Tennessee makes it nearly impossible for people with felony convictions to vote

Doug Holland@lemmy.world to politics @lemmy.world – 188 points –
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Good. Criminals deserve less

You do realize, this is a classic Jim Crow technique to surpress votes from those you don't want to vote. For exampl, you could make it a felony to be late for a rent but then the county only choses to prosecute people of color, but gives "grace" to white tenants.

They also chose crimes that can be pinned on black people whether or not they did them.

For example, drugs. Want to take out a black person that's "causing trouble?" Just arrest them and conveniently find drugs in their house. Maybe the person really knows that you planted them, but who's the white judge going to believe? The black man or the white police officer? The black man is now a convicted felon, behind bars. Even if he's released, he still can't vote anymore.

Repeat a few dozen more times and you can stop black people from "causing trouble" just with the constant threat of arrest hanging over their heads.

Careful, there's very little that separates you from those you wish to disenfranchise.

You might want to check out Anthony Ray Hinton's The Sun Does Shine for a memoir of what it's like to be wrongfully sentenced to prison for nearly 30 years all because your friend was mad at you over a girl.

There's also the case of Crystal Mason who's in prison, right now, despite comitting no crime.

Profit and Punishment: How America Criminalizes the Poor in the Name of Justice by Pulitzer prize winner Tony Messenger is a more comprehensive book, but one that I think every US citizen should read before defending the status quo.

Criminal justice reform is extraordinarily difficult in the US because citizens with first hand experience are disenfranchised. Everyone affected by society should have an equitable voice in society - there should be no disenfranchised underclass.

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