Stephen Wilson (@alwaysstevie) 's Twitter Profile
Stephen Wilson

@alwaysstevie

Black. queer. abolitionist. he/him/they. writer. organizer. Philly-raised. Currently imprisoned

ID: 1129403083321204736

linkhttps://abolitioniststudy.com/category/letters-from-dallas/ calendar_today17-05-2019 15:07:33

1,1K Tweet

8,8K Followers

338 Following

🖤ShutItDown2024🇵🇸 (@cemicool) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Have been off X but I did launch this resource recently: bit.ly/iftheybuildit on fighting carceral infrastructure of all kinds, particularly features recommendations on landscape assessments pre-organizing, avoiding identity reductionism, & rejecting carceral alternatives.

Inquest (@_inquest_) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The thorough new Prison Policy Initiative report on prison transfers cites Inquest's powerful article from Stephen Wilson about his personal experiences with transfers being used as retribution. Read here: inquest.org/unsettled-peop…

Stephen Wilson (@alwaysstevie) 's Twitter Profile Photo

It surprises me when people on the outside are shocked by police brutality. They are always performing some version of state violence - through acts of violence or the threat of violence.

Stephen Wilson (@alwaysstevie) 's Twitter Profile Photo

This conversation hosted by Haymarket Books has important insights for how we got to where we are re this current regime and how we need to organize against it. And yes, that includes solidarity with those targeted by the various systems of state violence. youtube.com/watch?v=jzuy7U…

Massive Bookshop (@bookshopmassive) 's Twitter Profile Photo

We are back from vacation and we're having a ⚡️FLASH SALE⚡️to get back on track with paying our bills. Through Sunday, June 22, take 50% off all books in our Massive inventory! massivebookshop.com/collections/ou…

Inquest (@_inquest_) 's Twitter Profile Photo

To get folks inspired for Juneteenth, we put together a reading list of some of our favorite articles on the long struggle for abolition. Contributions from Angela Y. Davis, Mumia Abu-Jamal, Joy James, Mariame Kaba, Kelly Hayes, and more. inquest.org/juneteenth-202…

To get folks inspired for Juneteenth, we put together a reading list of some of our favorite articles on the long struggle for abolition. Contributions from Angela Y. Davis, Mumia Abu-Jamal, Joy James, Mariame Kaba, Kelly Hayes, and more. inquest.org/juneteenth-202…
dean spade (@deanspade) 's Twitter Profile Photo

This is horrifying and will shorten trans lives. At the same time, we know that trans people have survived attack and erasure many times over, providing each other with love, care, and basic needs. We won't stop or be stopped. theguardian.com/society/2025/j…

Study and Struggle (@study__struggle) 's Twitter Profile Photo

We’re excited to share a new review of Our History is the Future in three takes. Read insights and conversation between Paris, Bryan, and Marcos on our website.

We’re excited to share a new review of Our History is the Future in three takes. Read insights and conversation between Paris, Bryan, and Marcos on our website.
Solitary Watch (@solitarywatch) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Hunger strike begins as California prisons hand down biggest restrictions since Covid #lockdown #solitaryconfinement calmatters.org/justice/2025/0…

Stephen Wilson (@alwaysstevie) 's Twitter Profile Photo

There's a lot of posts because of #Juneteenth reducing the comparisons between enslavement and incarceration to the issue of forced prison labor. While coerced labor is a through line, it is certainly not the most significant one. From an article I coauthored in Inquest

There's a lot of posts because of #Juneteenth reducing the comparisons between enslavement and incarceration to the issue of forced prison labor. While coerced labor is a through line, it is certainly not the most significant one. From an article I coauthored in <a href="/_inquest_/">Inquest</a>
Nick Estes (@nickwestes) 's Twitter Profile Photo

“Leonard Peltier’s Story Isn’t Over Yet” my interview with the Native elder in the The New Yorker, fifty years after the shootout at Oglala in the Pine Ridge reservation. newyorker.com/news/the-new-y…

Kamau Franklin (@kamaufranklin) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Any Black person who supports these white nationalist ICE raids have lost their mind. The same people that are dispossessing indigenous people, again, from their homes/lands, here is the same one that is oppressing, murdering, imprisoning, impoverishing Black people.

Kwaneta Harris (@kwanetaharris) 's Twitter Profile Photo

In this letter to my 13-year-old self, I reflect on everything I wish I’d known sooner. I hope it reaches someone who needs it. #DearTeenageMe #LettersToMyTeenageSelf ChristopherBlackwell Deborah Zalesne Jamie Beth Cohen narratively.com/p/letter-to-my…

Prison Policy Initiative (@prisonpolicy) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The FCC just delayed implementation of the provisions of the Martha Wright-Reed Act that dramatically reduced the costs of prison & jail calls. 🚨 The move is wrong both morally and legally. 🧵 fcc.gov/document/carr-…

Community Resource Hub for Safety & Accountability (@cresourcehub) 's Twitter Profile Photo

APPLICATIONS LAUNCH JULY 14TH! The George Jackson School grounds participants in both the study and practice necessary to build strong organizations and strong movements engaging in radical struggle as we continue to build our people power and fight for our future!

APPLICATIONS LAUNCH JULY 14TH! 

The George Jackson School grounds participants in both the study and practice necessary to build strong organizations and strong movements engaging in radical struggle as we continue to build our people power and fight for our future!
Prison Policy Initiative (@prisonpolicy) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Older people now make up 5x as much of the prison population as they did three decades ago. Turning prisons into “makeshift nursing homes” is one of the nation’s most wasteful, morally bankrupt experiments to date. And it certainly doesn’t make our communities safer.

Older people now make up 5x as much of the prison population as they did three decades ago.

Turning prisons into “makeshift nursing homes” is one of the nation’s most wasteful, morally bankrupt experiments to date. And it certainly doesn’t make our communities safer.