error
Last February, 42 mostly professional adults—lawyers, teachers,
civil rights leaders, and older activists—were arrested for shutting
down the Oakland jail to demonstrate against a vicious juvenile
crime law. They did this out of a strong belief that it was time to
show adult support for the many youth fighting that new injustice.
In the days that followed, teenagers came up to me and said,
“Thank you.” No, I thought, I am thanking you. This article is
about why.
For thousands of Californians, the new millennium brought years of organizing work
to a powerful climax with great promise for the future. A future that may well witness
a massive, multinational youth force—radicalized, organized, and trained—as not seen
in 40 years, if ever in the United States. Students of color have conducted lengthy
struggles elsewhere, like the long, anti-racist sit-in at the University of Michigan in
February-March. On campuses from Arizona to Ohio, students have held often militant
protests in solidarity with workers in sweatshops or right on campus, while Columbia
is seeing another round of struggle for Latino Studies. Winds of resistance also blow
in Latin America, where the year-long struggle at the University of Mexico has raged
as well as massive student and teacher movements in at least ten other countries.
Here in the ironically named Golden State, the upsurge was triggered by a new law
called the Juvenile Crime Initiative, put on the March 7, 2000 ballot by our notoriously
right-wing ex-Governor Pete Wilson. Proposition 21’s provisions filled 43 pages with
new measures that would:
give prosecutors (instead of judges) the option to file juveniles cases in adult
court, and put 14-year-olds into adult prisons
condemn juveniles to death for certain crimes if gang-related
define a gang as an informal group of three or more people wearing certain
clothing, as decided by police (gang-profiling, which has swept from coast to
coast like a plague, is probably the most semi-fascist of all provisions)
authorize tapping of phones of suspected gang-member households
require gang members convicted of a crime to register with police wherever they
move, like sex offenders
abolish confidentiality rules that allow young offenders to go back to school or
find jobs without being labeled criminal
increase penalties, give longer sentences and extend the “three strikes” law—for
example, up to now damage from graffiti had to cost $50,000 for it to be a
felony, now the amount would be lowered to $400; three felonies and you’re in
prison for life
California has joined 40 other states that have passed sweeping legislation to
criminalize youth, especially those of color, as described by Mara Dodge in Z’s March
issue. Of all the racist, repressive new laws, California’s Prop. 21 is one of the
harshest. Forget the fact that, between 1990-1998, the rate of California’s juvenile
arrests for felonies dropped 30 percent and its juvenile homicide arrest rate dropped
61 percent. Forget the fact that Prop. 21 costs more than $1 billion in prison
construction and $330 million to implement, instead of more funds for intervention
programs. Forget the fact that the record shows trying juveniles as adults increases
the likelihood of their returning to lockup after release. Forget the fact that California,
once a model, now stands 41st in educational spending nationally.
Prop. 21, the latest blow in the ever-expanding war on youth, might have quietly
passed last March. Its ballot description in most counties led 90 percent of the voters
to think the new law would simply reduce car-jackings, home invasions, and drive-bys.
But some young people were not about to let Prop. 21 sneak in—at least not quietly.
Their non-stop campaign against the initiative carries one message loud and clear: a
new movement primarily led by youth of color has been born in California. A new civil
rights movement, some call it.
That’s what the campaign was really about, much more than an attempt to block yet
another rightwing blow. “That’s why you didn’t see people sitting around mourning the
day after Prop. 21 passed,” said Jay Imani of the Third Eye Movement in Oakland. “We
are in a much stronger position now than 6 months ago. We were able to organize
people not just to defeat Prop 21 but for bigger goals, to educate youth to see the
idea of building a larger, long-term movement for changing the political and economic
realities of California.” Favianna Rodriguez, artist and campaign web-master, was even
more definite. “The campaign focus was always on training—training politically
conscious youth for a new movement-and it’s been happening for thousands of young
people. When I think that 6 years ago I was in the 10th grade and I have learned so
much since then!”
Adam Gold of Concord-and Beyond (C-Beyond), based in conservative, mostly white
Contra Costa County north of San Francisco, also emphasized the development of new
activists. “Prop. 21 radicalized a lot of young people through disillusionment with
electoral politics. They said, ‘How come it passed (by 62-38) when we and so many
people were all against it?’” (In fact, the only place where it did not pass was the
four-county Bay Area, which defeated it resoundingly, confirming the powerful youth
campaign.)
