12.
Defendant State of Florida Constitution of 1885 which following of the Black Codes
passed in 1866 (after the Northern reaction had become apparent), only
Florida's rivaled those of Mississippi and South Carolina in severity.
Florida's slave owners seemed to hold out hope that the institution of slavery
would simply be restored. Advised by the Florida governor and attorney general
as well as by the Freedmen's Bureau that it could not constitutionally revoke
Black people's right to bear arms, the Florida legislature refused to repeal
this part of the codes.
The Florida vagrancy law allowed for punishments of up to one year
of labor. Children whose parents were convicted of vagrancy could be hired out
as apprentices.
These laws applied to any "person of color," which was
defined as someone with at least one Negro great-grandparent, or one-eighth
black ancestry. White women could not live with men of color. Colored workers
could be punished for disrespecting White employers.
The explicit racism in the law was supplemented by racist
enforcement discretion (and other inequalities) in the practice of law
enforcement and legal systems
The Florida Constitution imposes a lifetime ban on voting by every
person with a felony conviction unless ill
The constitutional provision disenfranchising people with felony
convictions was originally enacted in the governor and his cabinet choose to
restore the individual’s right to vote.
This ban has long barred blacks from the polls at twice the rate of
other Florida citizens. Even without
counting those who are still serving criminal sentences, 13% of voting-age
blacks in Florida have lost the right to cast a ballot.
The Constitutional provision
disenfranchising people with felony convictions was originally enacted in the
aftermath of the Civil War, in 1868, as one of several tools to suppress the
votes of newly freed slaves. One hundred
years later, in 1968, the provision was re-enacted despite its history of
discrimination and its continuing racially disparate effects. Felony disenfranchisement has long been used
to diminish the voting power of Florida’s Plaintiff Negro Slaves population,
and the law continues to have that effect,
Defendant “States of Florida” Constitution which took effect clear
back to 1868 is voided and a direct legal cause of action for (145) years
forced enslavement within the Defendant States of “Florida” until Defendant
“Mississippi” free born November 8th 1961 “pro se” Negro Slave Plaintiff
(Hamilton) II in his person and each Negro Plaintiffs collectively herein on or
about until exactly legally February 7th 2013 upon which Defendant “Florida”
from the exact time frame 1788 Till “ Mississippi” free the (Negro Slaves
Plaintiff) on or about February 7th 2013 Defendant “Florida” simply for (145)
years flat out refuse to sanction, embargo, penalty, punishment, deterrent,
threatened “Defendant Mississippi” penalty for disobeying law or rule of ending
“Slavery” as required by the 1865 ratified 13th amendment …?
Defendant “States of Florida” Constitution which next took affect (103)
years later in 1968 sought to discriminate, and continue “Slavery Servitude”
for (45) more years until Mississippi free “pro se” Plaintiff (Hamilton) II in
his person and all 44.5 Million Plaintiff(s) herein
Their no need for argument
or fuss Government records are official and hidden..? by Defendant United States of America and
Co-Defendant State of Florida in 2011 to maintain usage and Superior Supremacy
of some “white magical sorts” of
“Enslavement” of 44.5 plus MILLION DNA
NEGRO RACE PLANTIFFS well beyond 1865 Civil War as Defendant “Florida” enjoyed to the fullest for the advantages of
the “Whites Only”…? to maintain their role in keeping “Florida” Negro
Plaintiff(s) herein “enslaved” since August 20th 1619 – 2013.
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