BACK IN THE GO-GO DAYS of 2011 I got into some sort of post-modern running conflict with a certain declining superpower that shall remain nameless, and shortly afterwards found myself in jail awaiting trial on 17 federal criminal counts carrying a combined maximum sentence of 105 years in prison. Luckily I got off with just 63 months, which here in the Republic of Crazyland is actually not too bad of an outcome.
The surreal details of the case itself may be found in any number of mainstream and not-so-mainstream news articles, from which you will learn that I was the official spokesman for Anonymous, or perhaps the unofficial spokesman for Anonymous, or maybe simply the self-proclaimed spokesman for Anonymous, or alternatively the guy who denied being the spokesman for Anonymous over and over again, sometimes on national television to no apparent effect. You’ll also find that I was either a conventional journalist, an unconventional journalist, a satirist who despised all journalists, an activist, a whistleblower, a nihilistic and self-absorbed cyberpunk adventurer out to make a name for himself, or “an underground commander in a new kind of war,” as NBC’s Brian Williams put it, no doubt exaggerating.
According to the few FBI files that the bureau has thus far made public, I’m a militant anarchist revolutionary who once teamed up with Anonymous in an attempt to “overthrow the U.S. government,” and on another, presumably separate occasion, I plotted unspecified “attacks” on the government of Bahrain, which, if true, would really seem to be between me and the king of Bahrain, would it not? There’s also a book out there that claims I’m from Houston, whereas in fact I spit on Houston. As to the truth on these and other matters, I’m going to play coy for now, as whatever else I may be, I’m definitely something of a coquette. All you really need to know for the purposes of this column is that I’m some sort of eccentric writer who lives in a prison, and I may or may not have it out for the king of Bahrain.
Over the last couple of years of incarceration, I’ve had ever so many exciting adventures, some of which I’ve detailed in the prior incarnation of this column, “The Barrett Brown Review of Arts and Letters and Jail.” I’ve watched two inmates get into a blood-spattered fight over the right to sell homemade pies from a particular table. I have participated in an unauthorized demonstration against an abusive guard and been thrown into the hole as a suspected instigator. I’ve shouted out comical revolutionary slogans while my Muslim cellmate flooded our tiny punishment cell in order to get back at the officers who’d taken his Ramadan meal during a search. I’ve found myself with nothing better to read than an autobiography by Wendy’s Old-Fashioned Hamburgers founder Dave Thomas, and read it, and found it wanting.
I’ve stalked a fellow inmate who talks nonsense to himself all day due to having never come down after a PCP trip, suspecting that he might say something really weird that I could compare and contrast with the strange William Blake poems I’d been reading and thought this might be a funny idea for an article, and I was right, so do not ask me to apologize for this, for I shall not. I’ve been extracted from my cell by a dozen guards and shipped to another jail 30 miles away after the administration decided I was too much trouble. I’ve spent one whole year receiving sandwiches for dinner each night, but the joke’s on them because I love sandwiches.
I’ve read through an entire 16th-century volume on alchemy out of pure spite. I’ve added the word “Story” to the end of every instance of prison graffiti reading “West Side” that I’ve come across thus far. I’ve conceived the idea of writing a sequel to the Ramayana but abandoned the project after determining that the world is not prepared for such a thing. I’ve been subjected to a gag order at the request of the prosecution on the grounds that the latest Guardian article I’d written from jail had been “critical of the government.” I’ve learned all sorts of neat convict tricks like making dice out of toilet paper, popping locks on old cell doors, and appreciating mediocre rap. I’ve managed to refrain from getting any ironic prison tattoos and feel about 65 percent certain that I’ll be able to hold out for the two years left in my sentence. And I’ve read Robert Caro’s four-volume biography of Lyndon Johnson over the course of a month, in the process becoming something of a minor god, beyond good and evil, unfazed by man’s wickedness.
