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#Alabama

13 posts13 participants1 post today

"#Alabama’s experience under Wallace presents a stark warning to #Trump’s working class supporters: while populist rhetoric may appear to offer a voice to voters who feel disenfranchised and marginalized, the policies that follow from it often fail to serve their needs. "

A prescient article proving more accurate by the second:

time.com/7198869/george-wallac

Time · History Offers a Warning About Donald Trump’s Brand of PopulismBy Brucie Porter / Made by History

How we treat prisoners is a reflection of ourselves. “The medical students wrote that the organs of formerly incarcerated people were considered especially useful to study because the diseases were often more severe because of the lack of medical attention in prisons.”
#HumanRights #Prisoners #Alabama
huffpost.com/entry/alamba-offi

HuffPost · Alabama Officials Face Lawsuit Over Alleged Inmate Organ HarvestingBy AP
Continued thread

#AntiProtestLaws: #Alabama

Proposed #AlabamaLaw limiting #protests near homes passes despite #FirstAmendment concerns: ‘We might go too far’

Updated: Apr. 02, 2025

"Alabama state Sen. #ArthurOrr’s, R-Decatur, bill seeking to limit where and when protests could be organized passed a Senate Committee on Wednesday.

"The Senate Committee on County and Municipal Government voted to pass the legislation despite concerns from Democratic lawmakers.

"Orr has attempted to pass similar legislation for several years but has been unsuccessful so far.

"The bill, #SB247, states that it would 'prohibit a person from picketing or protesting at or near the residence of any individual with the intent to harass, intimidate, or disturb during the period starting 30 minutes after sunset and ending 30 minutes before sunrise.'

"This prohibition would also apply if an individual used artificial noise amplification, blocked a public road, or blocked the entrance and exit of a residential area or place of employment.

"Orr defended the bill saying it would meet constitutional standards and that individuals should find public places to protest outside of neighborhoods."

al.com/politics/2025/04/propos

Full text of bill [pdf]:
alison.legislature.state.al.us

#CriminalizingDissent
#Authoritarianism #Fascism #Clampdown #CriminalizingProtest
#CharacteristicsOfFascism #USPol

al · Proposed Alabama law limiting protests near homes passes despite First Amendment concerns: ‘We might go too fBy Patrick Darrington | pdarrington@al.com

Dans le sud des États-Unis, le patrimoine du mouvement des droits civiques est en danger

Phillip Howard, un ancien militaire, tente de sauver des lieux emblématiques de la lutte des Noirs-Américains pour leurs droits dans les années 1960. Rencontre en #Alabama, un État du Sud profond marqué par le combat contre l’esclavage et la ségrégation.

Par @bougonmediapart.fr/journal/internati

Continued thread

State by State Pending and recently passed #AntiProtestLaws: #Alabama

#HB412: Felony penalties for #protesters near gas and oil #pipelines

Would substantially increase existing penalties that could cover protesters who demonstrate on pipeline property. Under the bill, unauthorized entry onto “critical infrastructure,” which includes pipelines, would be a Class D felony punishable by at least one and up to five years in prison, rather than a serious misdemeanor. As such, demonstrators who enter onto pipeline property could face felony arrest and significant prison time. The trespass offense covers entry onto areas of “#CriticalInfrastructure” that are not posted against trespassing or enclosed by a physical barrier, if any authorized person forbids entry.

See full text of bill here:
legiscan.com/AL/bill/HB412/202

Status: pending
Introduced 6 Mar 2025.
Issue(s): Infrastructure, Trespass

SB 247: New penalties for #StreetProtesters

Would create a new criminal offense that could cover protesters who demonstrate in the street or obstruct access to businesses and residences. The bill, which focuses on targeted residential picketing, also broadly prohibits protesters from “block[ing] any public road, the ingress or egress of any residence, or the ingress or egress of any place of employment while #picketing or protesting.” The prohibition would seemingly cover a large street protest, regardless of whether it actually interfered with traffic, as well as a large protest in an urban area that even temporarily blocked the entrance to a shop or apartment building. A first offense would be a Class C misdemeanor (up to three months in jail), and subsequent offenses would be a Class B misdemeanor (up to six months in jail).

Full text of bill here: legiscan.com/AL/bill/SB247/202

Status: pending
Introduced 18 Mar 2025.
Issue(s): Traffic Interference

SB 152: New controls on protest locations and costs for protest organizers

Allows municipalities in Lauderdale County to control where protesters may gather, and charge them expansive fees for a permit. Under the law, municipalities may prohibit spontaneous protests in public forums by requiring protesters to obtain permits in certain circumstances, including if the demonstration "will involve more than a certain number of individuals participating, as established by the municipality." The law also allows municipalities to charge protester organizers a permit fee that includes "the actual cost of cleanup," "the actual cost of the use of #LawEnforcementOfficers," and "any other actual administrative cost incurred by the municipality."

Full text of bill here: alisondb.legislature.state.al.

Status: enacted
Introduced 21 Feb 2021; Approved by Senate 16 March 2021; Approved by House 13 April 2021; Signed by Governor Ivey 27 April 2021

Issue(s): Security Costs

SB 17 / HB 21: New Penalties for Protests Near Gas and Oil Pipelines

Expands the definition of "critical infrastructure" under Alabama law to include pipelines and mining operations, such that protesters who enter onto pipeline property could face steep penalties. Preexisting Alabama law prohibited individuals from unauthorized entry onto critical infrastructure, defined as intentionally entering a posted area of critical infrastructure; the offense is a Class A misdemeanor punishable by up to one year in jail and a fine of up to $6,000. Under this law, if a person interrupts or interferes with the operations of critical infrastructure while trespassing, they would additionally be guilty of a Class C felony, punishable by at least one and up to ten years in prison. This law also expanded the definition of "person" to include nonprofits, creating the possibility that nonprofits who provide support or organizing for #environmental protests near critical infrastructure where individuals then #trespass could face organizational liability. The draft law was pre-filed for the 2022 legislative session in September 2021. It is nearly identical to HB 516 introduced in 2021.

Full text of bill here: legiscan.com/AL/bill/SB17/2022

Status: enacted

Introduced 11 Jan 2022; Approved by Senate 1 February 2022; Approved by House 10 February 2022; Signed by Governor Ivey 15 February 2022

Issue(s): Protest Supporters or Funders, Infrastructure, Trespass

Today In Labor History April 8, 1864: The 13th amendment to the U.S. Constitution was ratified, banning chattel slavery. However, it permitted a continuation of wage slavery and the forced labor of convicts without pay. And on this date in 1911, 128 convict miners, mostly African-Americans jailed for minor offenses, were killed by a massive explosion at the Banner coalmine near Birmingham, Alabama. While the Triangle Shirtwaist fire, which occurred just two weeks earlier, elicited massive public attention and support for the plight of immigrant women working in sweatshop conditions, the Banner explosion garnered almost no public sympathy, probably due to racism and the fact that they were prisoners.

West Alabama Women's Center to their patients, after a recent court order:

After three years of silence, they can "now allowed to tell patients ALL of their options for their pregnancies without fear of being prosecuted for "criminal conspiracy" by the Alabama Attorney General."

#AbortionIsHealthcare #AbortionRights #Abortion #Alabama

wawchealth.dm.networkforgood.c

wawchealth.dm.networkforgood.comAlmost Three Years of Silence is OVER!