Cecilia Brennan, of Youth Organizing Communities (YOC), saw the explosion of youth
activism in the Pico Union area of Los Angeles, home to the current LAPD Ramparts
scandal, as a major victory. “It was a wake-up call—like when you get slapped in the
face and you’re galvanized into action. Young people were so directly affected by 21.
They could see the economic realities of having jails instead of schools, of the prison
industrial complex, which say youth are expendable and money is all that counts. They
could see how the whole educational system was failing. They became so angry—and
that energy is so contagious.” “Often,” added Lali Sosa-Riddell of YOC at UC San
Diego, “college students who had been inactive were really pushed to get involved by
the energy of the high school and middle school students.”
Different regions sometimes had different victories. “Unlike the Bay Area, Los Angeles
didn’t have a strong tradition of direct action in recent years,” said Luis Sanchez of
YOC. “And it didn’t have the training. But that changed with 21. Out of all this action
will come a network of people in southern California who know how to do things.”
With the Cry of “Schools Not Jails”
The story of anti-21 activism includes creative new tactics, the key role of culture in
organizing for social justice, the need to deal with internal divisions, important
lessons learned, and deciding where to go from here.
This new movement took years to develop. Some San Francisco youth had been
energized and politicized during the 1991 Gulf War. In 1993 primarily Latino youth
were training and demonstrating all over northern California against racist policies and
programs in schools, demanding La Raza Studies at the high school level, and other
educational rights. The organization first known as Fund Our Youth, then StEP
(Student Empowerment Project), VOS (Voices of Struggle), and currently OLIN (the
name means Movement in Nahuatl, a language of pre-Columbian Mexico) organized
massive school walkouts involving 20,000 people over time in 1993-94. Mentored for
years by labor organizer Gabriel Hernandez, StEP played a seminal role in building the
current movement and devised the “Schools Not Jails” slogan.
Major forces in developing the movement were the campaigns against rightwing
propositions 184 (3 Strikes and You’re Out), 187 (No health and education rights for
the undocumented), 209 (No Affirmative Action), and 227 (No bilingual education).
The Bay Area’s Californians for Justice trained hundreds of young people in electoral
work. Some youth fought to block a new curfew. Many worked in the campaign to free
Mumia Abu Jamal and still more were energized by the big Critical Resistance
conference exposing the prison industrial complex at UC Berkeley.
By 1997, Raquel Jimenez of VOS could say “The high school students are running
things now. They needed college students as mentors in the beginning but now they
can run their own meetings.” VOS’s biggest effort drew over 4,000 youth to the new
police station in Concord for a dramatic protest demanding schools not jails. Young
groups with several years of activist experience like Standing Together to Organize a
Revolutionary Movement (STORM) attracted youth of color with their radical politics
and street style, and set up study programs that included revolutionary theory. All this
work and more laid a foundation of sophisticated and experienced young people ready
to help a new generation develop. “Veterans” of 1990’s activism, now in their
mid-to-late 20s, played a key role. They included many dynamic young women, whose
leadership was not to be challenged by sexism. This paid off during the whole anti-21
campaign, when you could see the great leap in skills and know-how made by female
teenagers. Third Eye Movement in San Francisco was not unique in having its liaison
with the police conducted by a 15-year old (mentored by a young Chicana) and media
relations handled by a 17-year- old. In Los Angeles it was 14-year-old Sommer Garza
of YOC who handled media for a major demonstration.
When Prop. 21 appeared, then, youth were ready to launch what many have called a
new civil rights movement.
From Hip-Hop To Hilton
From the beginning, hip-hop-youth’s resistance culture—played a major, mobilizing
role. An early example was the August 27 educational event organized by
Oakland-based Youth Against Community Injustice-Nia (YACI), based at a high school
notorious for its neglect by the state. With hip hop and speakers YACI educated the
audience about Prop 21, Mumia’s case, and the prison industrial complex. In
September, Third Eye Movement staged “Undersiege,” with hip-hop, poetry and
politics. Black Folks Against Prop. 21, an Oakland coalition formed by hip-hop artist
Boots of The Coup and Marcel Diallo of the Black Dot Artist Collective, organized a
series of “Guerrilla Hip Hop Concerts in December as well as voter registration
campaigns to attract new voters 18-35. The Malcolm X Grassroots Movement also
worked on voter registration.
