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Video instructions and help with filling out and completing When Form 8655 Amend

Instructions and Help about When Form 8655 Amend

Let's see here. Joan in Nashville, Tennessee, watches on Free Speech TV. Hey Joan, what's on your mind today? Welcome. I have to agree with you that slavery has never really changed. This never really ended. The manifestations are a little different, but it's still in existence. In fact, up until 1944, black men who were arrested, sometimes legitimately and then sometimes on false charges, were sent to work in coal mines. A lot of them never saw the light of day again. So, that was up until 1944. And then, of course, there's the whole poor school system pipeline to the new plantation system, which is the justice system, you know? Yeah, the private prison labor system. There, I mean, we still have that. We have prison labor now. You know, the Thirteenth Amendment says that you can be held in slavery if you are imprisoned and you can be made to work. I mean, you know, it's just that's the exception to the end of slavery in the Thirteenth Amendment. It is under color of law. And so, we have people in jails all over the country, and disproportionately people of color, who are working all day, every day, for, you know, five cents an hour, sometimes for nothing at all. And you know, how is that different? It is. And I wanted to mention this book to you. It was written in the late forties by an author who, I think, grew up in Alabama or Georgia or someplace like that. The author's name is Lillian Smith, and the title of the book is "Killers of the Dream". She laid out the schematic for racism. You know, according to her, the rich white planters made a bargain with the poor whites that the best interest was with...