First Quote Added
April 10, 2026
Latest Quote Added
"I'm genuinely just so thrilled any time people are taking actions based on a principle and a belief that what does Ruth Wilson Gilmore say-where life is precious, life is precious. That makes me very excited and happy."
"'I have gained more confidence and am more eager to do my duty as leader and a women's rights activist'."
"Even those who live in the diaspora, when they speak about their experiences in Zimbabwe it does not mean they are not being patriotic."
"Activists travel - we are the voice of the voiceless and speak the truth,"
"âAcceptance for these women is a challenge, unless they have someone to take them back to their families and act as an intermediary, asking for the familyâs forgiveness, and asking them to accept the women back into their homes and lives.â"
"Why do we want to glorify and justify rape, rape is rape!"
"My campaign and democratic socialism are very much in line because we are talking about popular control of resources, right? We have a criminal justice system that is profiting off of breaking black and brown bodies, low-income communities, our immigrant communities, our LGBTQIA communities. When we talk about what this office could be, there is a real opportunity to put some change in place that moves us forward in terms of reaching racial, social, and economic justice. To reinvest resources in things that are basic rights, and promote public safety and public health."
"When DA Krasner accomplished what he did in Philadelphia, it really pushed the Overton window."
"Weâre at a time where people are open to redefining what the role of the DA is, because historically it has served a function to punish the poor. Itâs been one that has disproportionately criminalized our black and brown and working-class immigrant communities. There is an incredible opportunity for harm reduction by bringing in somebody with more leftist analysis, saying âHey this isnât about convictions and sentences, this is about public safety, this is about fairness.â Thereâs some potential to shape the office, so that it really is a driver for protecting the very folks that have been disproportionately, negatively impacted by our system. It can be, when you have an independent, progressive person at the forefront, a vehicle for holding bad actors accountable who are profiting off of othersâ disenfranchisement."
"Being endorsed by Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, you know, folks like her, like Senator Jessica Ramos, Senator Julia Salazar, for me, it moved me in a way that said, âWell, I can do this. I can enter this space and have an impact.â Because, you know, as a 31-year-old queer Latina from a working-class family, never in a million years did I think that I would be entering a space like this. But I feel not only that I have the right experience, but that we are so well equipped to get the job done."
"When youâre on the ground in court every day, you recognize that some of these programs and the way that they are put into place do more to destabilize rather than stabilize and heal. And so, being able to kind of pinpoint those things and say sometimes itâs even better just to have people out of the system, period, so that weâre not criminalizing poverty, mental health, substance use, or criminalizing already marginalized communities, like our queer communities of color."
"We could be partnering and working on LEAD initiatives, Law Enforcement Assisted Diversion, things that weâre seeing in Seattle, up in Albany, that are working, that give police officers the opportunity to make the decision not to make an arrest and just to provide support. And in places where theyâre doing these things, theyâre seeing violence between officers and civilians go down exponentially."
"I think that weâre in this really special moment in time where weâre seeing decarceral prosecutors, committed to keeping people rooted in their communities with access to resources and supports, be elected all around the country. Weâre seeing defense attorneys being elected into these positions all around the country, and also being able to navigate relationships with police departments that, you know, coming in, were sort of adversarial, just based on the things that they were talking about."
"Iâve been practicing criminal law in Manhattan and seeing District Attorney Cy Vance sort of come out with these so-called progressive policies, and recognizing that, you know, thereâs a big fat asterisk next to those policies. And my clients, who were the exception to the rule before, continue to be the exception to the rule afterwards. One of the things that stands out to me, or Iâve told a lot during this campaign, is, when he said he wasnât going to prosecute turnstile jumps. You know, a week later, I picked up a turnstile jump that we litigated for a year and went to trial on. And it was a perfect example of whatâs wrong with our justice system, that weâre making decisions that overcriminalizes our black and brown and poor communities, that doesnât serve public safety."
"Every day in court was just a constant reminder that our justice system is the single most powerful driver of the continued oppression of our black and brown, our low-income, our immigrant, our LGBTQIA+ communities. But one thing thatâs also glaringly obvious is that if you have money, if you have the right political ties, if you pad the right pockets, you can get away with doing a lot of harm in our communities."
