extensive legal education on the inside, and mentors and moments that influenced his political perspective.

For more information about Kinetik Justice and the Free Alabama Movement, check out their homepage. You can also read their Freedom Bill that Kinetik mentioned in his previous interview. You can also see Kinetik in the news.

If you’re interested in any of the groups that Maya mentions, follow these links:
Californians United for a Responsible Budget
Ella Baker Center for Human Rights

Here are Links to articles that Maya mentioned if you’re interested in learning more:
“When Prison Reform Means Prison Expansion”
“Decades Later, Victims Of Chicago Police Torture Paid Reparations”
“The Prison System Welcomes My Newborn Niece to This World”

If you're interested in any of the other groups or individuals that Kinetik mentioned in this episode or the past episode, follow these links:
Political prisoner that trained Kinetik, Richard Mafundi Lake
Free Mississippi Movement United
Free Ohio Movement

Free Virginia Movement

New Underground Railroad Movement

Formerly Incarcerated and Convicted People's Movement

The Ordinary People Society


If you're interested in prison organizing, follow these links:

For prison organizing all over the country: IWW Incarcerated Workers Organizing Committee

For prison organizing in Denver, Chicago, WI, GA: Anarchist Black Cross

For prison organizing in TN: Black Autonomy Federation


Theme music from Die Jim Crow EP, available at diejimcrow.com.


We'll keep posting relevant links to our social media, so check out our Facebook or follow us on Twitter @DefeatMassInc.
The Thead transcript, Episode 2
File Size: 602 kb
File Type: pdf
Download File

Study Questions, Episode 2
File Size: 454 kb
File Type: pdf
Download File

How To Organize a Study Group
File Size: 440 kb
File Type: pdf
Download File


EPISODE 1: Prison Organizing, Fighting Poverty, and Electoral Politics
June's episode of The Thread features interviews with Kinetik Justice, the leader of the Free Alabama Movement and the recent Alabama prison strike, and Cheri Honkala, the founder of the Poor People's Economic Human Rights Campaign and former Vice Presidential candidate.


Kinetik Justice is currently incarcerated at Holman Correctional Facility, and because of his involvement with the prison strike, is being held in solitary confinement. Kinetik gives an incredibly detailed look at how they went about organizing the prison strike, the networks created within the State prison system, and the reasons for their strike. They also talk about the predecessors to the strike and what led to the current organizing. For more information about Kinetik Justice and the Free Alabama Movement, check out their homepage. You can also read their Freedom Bill that Kinetik mentions in his interview. You can also see Kinetik in the news.


Cheri Honkala continues to fight for the rights of people living in poverty across the nation. You can see more of the work she does on the Poor People's Economic Human Rights Campaign homepage. Cheri talks with Matt about the history of her involvement with anti-poverty work, her methods and model of organizing, how money and fundraising influences grassroots organizations, and how to use electoral politics alongside movement work. Cheri has been on Front Line USA's danger list for her work as a human rights activist. You can read about Front Line's work with Cheri and other human rights defenders, click here. Cheri and her running mate in the 2012 election, Jill Stein, are currently suing the Commission on Presidential Debates. If you want to read more about their arrest, click here. If you want to read more about her lawsuit, click here.

If you're interested in any of the other groups Kinetik mentioned, follow these links:

Free Mississippi Movement United

Free Ohio Movement

Free Virginia Movement

New Underground Railroad Movement

Formerly Incarcerated and Convicted People's Movement

The Ordinary People Society


If you're interested in prison organizing, follow these links:

For prison organizing all over the country: IWW Incarcerated Workers Organizing Committee

For prison organizing in Denver, Chicago, WI, GA: Anarchist Black Cross

For prison organizing in TN: Black Autonomy Federation


If you're interested in the March For Our Lives taking place on July 25th at the Democratic National Convention, follow these links: 

The March For Our Lives

Green Party Endorsement

Theme music from Die Jim Crow EP, available at diejimcrow.com.


The Thread transcript, Episode 1
File Size: 535 kb
File Type: pdf
Download File

​Study Questions, Episode 1
File Size: 454 kb
File Type: pdf
Download File



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