California and Nevada finally contemplate an end to slavery
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Bet it gets veto. They just made homelessness illegal so they about to fill shit ton of for profit prisons.
Its a proposition so they cant veto it without another proposition.
Looking forward to when GEO Group v. State of California reaches an outrageously corrupt SCOTUS.
GEO Group v. State of California
Context. In case you hadn't heard of this like me.
I'll be honest, I was just throwing a guess out at who might challenge this, as a cynical joke. Feels completely disgusting that it was a bullseye and there is already a similar case as precedent.
It is sad that this will cause a legitimate argument about the constitution.
"Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction. "
Unfortunately I think you're right, the way the thirteenth amendment is written might make laws like this unconstitutional. What we really need is another amendment banning it entirely.
Why would it be unconstitutional? The amendment doesn't require forced labor, it just allows it. States deciding to nix it as a "punishment" are fully in their rights.
You are correct but SCOTUS has zero respect for the Constitution when they're paid not to, so who knows?
I see zero reason why this would make state laws about it unconstitutional. The constitution does not say it is mandatory for prison slave labor to exist, just that it could
The US constitution not prohibiting something doesn't mean a law or a state constitution can't
How?? The language just makes something illegal. It's not like the one that forced alcohol to be legal.
Honestly, we'd do better with an Article 5 constitution convention.
The constitution was never meant to be something that was interpreted from the lens of when it was written. The Framers specifically made a way for states to rewrite the Constitution to adopt with the changing times.
Edit: clarified my comment as it was a bit ambiguous
~~The constitution was never meant to be a living document.~~
~~See the 27 amendments and the process laid out in Article V for actually changing the damn thing. I think it's weird you referenced the literal part about how to amend it and came to the conclusion that it wasn't supposed to be amended. Just cause politicians have given up on their duties to work for the general populous doesn't mean the document wasn't meant to change.~~
Edit: previous author rewrote and clarified their meaning.
What do you mean never meant to be a living document?
I'm going to edit my comment to be a bit clearer but the Framers knew that the Constitution wasn't meant for all time, that the document would need to be rewritten to reflect the changing values and issues in the present age. The easiest example is the third amendment. While it's important, yes, that we not be required to quarter troops in our homes, it isn't exactly the main issue facing us as a nation.
Fucking conservative judges, however, seem to think that the "history and culture" of the document should trump whatever issue is going on now.
Ah thanks for the clarification
they enslaved people to move unknown bodies from “Negro Hill Cemetery?”? The fuck..?
While at it, ban profits from prisons.
That's good. Prison Labour is modern slavery
It's still legal to have punitive slavery. There is a carve out in the amendment. It is repugnant. We need a 28th amendment declaring an end to all slavery.
Yes, please.
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https://apnews.com/article/california-nevada-forced-labor-slavery-ban-measure-43253e64726ced58050eeb2e553b6708