After being sentenced last January I released a statement reading:
“Good News! — The U.S. government decided today that because I did such a good job investigating the cyber-industrial complex, they’re now going to send me to investigate the prison-industrial complex. For the next 35 months, I’ll be provided with free food, clothes, and housing as I seek to expose wrongdoing by Bureau of Prisons officials and staff and otherwise report on news and culture in the world’s greatest prison system. I want to thank the Department of Justice for having put so much time and energy into advocating on my behalf; rather than holding a grudge against me for the two years of work I put into in bringing attention to a DOJ-linked campaign to harass and discredit journalists like Glenn Greenwald, the agency instead labored tirelessly to ensure that I received this very prestigious assignment. Wish me luck!”
In fact I had no intention of doing anything of the kind; it was merely the same manner of idle bluster that I’ve been putting out to the press for years now because I’m a braggart. Actually I was hoping to just sort of relax and maybe catch up on my plotting. But a month later, when I arrived at the Fort Worth Correctional Institution to serve the remainder of my sentence, the place turned out to be an unspoiled journalistic paradise of poorly concealed government corruption and ham-fisted cover-ups. Even so, I was still reluctant to grab at even this low-hanging fruit. I’d spent the 18 months prior to my arrest overseeing a crowd-sourced investigation into that aforementioned “cyber-industrial complex,” a subject which, although important, I also happen to find personally distasteful; the research end involved going through tens of thousands of emails stolen by Anonymous from the toy-fascist government desk-spies and jumped-up quasi-literate corporate technicians to whom the American “citizenry” have accidentally granted jus primae noctis over several Constitutional amendments. I hate all this computer shit and was actually a little relieved when the FBI finally took me down, thereby sparing me from the obligation to read another million words of e-Morlock jibber-jabber about Romas/COIN and Odyssey and persona management and whatever else the public is just going to end up ignoring until it’s too late anyway.
So I was disinclined to sully the rest of my incarceration vacation by having to memorize a book of Bureau of Prisons policies and court rulings on due process rights for inmates to see which ones are being routinely violated by the prison administration, and then run around secretly interviewing inmates and getting copies of receipts and making Freedom of Information requests and all that. After all, there already exists here a clandestine network of inmates who do all of this and more, and who routinely make significant discoveries ranging from procedural violations to outright criminal conduct by staff and administrators — and, naturally, all of these documented revelations are generally ignored by the incompetent regional reporters to whom the inmates occasionally send such materials. As I happen to know some of the 3 or 4 percent of U.S. journalists and editors who are capable of doing their jobs, I figured I’d just hook one of them up with the prisoner in question, hope that some instance of wrongdoing gets exposed in print, take more than my share of the credit, put out a victory statement reading, “No one imprisons Barrett Brown and gets away with it! Mwah ha ha!!” or something to that effect, and then spend the rest of my sentence doing whatever it is that I do for recreation.
In late March I put my awesome plan in motion, using the inmate email system to follow up with a journalist I’d provided with contact info for one of the inmate researchers and reiterating that the fellow had documented evidence of corruption within the Bureau of Prisons. Then, an hour later, my email was cut off. After a couple of days of inquiry I was pulled aside by the resident head of security, a D.C. liaison by the name of Terrance Moore, who told me he’d been the one to cut off my email access, as I’d been “using it for the wrong thing,” which he clarified to mean talking to the press. When I sought to challenge this plainly illegal move by turning in the BP-9 form to begin the Administrative Remedy process that inmates are required to exhaust before suing the federal official who’s violated their right to due process under what’s known as a Bivens claim, the prison’s Administrative Remedy coordinator simply failed to log it into the system for over a month, finally doing so only after the matter had been brought to the attention of the press; finally on June 4 he deigned to register receipt of the BP-9, thereby belatedly starting the clock on the 20 days the prison is allotted in which to address one’s grievance — and then he failed to respond even by that illicitly extended deadline.
I’ve since learned that this sort of thing is common here, and that in fact I was lucky to get my grievance officially acknowledged as received at all; I’ve seen copies of forms that have yet to be logged five months after being turned in to the unit staff. That would be problematic enough anywhere, as it constitutes denial of access to the courts. But it’s especially despicable at an institution like this, which includes a medical unit for inmates who require ongoing treatment — because to the extent that they don’t actually receive that treatment, the only recourse is to pursue the Remedy process so that their complaints won’t simply be tossed out of court on the grounds that they’ve “failed to exhaust” that process before going to the judge. I’ve included copies of the relevant documents in prior columns and will continue to provide updates as I take my case to the regional office, the national office, and finally to the courts, as of course it will be interesting to see whether or not the BOP takes due process seriously or, barring that, is at least willing to buy me off with a carton of Marlboros.