As Jay Imani of Third Eye said, hip-hop’s popularity and the role of culture in general
was key to the whole campaign. “On a march, if the chants have a hip-hop flavor,
young people will join. It’s also been crucial for drawing together youth of all
colors—because hip-hop is multi-ethnic from the get.” Creativity also showed in one of
the most campaign strategies, launched by Youth Force (formerly Critical Resistance
Youth Task Force), a northern California coalition of over 30 organizations. The
strategy was developed by the Data Center’s Impact Research Team in Oakland and
targeted corporate funders of Prop. 21 with the message of “fund schools, not jails.”
In the first such action, C-Beyond youth picketed the offices of Chevron and the Hilton
Hotels Corp., demanding that they denounce the initiative and cease funding it.
Chevron publicly pledged to give no additional support. Because Hilton did not
respond, Third Eye members and others occupied the San Francisco Hilton Hotel’s
lobby on October 27. Later, youth groups around the state tied up the corporation’s
phone lines, demanding that chairman W.B. Hilton denounce the initiative and cease
funding it. In Los Angeles, YOC organized an action against Hilton; in Oakland, youth
from a conference called Upset the Setup arrived at the Hilton there to demand that
the night manager deliver a letter to the big boss with their demand.
The gas and electric companies also had their turn as Prop. 21 funders. Hundreds of
youth picketed and occupied PG & E buildings in San Francisco and San Jose (where
Youth United for Community Action, YUCA worked) and later visited a PG & E
brown-bag luncheon with the company’s CEO. In Concord, C-Beyond delivered a brick
to the local PG & E manager, symbolizing the prisons that the company’s funding of
Prop. 21 would build. Youth clogged its phone lines for a week. Under this coordinated
assault, the company met their demands. The San Diego Gas & Electric Co. also heard
loudly from youth in that area called Educate Don’t Incarcerate. Above all, the
anti-funder strategy helped youth understand the economic roots of their problems.
Coordinating the Power
By late 1999 the level of organizing that had developed in the Bay Area was being
reached among southern California youth too. They had held a meeting on Oct. 30 of
high school and college youth from 8 cities as well as formations including the Asian
Left Forum and the New Raza Left. Together they were building a strong base in high
schools where none had existed before.
Coordination between different geographic areas increased in 2000 and more
conferences took place than can be listed here. Statewide banner drops organized by
Olin and YOC occurred simultaneously in Oakland, San Francisco, Daly City, Richmond,
South City/San Bruno, Sacramento, Los Angeles and San Diego. “We don’t have the
money to buy billboards and air commercials to inform the public about this repressive
measure. So we’re combating Prop. 21 with our art skills,” said Olin.
With the March 7 election drawing near, 600 youth and others attended a statewide
conference in Los Angeles on January 29, organized by YOC, Olin, and the New Raza
Left, to plan the final push, coordinate actions, and train activists in outreach, media,
web-page building and other skills. It was agreed to cap the campaign with two
“Weeks of Rage” just before the election. To encourage the spirit of unity, the sponsor
would be identified as “Weeks of Rage” rather than any single organization.
The first Week of Rage began on Monday, February 21. In Oakland, a hip-hop event
called It’s Not a Battle, It’s a War stirred hundreds of youth Then they marched over
and blocked the street at the City Jail, demanding that the adults arrested there be
released. They created such a ruckus that police soon freed three, hoping to defuse
the crowd.
The next day, in San Diego, 700 students organized by YOC core groups in 15 schools
walked out and marched down the city’s major artery. On Wednesday, students in six
cities in the Los Angeles area participated in coordinated strikes. Some 300 marched 6
miles through downtown Whittier (Nixon’s hometown, poor Tricky Dick) and rallied in
front of our old friend, a Hilton hotel. Youth actions exploded from Eureka, way up in
northern California, to Santa Cruz and even Stockton (hardly a bastion of protest). On
February 24 a march of 500 sponsored by the New Raza Left went from the Aliso-Pico
Projects in East LA to the LA county jail in downtown LA, where they blockaded the
intersection.
City jails continued to be a focus. In Oakland on February 24, hundreds of youth held
“Get on the Bus I-the Siege,” an event organized by Gettin’ Down. Buses picked up
middle and high school students and then they marched through downtown Oakland
for protests at the city jail and county courthouse. Candlelight vigils also took place
that day at city halls in over 12 cities, to remember imprisoned youth and for those
who might be imprisoned under Prop. 21. There were non-stop meetings to plan local
actions, precinct walking by Californians for Justice, movies, videos, exhibits and even
a dance against 21 hosted by Asian Pacific Islander Youth Promoting Advocacy and
Leadership in Oakland.
