Part 2: Alabama Prison Strike Organizer Joins with Pastor to Achieve Criminal Justice Reform
We continue our interview with an Alabama prisoner about the end of a 10-day strike to protest severe overcrowding, poor living conditions and the 13th Amendment of the U.S. Constitution, which bans slavery and servitude "except as a punishment for crime," thus sanctioning the legality of forced, unpaid prison labor. We speak with Kinetik Justice, who joins us by phone from solitary confinement in Holman Correctional Facility and is co-founder of the Free Alabama Movement and one of the organizers of the strike, and with Pastor Kenneth Glasgow, founder and national president of The Ordinary People’s Society (TOPS), a faith-based organization focusing on criminal justice reform and rehabilitation of repeat offenders.
Watch Part 1: Alabama Prison Strike Organizer Speaks from Behind Bars: We Are Engaged in a Struggle for Our
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Before I engage in a dialog with you HARRY, I want to know if clicked on this link to read this material of Alabama Prison Strike Organizer Joins with Pastor to Achieve Criminal Justice Reform both PART 1 and PART2, HARRY?