The TL;DR here is simple.
If Polis believes his prisons donβt use involuntary servitude, there are lots of ways to give legal effect to that belief.
12.03.2026 16:31
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Of course, much of this was taken out of the governorβs hands by Colorado voters in 2018 when they passed a slavery and involuntary servitude ban without an Except Clause.
My point is that Polis is leaving the creation of a state free of involuntary servitude to the courts, but he doesnβt have to.
12.03.2026 16:31
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And in Colorado, the threat of, and potential deterrent effect of, damages seems particularly acute because it is one of the few states that abolished qualified immunity as a matter of state law.
12.03.2026 16:31
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A skeptic might wonder why any of this would make a difference.
My answer to that is simple: civil rights damages.
If incarcerated people have Thirteenth Amendment rights, or similar rights as a matter of state law, then both federal and state actions provide damages.
12.03.2026 16:31
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Likewise, prosecutorsβ offices could make clear that the punishment of involuntary servitude is not one that they seek.
And in the case of plea bargains, they and defense attorneys could negotiate that the punishment of servitude is explicitly excluded as part of the bargain.
12.03.2026 16:31
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The Colorado Department of Corrections could promulgate a regulation that does what Iβve just described: clarifies that incarcerated people retain their constitutional right to be free of involuntary servitude, and adopt the federal laws that protect against servitude.
12.03.2026 16:31
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So Polis could help to draft and pass legislation that says, in effect, that incarcerated people in Colorado *do* have their full Thirteenth Amendment rights, contra what federal courts have assumed.
What else might he push? Regulation and prosecutorial practice.
12.03.2026 16:31
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If incarcerated people had the full suite of Thirteenth Amendment rights that the rest of us do, it would undermine the level of control prison administrators purport to need to control them.
Even giving prisoners the well recognized right to quit would significantly enhance prisoner labor power.
12.03.2026 16:31
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Tellingly, no jurisdiction that Iβve found does this. They almost all just stay quiet on the question and then have some other, separate regulations about prison labor.
And Iβll give you my guess as to why things work this way:
12.03.2026 16:31
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But letβs assume that Polis doesnβt want to rely on that exception. Good!
Hereβs how to make sure Colorado doesnβt take advantage of that carve out.
The broadest way would be by statute. Make explicit that Colorado does not include in its criminal punishments slavery or involuntary servitude.
12.03.2026 16:31
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First, the problem with Polisβs claim is the federal courts. For decades now, they have pretty uniformly and bluntly said that prisoners can be forced to work because they fall into the Thirteenth Amendmentβs exception for punishment of a crime.
12.03.2026 16:31
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Governor Polis defends against this case by saying that the work incarcerated people do in the state isnβt involuntary servitude.
If heβor other politicians, prosecutors, or administratorsβbelieves that, Iβm happy to explain to them how they can put their money where their mouth is. π§΅
12.03.2026 16:31
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Glad to see this case continuing to move forward.
Over 100 years after the Thirteenth Amendment, voters are choosing to end slavery and involuntary servitude without exception. Judges and legislators shouldnβt undermine that choice.
12.03.2026 05:38
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Lil Jon will be so disappointed.
10.03.2026 19:26
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Yep. Youβre going to say βfuck tha policeβ one day and a month later you wonβt be able to get through TSA.
08.03.2026 18:27
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BREAKING: U.S. Customs and Border Protection detained three U.S. citizens and three Green Card holders, including an Evanston resident, at O'Hare Thrusday afternoon
At least one, an Evanston woman, is currently being held at Broadview's ICE facility, her sister told me
07.03.2026 02:41
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Good try.
Too bad he had Isiah Thomas and Barack Obama come up right after him and let him know we donβt care about no time right now.
06.03.2026 20:06
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Was thrilled to be asked to contribute to this issue. I talk about some interesting parts of the history of slavery and continuing fights to end its modern incarnations, but the thesis of the piece is simple:
In this moment, stand up and fight back. Itβs worth it, and you wonβt be standing alone.
05.03.2026 21:05
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Professors @sonofdavid.bsky.social and @jocelynsimonson.bsky.social encourage scholars to look to bottom-up sources of knowledge for a richer understanding of the relationships between law, politics, economics, and the material world.
03.03.2026 01:31
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Functionally, yeah probably.
Doctrinally, Iβve been convinced for a couple years that their end goal is to make every type of race-conscious policymaking unconstitutional.
In practice, that means⦠yeah, what you said.
03.03.2026 00:46
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Iβm guessing Alito calling the remedy of a race-conscious redrawn district to prevent dilution of minority votes βunadorned racial discriminationβ is a preview of what weβre about to see in the VRA case.
Would also explain the weird procedural reach. Theyβre just jumping the gun by a few weeks.
02.03.2026 23:45
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Every time I repost it, it's because I've seen posts that can lead to jail time.
Every single time I post it, someone comes out and is like 'FUCK YEAH MAKE THOSE POSTS'
And I think what a fucking wanker, to have *shitposting* being the hill to die on, not actual doing anything, just SHITPOSTING
π€ͺ
28.02.2026 19:37
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βHow many of these gentle people have I helped to kill just by paying my taxes?" June Jordan, 1984
28.02.2026 14:21
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Dayum. Just heard a minister say, as perhaps only Black ministers can, βWe will fight until hell freezes over, and then we will fight on the ice.β
Iβm stealing that!!
21.02.2026 15:46
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Held: IEEPA does not authorize the President to impose tariffs. The
judgment in No. 24β1287 is vacated, and the case is remanded with
instructions to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction; the judgment in No. 25β
250 is affirmed.
Supreme Court: IEEPA does not authorize the president to impose tariffs.
www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/25p...
20.02.2026 15:07
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As much as self-promotion still feels incredibly awkward, I talk about this at length in Structural Abolition Constitutionalism, which Iβm happy to send a draft of to whoever might like to check it out.
18.02.2026 19:35
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What Toobin is searching for is abolition constitutionalism (or something abolition constitutionalism adjacent). There are a bunch of liberal/Left scholars theorizing it, or theorizing methods related to it (like The Originalism Trap). And both Sotomayor and Jackson have already used its methods.
18.02.2026 19:35
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Thatβs an Ohio thing. I got the same requirement while I was there.
14.02.2026 17:30
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