In the last big pre-election action in northern California, youth and supporters-newly
angered by news that Amadou Diallo’s police killers had been acquitted in New
York—marched to a dilapidated building in the Mission District where youth were often
transferred from juvenile detention. That night its dreary portable classrooms were
transformed into a “Liberation School” with bright art and colorful signs naming the
buildings for historical revolutionaries. Hundreds of youth and adults gathered in the
courtyard for an all-nighter of militant celebration.
Inspired by Week-of-Rage energy, schools all over Los Angeles were ready to walk
out. To prepare for police attacks, intensive training followed a mass meeting. March 5
brought 300 to 400 youth out in Santa Monica, 300 in Los Angeles who marched to
Belmont High School, and candlelight vigils all over. On Election Day, 1,500 students
from LA schools marched to the Sheriffs Station, shutting down the city’s major
arteries. Police harassment soon increased; officers would wait outside classrooms at
Santa Monica High to quiz students. No students were arrested but some did get
“Saturday School” as punishment. It was striking to note the respect youth have won
from parents and even sometimes from the media.
In San Francisco, the day after Prop. 21 passed, 300 people gathered at San
Francisco’s Hilton Hotel-where else? Ladies in mink coats looked startled as youth
filled the gilt-chandeliered lobby, and stayed there. Police moved into that opulent
setting and began arresting a total of 175 people, marching them off to paddy wagons
in the night. Their young faces took on a luminosity that combined defiance with
dignity and said: ain’t gonna let no jailhouse turn me around, turn me around.
Where Do We Go From Here?
Everywhere youth were soon discussing: where do we go from here? Students from
seven areas of southern California met on April 2 to plan future directions. Although
the emphasis on specific issues varies, the basic goal is similar everywhere: to build a
movement that could reverse the current trend of neglecting schools in favor of prison
construction. Many see this as an important move toward basic social change.
Some organizations want to focus on the longtime struggle for educational reform,
especially in curriculum and specifically Ethnic Studies. Before the election, youth in
the Los Angeles area sometimes made this demand along with their anti-21 campaign
work. For example, 300-400 students at Roosevelt High School, which has one of the
best-organized and most diverse core groups, demonstrated and then met with the
school district superintendent. They won Ethnic Studies as a unit. Also, at one time
their history teachers always skipped the textbook chapter on pre-Columbian societies
of the Americas-like Mexico, where many of the youth’s families originated. “We want
Chapter 12,” the call went out. By late February, they had won it. Roosevelt High
students also campaigned against Prop. 22, the anti-gay and lesbian initiative on the
same ballot as 21.
San Diego youth presented a whole program of demands reflecting particular
conditions in that area. As Lali of YOC pointed out, a lot of high school students come
from nearby Tijuana, Mexico and often do not speak English. So one of their demands
was “to co-exist with others without fear of intimidation, coercion, or harassment by
any government agencies, such as the police, Border Patrol, and school security.” For
12- and 13-year-olds who had been put in detention for speaking Spanish, that
probably seemed a more immediate threat than the prison industrial complex-although
they were coming to see the linkage.
In Los Angeles, YOC was preparing to send some people to the April protests against
the World Bank and IMF, and to focus on the Democratic National Convention in
August. Locally, they were energetically constructing a more effective network and
building relations with other, well established community organizations like the Bus
Riders Union.
In northern California, many youth see breaking down the prison industrial complex as
a priority in the general struggle against racist, capitalist oppression and exploitation.
For Third Eye Movement, building a labor sector and a teachers’ sector in the
movement are important. At least one organizer is talking about developing a
youth/labor united front. Everyone wants ongoing training and political education this
summer, a process pioneered by the School of Unity and Liberation in Oakland (SOUL)
over the last few years. Revolutionary Sunday School, as one program is called,
sounds like a good idea for lots of us.
Left forces played an important role in the anti-21 youth campaign. In northern
California, several of the most admired youth organizations consider themselves
Marxist or pro-socialist and have been studying Marxist theory for some time. Others,
especially among Latinos/as combine anti-capitalist, anti-racist beliefs with
indigenous values and spirituality.