"When people ask me for a book recommendation - just one book - this is the one I recommend. Until We Reckon (by Danielle Sered) has been such an incredible resource."
"I am a queer Latina from a low-income community. I grew up in South Richmond Hill, Queens and my parents grew up in Woodside housing projects. Weâre talking about communities that have been historically over-policed, over-criminalized, but also resource-starved. When we talk about the injustices done by our system, itâs not just people who are accused of crimes, itâs survivors and victims as well. It is a situation of certain folks not having access to the same resources and protections as other folks. My story wasnât one that I pulled myself up by my bootstraps and got to be a lawyer and got to do all these great things. Really thereâs not much that separates me from my clients. What separates me â the only thing that I can point to besides chance and luck â is the fact that my dad got a union gig out of high school. That was game-changing in terms of my access to an education, to health care, to therapy so that I could have reparative experiences around my own trauma that then could lead to a lot of different things like criminal justice system involvement. Itâs important to have somebody with that background. Who recognizes that a lot of times, what drives crime or unsafe conditions is instability in peopleâs lives. Stability, in things like housing, health care, education, equals public safety. These are things that we all should have a right to access. We should bring that perspective into our district attorneyâs office and say âHey, if what weâre supposed to do here is promote public safety, then we should be investing resources in the communities that have suffered because of other people benefiting at their expense.â"
"We have taken public health issues and punted them to a criminal justice system. What we should be doing instead is going to the root causes of the instability. You can tie it back to the bad actors who are destabilizing entire communities that then drive crime, whether it is low-level quality of life crime or violent crime. Itâs all connected. As a public defender I represent clients who the system criminalizes for their substance use disorder, rather than prosecuting a doctor whoâs overprescribing opioids. Or it prosecutes a client who is seeking shelter, rather than a bad landlord whoâs unlawfully evicting or a predatory lender whoâs stealing somebodyâs home. I represent people who are accused of stealing from their employers when in fact their employers are misclassifying workers, stealing their wages, taking advantage of our undocumented communities, preventing people from unionizing. When you think about it that way itâs a no-brainer, right? These are things that seem intuitive, but again there are people profiting off of this. That really the reason why those types of prosecutions arenât prioritized, and they should be."
"If the goal is public safety, then we should be doing whatever it takes to say, âHow do we make sure this harm doesnât happen again and how do we keep people safe?â The answer is not, overwhelmingly, to just throw somebody in a cage and then throw them back out on the street after whatever the sentence is. Where theyâre not in a position to thrive."
"Itâs personal to me. I think about my grandfather. My grandfather was a guy who was incredibly physically abusive to his family. To the point where my grandmother left him and my mom dropped out of high school to take care of the family. When I got older, and he was dying â essentially, he was drinking himself to death, he struggled with alcoholism â my mom let him back into our lives. And for me, he was the most patient, kind, funny person ⌠I loved him to death. Heâd play the guitar for me, heâd tell me these wild, fantastical stories. When I got older I thought about this abusive husband and father, and this really incredible grandfather, and recognized that they were just so equally true. He was somebody that could have been cycling in and out of our criminal justice system, but it wouldnât account for the fact that he was a Korean War combat veteran, he came home with PTSD, self-medicated with alcohol. And where were our systems in place to support him so that he could support his family? So that he could do things differently? I see that with my clients all the time. There will be somebody that is getting into fights and the DA says âHey, we gotta throw this person in jail.â My answer is âWell youâve thrown him in jail two or three times, he comes back, heâs still engaging in this behavior, weâre not changing behavior. Letâs learn about him instead. He has a trauma history, he is somebody who was abused badly as a child. All that was modeled for him were really unhealthy relationships. Why canât we invest in support services, why canât we give him access to therapy?â Because that could change behavior rather than throwing him in jail, which obviously isnât working. Tying it back in to my personal story: what was modeled for my parents, certainly, were unhealthy relationships. Then what were modeled for me were really unhealthy relationships. It is only through access to things like therapy that have allowed me to be able to navigate relationships in a healthier way than those who came before me in my family tree. Now I recognize that we should be taking a holistic trauma-informed approach to address violence."
