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1

nborders t1_it9a6uy wrote

I hope he can get past all of the lawyers queued in front of his home.

184

Spicy_Sugary t1_it9hjdp wrote

Voting while on parole can attract a 20 year prison sentence which is far more than a lot of rapists and murderers get.

Screwy priorities.

1,047

blueskies1800 t1_it9o2a6 wrote

I sure hope that this experience does not discourage him from practicing his right to vote in the future.

121

-shabushabu t1_itad1tn wrote

Almost exclusively going after black and brown people... The white retirement community that did literal voter fraud by voting multiple times for trump not only didn't get arrested but weren't punished at all... they got a warning and were told to be nice and not do it again...

65

Billy1121 t1_itadth0 wrote

Georgia was said to be, but really they went to Massachusetts and Maryland as indentured types

> It is estimated that some 50,000 British convicts were sent to the Americas this way, and the majority landed in the Chesapeake Colonies of Maryland and Virginia. Transported convicts represented perhaps one-quarter of Britons that left the country during the 18th century.

7

Alazypanda t1_itaeaup wrote

I'm on the east coast and often go to DC, their license plate says taxation without representation. Because ya know they don't really get a say in congress despite having a higher population than 2 states.

11

gjon89 t1_itaipny wrote

How about the ones that were entrapped by state? Those charges better be dropped as well.

6

NAGDABBITALL t1_itajf8j wrote

Trump signed a legal charter declaring that he could not designate Mar-A-Lago as his legal residence and by law could not use the address to vote.

Desantis said..."I don't care!"

25

Saberus_Terras t1_itamctl wrote

Suspiciously they dropped the charges just after the deadline to register to vote in the midterms.

114

DorisCrockford t1_itaqh3j wrote

Thank God! I've been thinking about him ever since he was arrested, the poor guy. Copped for being the last in line to vote and ending up on the news. Made the big shots look bad for not having enough polling places.

11

APr0N00b t1_itasvxq wrote

Too bad we got a new batch of people being arrested in Florida

5

MozeeToby t1_itat646 wrote

"No taxation without representation" was a rallying cry of the revolution, not government policy or federal law. There are lots of people in the US with no representation at the federal level who still pay federal taxes, the most obvious of which is the entire population of Washington DC.

11

gregorydgraham t1_itayd34 wrote

Yes, in New Zealand we let prisoners vote. They’re still citizens.

Let’s be clear here: Australia has actual concentration camps and has deported Aboriginals BUT they’re not big enough assholes to deny prisoners the vote. Sort your shit out.

11

ramriot t1_itaz9br wrote

OMG those Australians must breed like frigging rabbits to get where they are now, plus 168K seems a little small for a viable gene pool.

[Edit] This is meant to be humor

4

SpankMyButt t1_itb2oqh wrote

It might be a unpopular idea but not letting people with a record vote is bonkers to say the least. One of the purposes of democracy is to have every aspect of society represented and thereby make more informed decisions.

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TKler t1_itb75ma wrote

You work of a narrow western understanding of country.

Resettling natives is deportation, as you force them to leave their country.

They just don't leave your country.

edit: of instead of is

2

Spicy_Sugary t1_itb7wzu wrote

I'm familiar with the case. A white New Zealand citizen was convicted of beating his ex wife was at risk of deportation. He found a family member with Aboriginal heritage and used it to claim he's Aboriginal.

He could not be deported because the law does not allow Aboriginal people to be deported. So it's the opposite of what you claimed.

Now tell us about the 'concentration camps'. Should be fun.

4

Thykothaken t1_itb7zum wrote

>You work is

That typo threw me for a good loop.

But yeah, that's interesting! If they already had their own version of countries and are forced to move, then to the rest it's "just" resettling while to them it's straight up deportation.

3

Spicy_Sugary t1_itb8tlf wrote

Each of the men in the article (that you haven't read) were white foreign nationals born overseas at risk of deportation until they found a way to claim Aboriginal heritage. Then so they could not be deported because we can't deport Aboriginal people

So it's the literal opposite of what you claimed.

5

gregorydgraham t1_itb9e8e wrote

From the article:

“Thoms was released from immigration detention immediately after the court issued its judgement. … The court found immigration laws did not apply to Thoms, who was a recognised native title holder.”

Thoms is “recognised native title holder”, that is an Aboriginal, who was in immigration detention, that is being deported, and the Government did their utmost to get him deported.

Quibble if you want but Australia deported Aborigines.

0

Spicy_Sugary t1_itba3aw wrote

"That case had been brought by two men, Brendan Thoms and Daniel Love, who were born overseas and faced deportation after stints in jail."

Again they were able to be deported as foreign nationals. Once they used the loophole that doesn't allow Aboriginal people to be deported, they were allowed to stay because we can't deport Aboriginal people.

My dog learns quicker than this.

