The #AlabamaMemorialPreservationAct is bad law that creates even worse results. The spirit of it is wrong. But, if you ever wanted to see what the wrong side of history looks like in video format, here you go.
Here is a fun fact. The $25,000 fine he argues applies to monuments over 40 years old actually doesn’t apply. It only applies to monuments between 20-40 years old. Also, it only applies to people that didn’t apply for a waiver before removing a 20-40 year old monument.
Don’t believe me? Read it for yourself. The only penalty in the law deals with waiver violations. There is no procedure for getting a waiver for monuments over 40 years old. And there is a reason for that.
Every Confederate monument in Alabama is over 40 years old. The folks who wanted this bill knew that. They also didn’t want to provide a penalty in the law because they didn’t want these “priceless” monuments to have a price tag. Certainly not one has low as $25,000.
The fact that there is neither a penalty nor procedure in the law to alter or remove a Confederate monument over 40 years old was intentional. Also, the fact that there is neither a penalty nor procedure in the law to alter or remove a monument over 40 years old is quite clear.
Again, the folks who wanted this law didn’t want anyone to believe that they could just pay a fine to remove a Confederate monument. You can’t even apply for a waiver to remove it. To some, protecting the Confederacy is much more important than making sure we all have healthcare.
Now, The AG could have said that I need to go get the law changed, as he encourages you to do, because the law is unenforceable. Did he do that? Nope. Instead, he chose to make a specious argument to get a court to change the law to fit his agenda. Unfortunately, it worked.
So, I guess his courage to fight to get the law changed outside of the Legislature is somehow different from someone else’s dedication to their convictions to fight a bad law.
Here we are, in 2020, still fighting the Civil War in Alabama. The spirit of the dead is burying the living.
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Alabama is another step closer to spending at least 2.6 billion on building three new prisons for men. I have never seen people so happy to spend this much money on a plan that doesn’t solve the problem, creates generational debt, and doesn’t buy us anything at all. #alpolitics
Let’s get a few things out of the way. You are going to hear that we are signing a 30 year lease. We aren’t. We can’t. It’s illegal. So instead, this “arrangement” is going to be a series of 30 1 year leases that will have to be renegotiated every year. #alpolitics
At the end of the 30 1 year leases (assuming we make it that far) we won’t own anything. We will neither own the prison nor the land they sit on. 2.6 billion and we won’t have anything to show for it. #alpolitics
Ever since I tweeted about my experience with John Lewis and also about my Dad, Judge John Henry England Jr., reading the resolution renaming Nott Hall, many people have contacted me and asked to know more about him. Well, let me tell you a few things.
He was born in Uniontown but grew up in Birmingham. He graduated @TuskegeeUniv in 1969. He was pretty active in college. Example? He may have been involved in locking the administration up in their offices during a protest. However, he also made time for the ignorant bench too.
In 1969, my Dad went to @UALawSchool. He along with Michael Figures, Booker Forte Jr. and Ronald Jackson were the first Black students to attend the Law School. However, he did not graduate until 1974 because he served 2 years in the Army during the Vietnam War.
Congressman John Lewis is a true American hero. I had an opportunity as a kid to meet him. It is a story that I carry with me that changed my life. If you will indulge me, I would like to share it.
When I was younger, my dad, Judge John England, used to force me, my brother, and my sister to go to Selma. To be perfectly honest, I used to hate it but it didn’t matter. He made us go. One time in particular, it was to participate in a renactment of Bloody Sunday.
I was angry. Attitude was terrible. I made sure to make it clear to anyone that approached me that I didn’t want to be there. I kept saying that I didn’t understand the purpose and kept asking why this was necessary. Well, as fate would have it, I had a lesson to learn that day.
.@GovernorKayIvey, we need to have a special session on criminal justice reform. Since @USAttyTown came to Montgomery and told us that our prison system was worse than the death penalty, conditions have gotten worse. @ALCorrections and @ALBPP are working against reform.
Let’s talk @ALBPP first. Remember the law we passed to “reform” the Parole board? Well, since that bill passed and you appointed Charlie Graddick, only two things have changed, the name to “Bureau” and they basically do not grant parole at all now.
Since November, there have been 1135 hearings. Only 159 have been granted. That’s 14%. Most recently, after you had to force them to hold hearings during the pandemic, the numbers got worse. They somehow managed to INCREASE the population.