Reforms Don’t Disturb the Official Klanarchy Running NY Prisons: Rule by Racists Enabled Gangs of White Cops to Savagely Beat, Torture and Murder Robert Brooks and Messiah Nantwi at Separate Prisons

ACCORDING TO FUNKTIONARY:

reform – superficial change in form and formalities (fictitious change) which only further lubricates the status quo by renovating and painting old society in new colors. 2) appearance of change sans the change. Reform is always in the service of the status quo and the politician: it serves the privilege of the past not the promise of the future. Reform creates hypocrisy as a matter of course. Reform is the first stage in the three “R’s” in hue-man evolution; the other two being revolution and rebellion. There are two basic types of reformists: those who are preparing the ground for Third Eye revolution and those who are trying to prevent the conscious revolution. (See: Revolution, Status Quo, Meme & Change) reformers – naïve politicians. They came to do good and stayed to do well. Reformers themselves get reformed into the structure, consciousness and content of the dominant exploitative system—and thus become the system. (See: Revolution)

Klanarchy – rule by the Klan. Klanarchy was practiced at its zenith in the southern states between 1910 and 1955; characterized by such vigilantism as murders, beatings, lynchings, tar-and-feathering, bombing and maiming almost exclusively people of Afrikan descent, and to much lesser extents Catholics and “Jews.” The TRUMP Klan currently ruleS.

[AREN’T NY PRISONS CONTROLLED BY ELITE LIBERALS?] From [HERE] A sweeping prison reform bill aimed at improving safety, accountability, and transparency in New York’s correctional facilities was signed into law Friday following the murders of incarcerated individuals Robert Brooks and Messiah Nantwi by corrections officers.

The killings prompted widespread outrage and renewed calls for systemic reforms across the state’s prisons and jails.

The legislation codifies expanded use of body-worn and fixed cameras in all facilities and transport vehicles, requires rapid disclosure of video evidence to investigators, incarcerated individuals, and their attorneys, and strengthens reporting requirements when deaths occur.

Video related to deaths must now be provided to the Office of the Attorney General within 72 hours, or within 24 hours if discovered belatedly. Next of kin must be notified online within 48 hours, and autopsy reports must include photographs and x-rays.

The new law mandates continuous 24-hour video surveillance in all areas where guards interact with incarcerated people, including infirmaries and all prison vehicles. The law requires prisons to eliminate all camera “blind spots” except toilets, showers and inside cells. [MORE]

The bill also enhances oversight by increasing the number of members on the State Commission of Correction from three to five, including at least one formerly incarcerated person, and mandates a study of deaths in state facilities over the past decade. Incarcerated individuals will have greater access to the Correctional Association of New York, and former inmates will have a post-release window to file claims for harms suffered while in custody.

Many of the reforms are already underway. Body-worn cameras are now fully deployed statewide, fixed-camera projects are prioritized at Marcy and Mid-State correctional facilities, and the Office of Special Investigations has expanded staffing to boost investigative capacity.