In the meantime, I continue to have neat adventures. Last month one of the American Indian inmates invited me to attend their weekly sweat lodge ceremony, which is held in a fenced-off area that each federal prison is required to provide for ritual use by the Natives. The next morning I showed up at the appointed time and, having determined that it wasn’t an ambush, I began helping the 20 or so resident Indians break up tree branches for fire kindling, something I did very much with the air of a five-year-old who believes himself to be “helping Daddy.” Next we built a large bonfire (I assisted by staying out the way and being good) by which to heat up several dozen large rocks that would be used for “the sweat.” The fire-making process was expedited by strategically placed crumpled-up sheets of the Fort Worth Star-Telegram, which I gather is not a strictly traditional aspect of most shamanistic ceremonies. As if to acknowledge this, one of the Indians declared, “The one good thing the white man ever did was invent paper.” Naturally all eyes were on me, and I knew that this might be my only chance to win them over. “We didn’t invent it,” I blurted out. “We just stole it from the Chinese.” This produced appreciative chuckles all around. “I got a laugh out of the Indians!” I thought exultantly, my triumph so complete that I was unbothered by the fact that what I’d said wasn’t really true.
By and by we crawled into the lodge, a wood-and-canvas structure with a dirt floor, in the middle of which had been dug a pit to hold the heated rocks that would be providing the extraordinary heat we would need to sweat out our sins. The flap was then closed from the outside, leaving us in perfect darkness, and thereafter began the first of the 15-minute “rounds” of the sweat ceremony, which consisted of all manner of tribal songs, entreaties to the spirits, and sometimes just discussions and announcements. At one point my sponsor, a Lakota, declared that although superficially white, I might nonetheless have an “Indian spirit.” It was one of the nicest things anyone had ever said about me, this polite supposition that I might not really be descended from the fair-skinned race of marauding, treaty-breaking slavers whose Novus Ordo Seclorum had been built on a foundation of genocide. But insomuch as I’d spent the bulk of the ceremony not in prayer, but rather in a state of neurotic concern over whether or not my self-deprecating comment from an hour earlier about whites stealing paper could have perhaps been a bit more crisply phrased, I’m afraid my spirit would seem to be Anglo-Saxon after all.
Although undeniably majestic, the ceremony was also something of a disappointment. I had gone into the thing hoping that I might mysteriously know exactly what to do — how to pass the peace pipe and all that — and maybe even start singing old Cherokee songs that the eldest of those present would barely recall having heard from their own grandfathers. Stunned, the Indians would collectively intone, “He shall know your ways as if born to them,” this being the ancient prophecy I had thereby fulfilled, and then I would unite the tribes under my banner and lead the foremost of their warriors on a jihad against our shared enemies, as Paul Muad’Dib did. Instead, the Indians had to remind me several times not to just stand up and start walking around during the ceremony.
I’m currently in the midst of another adventure, having been placed back in the hole two weeks ago after a suspicious incident in which staff singled me out for a search of my locker and found a cup of homemade alcohol, or “hooch.” Next time, then, we’ll take a look at life here in the Special Housing Unit, or SHU, as the hole is more formally known, and where I expect to spend some 45 days. And when I get back, there better not be any more Republican presidential primary contenders. You don’t need three dozen slightly different variations on right-Hegelian nationalist populism from which to choose. That’s just excessive.
“He’d like to occupy a throne room surrounded by experts in flattery; while in a dungeon beneath, unknown to the world, would be a bunch of able slaves doing his work and producing the things that, to the public, would represent the brilliant accomplishment of his mind. He’s a fool, but worse, he is a puking baby.”
— Dwight Eisenhower
(Quoted by Jean Edward Smith, Eisenhower in War and Peace)
Brilliant. Loved it. Good stuff, Barrett.
