I was just scrolling through some of the referendums…what exactly is going on here?
Less than 2/3 of the vote counted. Since 1982, CalPIA “employs” prisoners for $1/hr to make office furniture and supplies, stamp license plates, and fight wildfires, among other labor. Some have died. It’s slavery. If the measure passes, these activities will cost the state a lot more money. And to add to it, Prop 36 looks like we will be sending more prisoners in for non-violent crimes.
No problem just make sure they don’t send any good white boys to prison. /s
Well, looks like it’s a plantation for a service economy - just rule the labor and have their output be devoid of any actual product so that they never feel a sense of accomplishment. Gotta keep em hopeless to keep them working for me instead of for themselves.
Refusing to outlaw prison labor. The measure is disingenuously named.
This seems to have been the problem, according to advocates. They’re saying that people weren’t really clear on what the measure would accomplish.
I think a solid piece of evidence is the vote count. The total vote count appears around 300k less than all of the other measures, meaning people just skipped over that one which is never a good sign.
Ps. I just did spitball math at 6am, I didn’t read that anywhere so totally my (could be wrong) observation
Last I saw, CA still had a bunch of votes to be counted though…
56% reporting.
No - 54.7% - 5,394,838
Yes - 45.3% - 4,474,816
Soooo… 9,869,654 votes counted and that’s 56%, so 100% is around 17,624,382 votes total, meaning 7,754,728 still uncounted.
Slavery is legal in the form of prison labor
13th Amendment:
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.
Basically says: “slavery is illegal unless it is used as a punishment for a crime”.
California was voting to override the 13th Amendment it seems