5

DutchNotSleeping t1_itbchs4 wrote

Not just Australia, most democracies. In the Netherlands too. It's just in the USA, where 2 parties control all the power, that voting rights are being taken away from minority groups. I mean, if (former) inmates can vote, throwing all black people in prison for non violent drug charges won't be as effective right?

19

sybrwookie t1_itbh3jm wrote

When the goal is to get at least some people to go, "I dunno, I just got off probation a few months/years ago, I'm not taking the chance" and not voting, it's less insane and more evil.

8

kst1958 t1_itbi0xq wrote

Texas' government is a cesspool of Trump cronies and bootlickers, all majorly funded by fundamentalist Christian billionaires. - Texan here.

11

Bvoluroth t1_itbj537 wrote

Not letting prisoners vote is so fucked

3

Akiias t1_itbj8dh wrote

This is misleading. If I was at PC I would show why. If I remember when I get home I'll update.


Update:

Faster to look at info:

> https://ballotpedia.org/Voting_rights_for_convicted_felons

  1. In two states and Washington, D.C., convicted felons always retained the right to vote: Maine and Vermont.
  2. In two states, voting rights were restored to a convicted felon immediately upon completion of prison and parole time: California and Connecticut.
  3. In nine states, felons with certain convictions never regained the right to vote. The government may opt to restore an individual's voting rights. In Arizona, the government must opt to restore voting rights for individuals with two or more felony convictions. Voting rights are automatically restored to an individual with one felony conviction upon completion of his or her sentence.
  4. In 19 states, voting rights were restored to a convicted felon immediately upon completion of his or her prison sentence.
  5. In 18 states, voting rights were restored to a convicted felon upon completion of his or her sentence, including prison time, parole, and probation.[4]

More official version:

> https://www.justice.gov/voting/file/1507306/download

−10

ukexpat t1_itbjzvu wrote

Next up: Texas legislature changes the law to give the state AG the authority to unilaterally prosecute election fraud charges.

3

JAT621 t1_itbno9j wrote

We’re living in Jim Crow 3.0

3

jdv23 t1_itbppk9 wrote

And all non-citizen residents. I’m a British immigrant who gets taxed without being able to vote. One day I’m going to snap and throw all your coffee in the harbor

4

flargenhargen t1_itbpqg7 wrote

> not letting people with a record vote is bonkers to say the least.

The reason is exactly what you'd expect. Trying to keep people who aren't likely to vote for you, from voting at all.

https://www.democracydocket.com/analysis/what-can-we-learn-from-the-history-of-felony-disenfranchisement/

>When Black men were granted the right to vote in 1870, Southern states started to adopt felony disenfranchisement laws, not long before they adopted poll taxes, literacy tests and grandfather clauses, all tools designed to prevent Black voters from accessing the ballot.

The good news is that as described in that link, it's starting to trend away from that, and people are getting access to vote again in more progressive states, and even some that aren't so much.

11

Dutch_Rayan t1_itbs8rt wrote

Even having to stand in line for hours should be illegal, need more voting booths then.

7

Traevia t1_itbsroi wrote

It was a company town. Most of the ventures were financed from companies. Indentured servitude is a lot different and was working for a company for a set period in exchange for the voyage costs.

1

KazkaFaron t1_itcaefp wrote

yeah this man looks like a hardened criminal for sure oh wait no he's just black

1

BrooklynFlower54 t1_itces67 wrote

But folks at the Villages Apartments in Florida VOTED TWICE and didn't get jail time, but a Civics course, imagine that?

3

WellWellWellthennow t1_itcgpsl wrote

This is supposed to be an uplifting sub and this thread just totally depressed me.

1

LeonardSmallsJr t1_itcmg5h wrote

Scorecard:

Voter fraud: 2 (both conservatives)

Election fraud: Fucking everywhere and being “legalized”

2

Neltrix t1_itcx8k3 wrote

Awesome now sue them for everything they got.

1

rgg25 t1_itd8xam wrote

This is not uplifitng. This is gross. The fact that the AG of Texas can pursue this and be wrong and come away unscathed is sad. Hervis should sue the AG for wasting his time.

1

Aporkalypse_Sow t1_itdipqm wrote

From the article.

After serving time for a 1995 burglary conviction, Rogers had been out on parole since 2004. His parole ended in June 2020

25 years of not being able to vote because of burglary. A crime that involves theft without the presence of the owner of the property. As in you didn't harm a person to steal from them. Wrong, sure, but not being able to vote for a quarter century?

Just because OP used the word record, instead of currently waiting for an insanely long parole to end doesn't mean they were misleading.

1

iwishiwereyou t1_itdkd4m wrote

God but if we were to try to rewrite the constitution now with the fucking lunatics, fascists, and bigots that hold roles of power, we'd be so fucked.

Some right wing extremists really do want to rewrite the constitution. It would go very badly.

1