Hilarious. Bad call to read this at work though
Exposing Crazyland’s oppression, hegemony, and jingoism, unsuccessfully cloaked in official lies and spin, is a clear and present danger to the old white assholes who really like fucking with people. And the black guy who’s always trying to seek acceptance from these old white guys is prosecuting and jailing anyone who pisses off the old white guys, who are really never going to like the black guy no matter how hard he tries to please the old white guys.
Barrett’s brilliance is what it is. Wherever situation he is in. Others can’t help but see this quality and respect and admire him. Thank you Barrett.
I really enjoy Barrett Brown’s writing. I look forward to more of his wit and wisdom as soon as he can write again.
Simply wonderful, distinctive writing. I’m thinking a novel is in order, something with the flavor of Celine meets Heller meets Kafka -over a cup of prison hootch.
BB’s visiting privileges just suspended… :(
I thought he was in the hole? Generally persons in the hole don’t have visiting privileges save for visits with lawyers? Or was this something further than that?
Reading this wonderful tour de force of gonzo journalism reminds me of what we who are not in the US say about the Divided States of America: “The wrong people are in jail. The wrong people are not in jail.”
Keep on keepin’ on!
Excellent article. It’s a shame that we have locked up people like him in the hope that the problem has been put away. Instead it has spawned thousands of Barretts of all colors and shade. Now what?
Great work getting Barrett to work for the intercept. His work has interested me for a number of years now and his style of writing always has me in stitches
And when I get back, there better not be any more Republican presidential primary contenders. You don’t need three dozen slightly different variations on right-Hegelian nationalist populism from which to choose. That’s just excessive.
I’m pretty sure Donald ‘the donald’ Trump is to the right of right-Hegelian (and Hitler) and he’s the front runner… if that helps.
Nothing I like better than a Con w/ a vocabulary Barrett! The last time I was in the (blank) (blank) regional Spa … I was forced to watch Jerry Springer all day and night. *you Feds got it made in the shade
I realize that this particular vein of journalism attracts a certain audience, but you really are missing the point if you think that the problem is one party. The situation calls for a more nuanced approach than “that tribe is the problem, get rid of them.”
I apologize anon. The first paragraph in my post was a “quote” from Barrett’s article. It was TI’s fault … i put in but it didn’t take.
*and I think Barrett was speaking in tongues
@ anon
“And when I get back, there better not be any more Republican presidential primary contenders. You don’t need three dozen slightly different variations on right-Hegelian nationalist populism from which to choose. That’s just excessive.”
*Barrett Brown … not me
Having spent a little over two years throwing my whole weight into the machinery of the BOP, I can tell you the easiest way to get your BP-9 answered in a timely fashion is to either file a BP-10 with the BP-9 that was not answered within the allotted 20 days, or to file a BP-8 on them not answering your BP-9.
A part of me misses typing on those old blue forms…
Also, another fun thing to do is to write to Senators. Their interns will send a copy of your letter to the prison, and the Warden will respond to the Senator’s office. When the Warden responses, you’ll get a copy from the Senator’s office. The Warden will respond with some PC nonesense, but its just a gentle reminder to the Warden that you are serious about your claims.
Last post.
If you look under 28 CFR 542.18 you will find the following:
“If the inmate does not receive a response within the time allotted for
reply, including extension, the inmate may consider the absence
of a response to be a denial at that level.”
This provides a remedy to the situation where an Administrative Remedy is ignored. This is the reason that I would send in a BP-10 if my BP-9 was not answered within the allotted 20 days (as I indicated in my first post). This will prevent your Administrative Remedies from being ignored. When you file a BP-10 to region and they call your Warden to ask what happened with the BP-9, it will irritate the Warden and you’ll never have a problem with your Administrative Remedies being ignored again.
***********This means that there is a factual error in your article insofar as it states that there is no redress for an ignored BP-9. You also skipped the BP-8 form that goes to your Unit Team.