"We should be talking about why we donât have safe staffing in our hospitals, why we donât have more resources, why we arenât creating environments that allow people to access care. Rather than saying âHey, weâre going to criminalize you and throw you into the criminal justice system.â"
"Rikers Island, our jail here, is the largest mental health provider in our state. Itâs horrific. You get released from Rikers Island, you get a couple daysâ worth of medication, and then youâre on your own. The amount of money weâve spent to incarcerate folks could all be reinvested in comprehensive mental health care access."
"DAs get to decide what our metrics of success are. But âsuccessâ has been defined as convictions and sentences, right? Thatâs got to change. The metrics should be reducing recidivism, decarcerating, applying the law fairly across racial and class lines. The police department is typically going to make arrests that the DAâs office supports, that it is going to then take and prosecute. So, I think that it is a mechanism for informing the police department what kind of offenses they should be focusing on. Also, with the resources that the DAâs office has, thereâs an opportunity to reinvest in our community. The DAâs office does have those resources, so that police officers arenât the first responders in situations where they really shouldnât be."
"The second that you introduce somebody to the criminal justice system you are injecting a ton of destabilizing and stigmatizing factors that continue to perpetuate the barriers that those folks are experiencing."
"If you want to target true trafficking, then you have to fully decriminalize so that youâre creating a space where survivors and victims can access health care services, can feel comfortable cooperating with the district attorneyâs office or law enforcement. Doing anything to drive the behavior underground just increases the risk of harm and violence. You canât take the middle ground and say âWell, Iâm not going to prosecute sex workers but Iâm going to prosecute their customers.â Again you are creating an environment where thereâs still a fear of decriminalization and thereâs serious destabilization."
"You cannot separate our criminal justice from housing, health care, and education. You just canât."
"TDCJ prisoners still do everything from growing all the food we eat (and which the TDCJ also sells commercially for profit), raising livestock and crops on hundreds of thousands of acres of TDCJ-owned farmland (which are aptly called âcoloniesâ), to building and maintaining the prisons that hold us. The prisoners plant, tend and harvest everything from cotton, beans, carrots and potatoes, to peanuts and more. This work is performed by âhoe squadsâ of prisoners using primitive manual labor methods like those of the field slaves of yesterday or Third World peasants, while armed guards on horseback âoverseeâ them. The prisoners, like the old slaves, refer to these overseers as âbossmanâ. To see one of these teams at work is to witness a scene like something ripped from an old slave movie."
"I still endure repression at the hands of the pigs, as do my peers. I still take a principled stand against this repression. But above all else, I am working on bringing my peers into a principled ideological and political consciousness that will give them discipline and a cause to struggle for, while simultaneously imparting to them the correct methods of mass based struggle. The pigsâ response continues to be to isolate me. Their violence has proven futile. Even in this most totalitarian of environments, innovation and relentless commitment to an ideal has proven, to my satisfaction, that the oppressive institutions are not invulnerable. Fear is our greatest hindrance. Fear and half measures. They can isolate me, but they cannot isolate an ideal."
"I appeared frequently in the courts â state and federal â for hearings and trials. Initially, I received routine compliments from judges â and grudgingly from defense attorneys â on my legal comprehension and ability. This all changed when I persisted in efforts to have the courts comply with the laws. I refused to accept the unwritten rule that certain issues are not to be challenged or exposed. My efforts were calculated to bring the courts to bear on DOC officials at the highest levels, to force them to change the conditions under which we lived, and conform them to basic requirements of the written laws. The courts had other plans. The state courts were not willing to grant these sorts of relief, although the letter of the law required it. They attempted instead, numerous times, to grant my release from prison."
