• @[email protected]
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    -411 year ago

    Funny how you’re claiming it’s actually everyone else who’s racist when you immediately think of race when people talk about convicted felons.

    • Flying Squid
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      211 year ago

      Understanding demographics is not racist. Black men are convicted and incarcerated more often than anyone else in this country because our justice system is weighted against them.

    • snooggums
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      191 year ago

      Not when you understand the disproportionate incarceration of black people for the same crimes. Like how the war on drugs made lot of drug crimes felonies with the intention of disenfranchising the black population through unequal enforcement. Plus Jim Crow laws and everything else that disproportionately punishes black folks based on criminal history.

      Understanding history is why we know racism is a major component of anything that removes the right to vote.

      • @[email protected]
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        -291 year ago

        Understanding history is why we know racism is a major component of anything that removes the right to vote.

        More like you’re just grasping at straws to connect entirely disconnected events since you have no actual position to argue from an honest perspective

    • TechyDad
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      191 year ago

      Do you know why felons can’t vote? How that started?

      It was after the Civil War. Black people had the right to vote, but the Southern states didn’t like that. They couldn’t just say “black people can’t vote anymore.” That wouldn’t have been allowed. So instead, they used a bunch of different voter suppression tactics to reduce how many black people could vote.

      One of these tactics was removing the right to vote from convicted felons. The states first said that convicted felons couldn’t vote. Then, they decided which crimes were felonies based on how many black people were convicted of those crimes. (Note, this might not have been how many black people COMMITTED the crimes, but how many black people could be rounded up and convicted despite the evidence.)

      Black people in the South would get arrested for various crimes (again, with or without evidence), get convicted of felonies, and lose their right to vote. Even if they weren’t convicted or charged, the message was clear: Stand up politically against White Men and you’ll go to prison and lose your rights. The large black voting groups got smaller and smaller.

      Removing the “felonies remove voting rights” rule reverses a discriminatory practice.