Don’t know if you’re on prisontalk forum, but if not there are usually a lot of people looking for help for their family members on learning how to do stuff like this (and it’s something best discussed for them with someone with experience). A few hours writing something up and helping people out there might go a long way. Just a suggestion, if you’re game. :)
I’ll definitely look into. When I first got out I browsed the site and it seemed to be cluttered with pseudo-experts and disinformation. I’ll give it a second look.
One reason I suggested doing so is because they’re always so desperate for information that they tend to get incorrect information; they lack the filter to know what will and won’t work (and what’d make things worse) most of the time. It’s not a site I’d advocate looking for peers at. It’s a site I’d advocating offering a helping hand to, if you have the qualifications/experience. :)
Wait… this isn’t the prisontalk forum?
No, no, alan, the Internet is the prisonkitchenforum; we have access to better food, and higher (trustie!) privileges with any luck. Sorta like several levels of hell — Dante’d be proud? :P
….Hunter Thompson DNA ….
Yo, Barrett …Hunter back from the afterlife…..
Been awaiting sooo long….
Sending appreciation from Europe and powerful sweat magic to keep you safe.
Yup… As I said, I may not like the man, but the man can WRITE.
I love that the Intercept is publishing Barrett “Twain” Brown. This guy has a huge following of loyal fans and giving him this exposure makes me like the paper even more. He’s a crime victim of the FBI and this is a work of restorative justice .
To be honest, I’ve never really considered BB to be a crime victim of the FBI — yes, a moderate overreach, but at least in part one that was probably fairly reasonable given the climate, his state of mind, and his followers (and those who disliked him); at the time, inciting videos like those he posted which contained straight-forward outright threats would have likely wound up garnering people more than willing to feed into it. Those who had an eye on the phenomena from the time it started know it snowballs; either way, he shouldn’t have been threatening to destroy peoples’ families and their lives for doing what was essentially their job (and BB wasn’t beaten up or abused; the overly done SWAT raid (very overly done) — maybe that was overdone, but at the same time consider — there was (and still exists) a group of people who considers SWATting good fun. In fact, in the video of BB getting arrested back in Sept of 2012, most people believed it was indeed a joke.
It’s more a less a matter of public record that he did commit crimes (and I’m not talking about the stuff with Anonymous, et al); it is debatable (and I’ll say he shouldn’t have been) as to whether those should have been prosecuted to the extent that they were, and he obviously got oversentenced… but he did pretty much demonstrate a certain degree of threat and a lack of self-control given his poor judgment in posting those videos to begin with. Should poor judgment be punished? Generally, within reason, no — but then it becomes about: was what he did within reason… which leads into the reasonable man principle, and I can’t imagine any reasonable man would do what he did.
He also went out of his way to incriminate his mother and hide evidence (now, my beliefs about governments believing they have rights to see anybody’s data is irrelevant here; they shouldn’t, but when a search warrant exists, then technically that’s breaking laws; lying about it is, too.
Note I’m not bringing his substance issues up at any length, despite those having legal ramifications, because I find those irrelevant.
BB is and was a polarising figure; he has a fan base but he also has a lot of people who don’t like him, and that’s true for most people with strong personalities (and BB definitely has a strong personality; part of that is why his writing is so entertaining). But he was never a saint, and implying he’s a crime victim is, to me, overstating the facts.
Even polarising figures have the right to write, and if they’re good writers they should be all means have an audience that will appreciate what they have to say. Barrett is an extraordinarily funny writer. I absolutely give him credit for that. But I’m not sure this is a work of restorative justice; I do, however, strongly believe that his writing on D and now on here is indeed a work that exposes injustice, and that IS a good thing.
But this is all JMHO.
Hit the showers kid. Then get a room.
Pass.
Fumble.
…muff???
I think that Chinese did actually invent paper.
But in the West we learned about it from the Arabs (in Baghdad probably), not the Chinese. (The Arabs learned it from the Chinese, of course.)
I don’t know how many times I’ve heard that phrase myself: What doesn’t kill us, makes us stronger,
doesn’t it Barrett…
Brilliant, hilarious, damn I love this man
“popping locks on old cell doors” made me realize that this is what an article from prison written by Richard Feynman would sound like.