"What I was to encounter at Greensville defied anything that Iâd expected. The pigs had a refined system and license for brutalizing prisoners. I was not to understand the magnitude of the situation until a few days after being there. The pigs had a tier of handpicked proxy prisoners, whom they used to violently suppress those who got out of line. The ringleader â Iâll call him Pumpkin â was a career con with a reputation for butchering other prisoners. He had a trustee job (all trustees were similarly selected). Pumpkin was allowed by the pigs to keep weapons on his person. Part of the mental terror game was that while he was out cleaning (everyone knew he was a pig hit man and stayed armed), the pigs would bring others out around him in handcuffs. ... The next day or so the pigs would put them on the exercise yard together, remove everyoneâs handcuffs except the targetâs (theyâd put five to seven prisoners in each pen), and allow them to mob attack the still handcuffed target. Or if they wanted him butchered, heâd be unhandcuffed and left to contend unarmed against a knife-wielding Pumpkin."
"When you are poor you donât have any social respect or social worth because everything is defined in terms of money and how much of it you have. This is what capitalism does. It turns all values into commercial values, even the value of life itself."
"The ruling powers tell us poor lower-class folks that we have an obligation, a social responsibility to society, to abide by the law, but they donât have any social responsibility to us to help us meet our needs. Itâs pure bourgeoisie class-based morality, a morality that serves the ruling class, not the masses of the oppressed."
"I have nothing and therefore nothing to lose. I have conditioned myself for every conceivable shock and strain â physically, mentally, and emotionally. I fear nothing. No threat or prospect of danger deters me; Iâve faced them all, continuously and by choice. I am willing to suffer with those who suffer, to die with those who die, and to struggle in the most extreme manner for their liberation. Iâve lived the past decade with no pleasures, no amenities, and no entertainment. Iâve conditioned myself for every extreme. This is the level of commitment that our struggle demands, and the level of commitment that I have, and those who share this commitment have my complete loyalty."
"Most people donât quite relate US prisons to government sponsored torture. We can thank the mainstream corporate media and politicians for this. Since the 1960s and 1970s theyâve persistently projected the false image of US prisons as resorts where criminal predators eat chips, lift weights, and watch videos all day, much like the images given of slavery as an experience that Black folks actually enjoyed. These false images are sustainable because the real world of prisons is a hidden one, concealed behind walls and razor wire, inaccessible to the public."
"Every prisoner confined in Texas is forced to work without pay. ... Only those very few with documented serious medical or mental health conditions which impair work performance, and those held in the TDCJâs torturous segregation units, are not made to work. Often those with documented medical and mental health exemptions are still forced to work â their exemptions being simply ignored. Those who refuse to work are punished, thrown in segregated confinement, and their imprisonment is typically extended."
"Once U.S. prisons are recognized to be a system of enslavement, and the lie is exposed that slavery in Amerika was ever abolished, the abusive conditions that pervades them makes perfect sense."
"Under the old North Amerikan slave system it was openly admitted that people simply will not willingly submit to bondage and unremunerated forced labor. The human spirit naturally rebels against such a condition. Therefore the wealthy interests whose economic domination, power, prestige and wealth itself relied on slave labor, had to devise a system which would compel the submission of those to be kept in bondage."
"Amerika faces no meaningful threat to its security except from those who live within its own territorial borders. The domestic upheavals of the 1960âs and 70âs taught empire some valuable lessons on just how dangerous an informed and discontent population can be. As a result, and through a steady application of misinformation, carrots, and sticks, empire has worked steadily to drain the focus, resolve, and militancy of the informed and discontented. From that point to this, empire has manufactured a discontinuity in popular struggle, while maintaining continuity in its own growth and consolidation. One of the empireâs principal tools and weapons has been its prisons."
