“HB 211 is a debt trap. It creates a population of people who are, by definition, unable to pay. And then converts that inability into a labor obligation,” Michael Ryan, a finance expert and founder of MichaelRyanMoney.com, told Newsweek. “The ‘streets to success’ framing is deliberate misdirection. No legitimate treatment program requires the patient to work off their bill under threat of incarceration."

I’m morbidly fascinated by how carefully this article avoids using the obvious term. But slavery. It’s slavery. It is a bill that would literally, legally, enslave a population (of predominantly Black men, fucking surprise) for the “crime” of being poor.

  • Mirshe@lemmy.world
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    15 days ago

    We already use a lot of incarcerated labor in “invisible” jobs. Whole industries rely on incarcerated labor.

    • sp3ctr4l@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      15 days ago

      Completely correct… that’s… the model.

      The fun little carve out in the 13th Ammendment that enables this to all work.

      So that model is now going to expand.

      My next guess would be: All the people who did PPP fraud, maxed out BNPL loans and then just refused to acknowledge collections, untill they miss a court date and end up with a default judgement by a court.

      Literal debt slaves.

      And then also everybody getting shaken out of Section 8, lotta them will end up homeless, ie are defacto criminals when a cop notices them or a karen instructs a cop to notice them.

      • KelvarCherry [They/Them]@piefed.blahaj.zone
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        14 days ago

        I agree with everything you wrote except the PPP fraud. IIRC that was all forgiven under Biden, and all the real perpetrators were businesses. They’re absolutely coming for Section 8 people and those on food stamps before the new rules kicked most off, next.

        • sp3ctr4l@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          13 days ago

          No no no, the Trump admin has been and still is absolutely cracking down on that… its so common that youtubers are making compilations of tiktokkers who very obviously abused it, and are now going to prison.

          Yeah, definitely a whole bunch of actual businesses did PPP fraud… but they tend to have enough money to at least hire a lawyer/accountant, if not bribe Trump in some way.

          The other half of that was people … just making up businesses (llcs) out of nothing, on the spot, that do nothing… or, don’t even actually exist. Or, they registered their PPP loans using friends/family’s personal or business information.

          … And fairly often, they video’d the entire thing, and the proceeds of it, on tiktok.

          What goes along better with the image of kicking deadbeat scammers and leeches to the curb than going after boisterous idiots who publicized their own crimes in hd video?