Damn this man can write! If it doesn’t seem like there are as many awed comments here as there ought, that’s only because the better the story, the lower The Intercept starts it out on its main page. I very nearly missed this one altogether.
Hell yeah! What an opportunity! I hope Obama is cc’d on every letter of report.
As sm ex offender, seeing the women’s faves or genitals sliced over commisary or lover’s quarrels, i drveloped a 501(c) np called the Sisters Of Jesus, because i saw what women were forced to do, even by guards for commisary.
Today my dad and i have helped over 5,000 eomrn every six months to those who qualify with 35.00 every six months.
Believe me, because my dad is an attorney and all my mail could go out LEGAL and sealed, they finally figured it out because someone got turned down and snitched me out….I spent many a days in SEG, and when my mom died and i received a copy of her will i was suddenly transferred to another facility, and once again in SEG with all my family’s personal financial informaton taken.
Nothing was done to the LT. who had this hard on against me, but i was promoyed to trustee and given college privileges.
So write it all, and i will put you on my on my prayer list that you might not suffer punishment for truth.
You, my brither in broken chains, are my hero.
I’m so proud of you. May whomever you believe in, guide and guard you, amen!
I work with a native who does a weekly sweatlodge with out local komox’sh band. I appreciate your denying your jailers the victory of lowering your life force. I tried to write but the letter was returned. Looking forward to your next adventure.
Many lols, will enjoy again. (Though not until you’re SHU-less, it seems.)
Love seeing this here though you might be too good for the place. I wrote you a letter which included stamps for bingo. But the certified letter was returned as ‘undeliverable.’ I’ll try again in the future.
Best wishes to a very talented and gifted writer— enjoy your work Barrett.
Barrett Brown from way downtown. Nothing but net…
Tom Wolfe did not write better than this! Stay strong, Mr. Brown.
I’ve been anxiously awaiting your first edition at The Intercept. As far as I know I’ve read all of your writings that were published at “Barrett Brown Review of Arts and Letters.” Having familiarity with those writings from you made this one that much more engaging and interesting. I recommend that all who pass this way open that link you provided and set aside some time to take it all in.
There is something about reading someone write informatively and humorously while in the circumstance such as you are currently in that not so much lifts the moral or spirit, but puts it on a path where one is less detrimentally affected by all the woes and awfulness that any sentient being is aware of and sees and feels most everyday.
There are many who really appreciate your communications. I’m one of the many.
Take care of yourself. Looking forward to reading your next one, and so on…
It is a shame you spit on Houston. I live there, and have not done anything to you. Otherwise, a terrific read made from a shitty situation. Best of luck, chin up and all that.
It`s common knowledge that Houston sucks for these reasons:
1) Humidity
2) Proximity to Beaumont, the ass end of Texas.
3) Naming your teams the Texans. Really?
4) Traffic.
Those conditions nearly qualify too many areas to be useful.
Let’s face it, no matter how entertaining, being an eccentric writer just isn’t a lucrative or productive career.
So, could you please just buckle down and focus on rehabilitating yourself and learning some useful life skills? It’s ever so disappointing that scarce tax dollars are being wasted on someone who clearly has no intention of learning the lesson that we, as a society, decided you needed to learn.
How can we possibly sustain our incarceration and punishment policies with such clearly abysmal results?
I mean, if you keep this up, you will surely reduce the incentive to prosecute your fellow underground commanders, and our war to maintain our glorious empire will fail.
And nobody wants that.
And Harkonans rule… so there.
A more in-depth explanation about “the toy-fascist government desk-spies and jumped-up quasi-literate corporate technicians to whom the American “citizenry” have accidentally granted jus primae noctis over several Constitutional amendments.” from the resilient Barrett Brown
(Starts at 1:50)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0TTkYdHqjH8
Stay strong man!
otoh, Bloom County” is back. (Keep safe.)
We have your back, Barrett. It is good to see you being productive in these circumstances. Thank you for what you do.
Interestingly enough, you were not wrong about the history of paper. A thing I am certain you have learned in studying all these historical figures. It does not matter if what you are saying is bullshit. You just need to say it with conviction.