"I had no car, no money, and it was tough seeing others have what I didn't have even though I was working. I mean the social pressures to have the flyest ride, clothes, and financial mobility started to bear down on me. Itâs hard for a person to be without these socially valued possessions and feel like a whole complete human being. [...] Reading Blood In My Eye I discovered that capitalist-private property relations are the source of class inequalities, which is the primary factor in my being a member of a class that bears all the burdens of society without enjoying its advantages. Under the influence of illegitimate-capitalist values, I was pursuing the alleviation of social-economic hardship through individual advancement. This is a wholly inadequate remedy to social problems because it doesnât challenge the fundamental injustice of class-exploitation and class-oppression, which are responsible for creating the socio-economic ills in the first place. Unaware of my class interest, I was perpetuating my own oppression by engaging in competitive capitalist practices that ensure the smooth functioning of the system as the exploiting minority profits in more ways than one off the division and disunity engendered by competition, so prevalent amongst the exploited. Look around: competition, euphemistically called âindividuality,â permeates and is systematically promoted to the masses of people while the corporate conglomerations and Fortune 500 are busy âmerging and monopolizing.â"
"With the added psychological deterrent of litigation, my clashes with the pigs declined somewhat in frequency. They focused primarily on isolating me from others. Their efforts to perpetuate a discontinuity in our unity has been the pigsâ only effective weapon against me. And theyâve admitted in a thousand ways that their greatest fear is ending up with many other prisoners on their hands who think and act as I do. Their isolating me was long a tactic that I could not devise an effective countermeasure against, that is, until after 2001, when I was first exposed to revolutionary theory and have since come to understand the role of ideology. Without a unifying ideology, there can be no unity of struggle. Ideology was something Iâd never had, and thus something I could not share. The prisoners whoâd united in struggle with me had done so because of me. Not because of a shared principle. Therefore, when I was no longer around, they lost the initiative to struggle on."
"There was never a more loyal woman in the South after we were forced by our political leaders to go to battle to defend our rights in ownership of African slaves, but they called it "States' Rights," and all I owned was invested in slaves and my people were loyal and I stood by them to the end. Like General Lee I could not fight against my kindred in a struggle that meant life or death to them. Nevertheless I am now too near the borderland of eternity to withhold my matured conscientious and honest opinion. If there had been no slaves there would have been no war. To fight for the perpetuation of domestic slavery was a mistake. The time had come in the United States to wipe out this evil. The South had to suffer, and even when our preachers were leading in prayer for victory, during the war, and black-robed mothers and wives were weeping for their dead ones, who perished on the field of battle, I had questions in my own mind as to what would be the end of it."
"There were abuses, many of them. I do not pretend to defend these abuses. There were kind masters and cruel masters. There were violations of the moral law that made mulattoes as common as blackberries. In this one particular slavery doomed itself. When white men were willing to put their own offspring in the kitchen and corn field and allowed them to be sold into bondage as slaves and degraded as another man's slave, the retribution of wrath was hanging over this country and the South paid penance in four bloody years of war."
"I do not want to see a negro man walk to the polls and vote on who should handle my tax money, while I myself cannot vote at all. Is that fair?"
"This women's movement is a great movement of the sexes toward each other, with common ideals as to government, as well as common ideals in domestic life, where fully developed manhood must seek and find its real mate in the mother of his children, as well as the solace of his home."
"Savage tribes used physical force to manage their women. The club and the lash were their only arguments. Moslem fanatics go a step further in saying women have no souls."
"When there is not enough religion in the pulpit to organize a crusade against sin; nor justice in the court house to promptly punish crime; nor manhood enough in the nation to put a sheltering arm about innocence and virtue----if it needs lynching to protect woman's dearest possession from the ravening human beasts----then I say lynch, a thousand times a week if necessary."
"When the women of the country come in and sit with you, though there may be but very few in the next few years, I pledge you that you will get ability, you will get integrity of purpose, you will get exalted patriotism, and you will get unstinted usefulness." â Address to the Senate, November 21, 1922"
"A Senator of the U.S., a woman, is still a sort of political joke with our masculine leaders in party politics.. But the trail has been blazed! The road is apparently roughâmaybe rockyâbut the trail has been located. It is an established fact. While it is also a romantic adventure, it will ever remain an historical precedentânever to be erased."
"Each of the Arts whose office is to refine, purify, adorn, embellish and grace life is under the patronage of a Muse, no god being found worthy to preside over them."
"Our own theological Church, as we know, has scorned and vilified the body till it has seemed almost a reproach and a shame to have one, yet at the same time has credited it with power to drag the soul to perdition."