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Self-Interview: Jeff "Free" Luers and Rob
Thaxton (Rob Los Ricos)
Rob Thaxton: 12112716, OSP, 2605 State St., Salem, OR
97310.
Jeffrey Luers: #13797671, OSP, 2605 State St. Salem, OR
97310
"Just because we are prisoners does not mean that
we have lost our reasoning, analytical powers. We still have world views
based on long years of experience. Too many, even in our own political
movements, would prefer to relegate us to museum pieces, objects of campaigns
perhaps, but not political subjects and comrades in an ongoing political
struggle against imperialism, oppression, and exploitation. The state
tries to isolate, true; that makes it all the more important not to let
it succeed in its proposition. We fight for political identity and association
from here; it is important that political forces on the outside not lose
sight of why the state wants to isolate and destroy us, and therefore
fight to include is in political...struggle... In many struggles, many
militants have been exiled yet they have still been considered part of
their struggles, not merely objects. We, we here, could be considered
internally exiled. Don't lock us into roles as objects or symbols..."
- Marilyn Buck, from Enemies Of The State.
Rob Los Ricos (RLR): Hey, Free! Welcome to Oregon State
Prison - Prison Paradise!
Free: I always wondered what paradise looked like. I'm
glad to have finally found it. It is good to know that these guards with
guns and 25- foot, concrete walls are here to keep paradise safe.
RLR: Man, there is so much I want to discuss with you
- one political prisoner to another. I almost don't know where to start.
That's why I put that Marilyn Buck quote up front, to perhaps get the
ball rolling. My immediate reaction to meeting you would be envy, due
to the amount of attention you're getting. But - dude - I do not envy
your sentence at all. So, first of all, how are you holding up? Does all
the publicity - for the most part sympathetic outrage - over your outrageous
sentence help?
Free: All things considered, I'm holding up alright. I
don't think that I could ever put into words what it feels like to lose
everything that I love. The people that I love. And that is basically
what has happened.
It is good to know that a lot of people are seeing what
I'm going through and saying "Wow - that's just wrong." If those
people actually get involved in an effort to free me (us) that would help
a lot more. For the most part, though, I think a lot of people are just
saying "That's fucked up" and not doing anything about it.
How about you? I know from being on the outs when you
fell, there were a lot of people talking about you. Everywhere I went,
you saw flyers saying "Free Rob Thaxton!" Has that helped your
situation, or made it more bearable?
RLR: Yea, "Free Rob Thaxton - with your subscription
to Green Anarchy." No, wait - "Come to tonight's punk show and
you may win a free Rob Thaxton!"
I'm sort of underwhelmed with the support I've gotten
so far. I'm not gonna knock anyone, though our movement - such as it is
- doesn't have a lot of experience with real oppression, so most of our
lip service supporters are at a loss as to what to do, other than send
reading material and money. And I sincerely appreciate having that sort
of support. Still, I would like to be more involved with what's happening
out there beyond those big, gray walls.
As far as being the subject of graffiti, hey - what red-blooded,
rock-slinging, cop-assaulting, rioting anarchist wouldn't be honored by
that?
It's totally understandable that folks out there don't
know how to help out, considering all the petty rules prisoncrats arbitrarily
throw up to discourage and limit access between us and the outside world.
It takes a lot of time and effort to be involved with prisoners as allies
and comrades. Being friends - pen pals, even - is much easier and the
people who've been writing for a while have made a lot of difference to
my time in here. I can't imagine how I'd have managed so far without them.
Other than contacts and friends I had from my previous existence, all
these folks got my contact information from zines or prisoner listings
on the internet.
So, I enjoy the attention, but I'd like to feel like I'm
still part of the struggle, instead of a fallen martyr.
What are some of the ways you think people could help
us out more? All the ideas I have would take a lot of resources and effort,
more effort than one or two people could be expected to do. How about
you?
Free: Well, some of the obvious things that come to mind
are writing the governor. It might not seem like much, but there is always
the possibility it can help us legally. If nothing else, it shows we have
support and that makes it less likely we'll get fucked with.
Second, stop treating us like a cause. We're human beings
and not abstract enemies. A lot of people have gone on, without my consent,
to speak on my behalf, to claim to represent me. That really disturbs
me - that is the exact process/system/attitude I struggle against. If
you really want to get involved, contact me. Talk to me about what I want,
what you can do to help. If you don't want to get involved, but want to
show a level of support - write letters. It may be hard to believe, but
very few people actually continue a correspondence. I'd really like to
form new friendships.
We are in here as an example, our sentences are meant
to be a deterrent to dissent. Actions of solidarity show them that the
voice of revolution will not be silenced because a few of us have fallen.
We must continue to increase the pressure on all fronts. The continuation
of the struggle is the greatest form of support, because it gives us hope
that one day there will no longer be a corrupt, oppressive power to keep
us behind these walls.
While there are so many ways to support us, and I can't
possibly write or even think of them all, a combination of all the above
would be so awesome.
Rob, you and I are both writers. It isn't always easy
to get our writings out there, where lots of people can read them. What
would you think of setting up some kind of network that could pass our
prison writings along?
RLR: Hmmm...seems like that is happening already. We have
- along with our friends and comrades - APLAN and Break The Chains. We
both have friends in Earth First! And the folks in Eugene who stepped
up to be our www helpers. That's a great start, heh?
You know - being 41 years old, Tejano and a parent, I
have a lot of interests that aren't usually addressed in the punk rock
or student circles. It's been difficult for me to convince folks in the
great beyond that there are groups and publications I'd really be interested
in contacting. Too many of my contacts out there aren't interested in
those groups, people and publications, so they downplay, question or blow
off my requests. Some times I feel like the sibling no one likes to talk
about. Luckily, I'm a resourceful person and I have patience and lots
of friends, so I know I can eventually get around to doing the things
I want to do.
It would be nice to have a support group, though - there
are lots of things I'm not able to do from here that outside folks could
do. I really worry about being forgotten in here. For instance, no anarchist
zine has published anything I've written in over a year. There have been
a few exceptions, but those have all been letters and rants I wrote a
year - or two - ago.
Again, things are happening now that are really encouraging,
so by the time this goes out, I'll have a few loose ends tied up that
will help start to prepare me for life after prison.
How about you? What are you going to do with your time?
Free: I think I'm going to dedicate most of my time to
personal growth. I've spent the last several years dedicating my life
to activism, revolution - the cause. And I will continue to do so. I want
to inspire people to educate themselves and to take action. I also want
to continue to educate myself, I'm going to study sociology and environmental
science. I'm going to find the ways I can continue to be effective from
here. And prepare for what will be a very different life than what I'm
used to, 20 years from now.
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