Great read Barrett. Good luck to you and stay strong.
To be fair, it was Eisenhower, not MacArthur who ran for President in 1952.
Kudos to The Intercept for bringing Barrett Brown on board. While I enjoy reading stories by all of the capable journalists here, only Mr. Brown has me chuckling instead of suppressing an urge to throw something at the wall.
When he *wants* to he’s one of the few people who manages to use peoples’ anger in such a way that it doesn’t dissipate the anger but makes it more useful. That’s a gift that most writers (or storytellers) lack.
That was a great read. Barrett’s style of writing is very entertaining, it’s a shame he’s writing in prison, but it sounds like he’s making effective use of his time and a bad situation.
Also, can someone explain what Hegelian means? I couldn’t find a simple definition of it.
Web search: Hegel philosophy
Back in your former luxury accommodations, I sent you two books — Notes of a Revolutionary by Andrei Amalrik who resembles you in his creative ODD, and Something Good for a Change by Wavy Gravy who was the master of ceremonies at the original Woodstock (“don’t take the brown acid”) and shares your sense of unorthodox humor. The books were both shipped but never acknowledged as received, perhaps because you were in the hole at the time. I hope they found their way to you eventually. If not, do read them. You will find both more rewarding than Dave Thomas or even Lyndon Johnson.
For that matter, Barrett, I sent you a copy of Alexei Panshin’s The Thurb Revolution with the same result and for similar reasons.
I’m glad that Dallas and now The Intercept has their very own Spider-Jerusalem.
“The typewriters a gun. Show em’ some steel.”
Very good to see you here, Barrett. I’ve been reading your (as Mona notes, ‘angelically inebriated’) writing for some time. Good on the folks here at TI for noting the same. Your work is yet another asset to this site.
I love your writing, Barrett. Stay strong and keep those spirits up please! We’re all behind you. This despicable country wants to break you and others like you – the real heroes fighting for freedom. Don’t let it! I and so many others are looking forward to your release so you can raise hell and keep uncovering the fascistic ways and corruption of the U.S. government, including the deplorable prison and ” justice” systems.
Congrats on your new gig, Barrett! I hope you stay strong and keep your sense of humor. I imagine at times you might feel pretty low, so I will pass on something my father once said to me during one of the most miserable times of my life. He said, “The best, and the worst things that ever happened to me, in my life, I never even saw them coming.” I can say with hindsight that he was right and I could make the same observation about my life.
I know you’ve gotten some of the “worst things” in your life out of the way, and I hope some of the “best things” are now coming down the pike, imminently.
Take care of yourself Barrett, and get out early! And remember: This too shall pass.
Thanks for the description of your recent events. Do you know for sure you have no indian ancestry? How far back have you checked your lineage? I was surprised myself that I have some Montauk Indian ancestry that goes back to the times when New York was New Amsterdam and headless horsemen were the common day scare tactic to keep the villagers in check.
Best wishes for now.
Barrett,
I really didn’t know much about anonymous until the case of Matt Dehart came across my phone from Canada. I was dosing a lot of cough suppressant (dextromethorphan) on a vision quest to find God. I came to when I tackled a hippy that I thought was Jesus after much begging for forgiveness for my sins. Then, I came across you and have been reading up on you ever since. I loyally donated a whopping $20 to your fundraiser and will probably donate more soon. You do kind of remind me of Hunter S. Thompson. I’m not an atheist, but kind of inspired by your atheism. Needless to say, the inspiration comes from being tired of all this God shit. I enjoyed watching you withdraw from opiates and disrespect the FBI on youtube. Even more entertaining was watching you get tackled from your chair by agent dickless who was screaming “show me your hands”! You were on 4 chan at the time, and yes, someone uploaded it to youtube. I almost think you’d have been better off without getting to cozy with the anons. I like them and support them openly on twitter, but I don’t have much to lose and usually get locked up in jail a couple times a year anyway. You shouldn’t be in jail is my point. You should be out here raising hell with project PM and overthrowing the government. Overthrowing the government is a worthy cause and it should have been done long ago. Just so you know, just because you’re an atheist and an anon doesn’t mean that we’re not beginning to understand your point of view. You must keep writing though. We’re not there yet. I’ll let you know when we get there.
P.S. Whether you like it or not you’re an anon. A maskless one. The first maskless one. I’m the second maskless anon. I call myself an anon supporter publicly, but privately I too harbor a deep resentment for the FBI and government in general. It’s a healthy and beautiful thing. We’re going to try to get you a goddamn pardon. You don’t deserve to be locked up and indebted. The people who should be locked up will get theirs, don’t you worry. There are sick mother fuckers like me in the world and WE DIG YOU!
Boogie man out!
P.S.S. my twitter is @jameswesb . it’s pretty fucking spectacular.
Mr. Brown:
I donated to your defense. It wasn’t much but what I could afford. I wish you the mental strength and fortitude to hang in there for whatever remains of your wrongful sentence. May you also have the good fortune to remain physically well and unharmed by the guards and your fellow inmates. Having the opportunity to read, write and trying to maintain a sense of humor about the absurdity of your situation likely helps. I wish you the very best and hopefully time goes by quickly for you without incident. I believe you have a lot to offer the world when you get out. So hang in there, be well and good luck.
In the hope someone is printing the comments out for you Mr. Brown, let me wish you fortitude and all else needed to emotionally survive the next several years. You write like an angel on coke and I savor every line. Keep it coming.
barrett will u marry me
j/k
(sorta)
Haha I was about to post something similar. Beat me to it.
I just started watching Orange Is The New Black. The show definitely makes you think what would happen if well-educated / well-to-do me gets sentenced to prison. I definitely enjoyed reading your article. I wonder if you gain clarity about your situation (your situation before you went to prison) being in prison? I talked yesterday with an alcoholic who was involuntarily committed and she had absolutely no insight into her situation. She blamed the specific drink for causing her problems – like switching from a 120 proof to 100 proof bottle would make any difference.
I was interested to about your remark about COIN and wondered if you had any thoughts about its role in due process. I might be more interested in hearing about that one after you are out of prison and can speak more freely.
“The El Chapo of Anonymous.”
Good on ya for not leaving your sense of humor and rebellious spirit behind. It’s good to read you here and I look forward to the day when your musings can no longer be muted by the insufferable authoritarian idjits who comprise the biggest portion of the Carceral Industrial Complex.
You’ve got plenty of spirit, Indian or not.
Keep at it! Your life matters!
Barret Brown,
Now is a great time for you to be in prison, we need someone like you in there. Here on the outside, mainstream media are being forced to confront systematic state terrorism, in the meager way they do, as citizens document terrorist attacks by militarized-assembly-line-workers (cops) with their cellphone cameras. Could you make use of cell phone cameras inside there Mr. Brown? Tides are turning out here because people are seeing the murder and abuse that their tax dollars fund, can you get us some pictures and video from inside there?
You’re doing great work buddy! Stay sane.
Sorry, but NO time is a great time to be in prison. Period!
Having spent 8 months in jail on a fraudulent charge, which was overturned and any record of that time sealed, I can most certainly attest to that!
No decent person should be denied their freedom, and if only that President Obama had dared to visit the American political prisoners, like the patriotic Barrett, in prison.
But that would never happen . . . .
I beg to differ. It is when people have the least left to lose and an outlet to do so that they are freest to speak the loudest to their oppressors — not freest from their oppressors, but from one’s own internal fears. Just something to think about.
rockon barrettbrown. billy n’ kenny will dy of jelly
Love this. Mr. Brown’s writing reminds me a little bit of Joseph Heller’s in Catch-22. What an unrepentant and brilliant smart ass! The Wit brothers (Dim, Half, and Nit) may have him in the hole, but he has them at a distinct disadvantage… being a real human being and all.
this sucks
“Contact the Author:
Barrett Brown
mailto:”
It’s fitting.
This was a first for me – never having read anything written by you before. It won’t be the last. I’m sorry for what you are going through – but I thank you for telling us and for keeping on being “Barrett Brown”.