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Opinion column by John Archibald: Bryan Stevenson argues that the South lost the Civil War, but won the narrative war. And the rest of the nation, well, they just sort of let it happen, Stevenson told me in a recent interview. Sure, there was a 14th Amendment that guaranteed equal protection, and a 15th Amendment that was supposed to do the same for the right to vote, but it didn’t always work out that way. “The U.S. Supreme Court retreated from enforcing those constitutional rights, and instead prioritized state’s rights,” said Stevenson, executive director of the Equal Justice Initiative in Montgomery and best-selling author of “Just Mercy.” “And state’s rights were all about White domination of Black people,” he went on. “It was about restoring power to the oligarchs, who had lost during the Civil War, making sure that they had the mechanisms to control poor White people and Black people. And that’s been the history of the South ever since.” It has. It is. You can read it in the legitimate history books the Alabama Legislature doesn’t want your kids to see. You can see it unfold in real time in the archives of newspapers since Reconstruction. Lynchings. Bombings. Backlash to every step toward genuine equality. It’s right in front of you if you want to see. In generations of state legislatures. In the current United States Supreme Court. Even in Alabama’s 2026 elections. Every victory for equality has been met with a backlash. The Civil Rights Act, and the Voting Rights Act, were supposed to change things. Those acts were supposed to change us. But as Stevenson points out, very few Southern politicians voted for those acts. They passed because America was shocked into action after seeing what happened in Mississippi and Birmingham and Anniston and Selma. “They weren’t repentant,” Stevenson said. “They were just outnumbered.” Stevenson insists there is hope for a better world. It comes in understanding our history, and its narrative, telling the stories that affect Black and White people alike. When we really know our past, we’re more likely to pick a better future. Read more at the column linked above or in bio #alabama #civilrights #CollegeFootball #DEI #equaljusticeinitiative
Opinion column by John Archibald: Bryan Stevenson argues that the South lost the Civil War, but won the narrative war. And the rest of the nation, well, they just sort of let it happen, Stevenson told me in a recent interview. Sure, there was a 14th Amendment that guaranteed equal protection, and a 15th Amendment that was supposed to do the same for the right to vote, but it didn’t always work out that way. “The U.S. Supreme Court retreated from enforcing those constitutional rights, and instead prioritized state’s rights,” said Stevenson, executive director of the Equal Justice Initiative in Montgomery and best-selling author of “Just Mercy.” “And state’s rights were all about White domination of Black people,” he went on. “It was about restoring power to the oligarchs, who had lost during the Civil War, making sure that they had the mechanisms to control poor White people and Black people. And that’s been the history of the South ever since.” It has. It is. You can read it in the legitimate history books the Alabama Legislature doesn’t want your kids to see. You can see it unfold in real time in the archives of newspapers since Reconstruction. Lynchings. Bombings. Backlash to every step toward genuine equality. It’s right in front of you if you want to see. In generations of state legislatures. In the current United States Supreme Court. Even in Alabama’s 2026 elections. Every victory for equality has been met with a backlash. The Civil Rights Act, and the Voting Rights Act, were supposed to change things. Those acts were supposed to change us. But as Stevenson points out, very few Southern politicians voted for those acts. They passed because America was shocked into action after seeing what happened in Mississippi and Birmingham and Anniston and Selma. “They weren’t repentant,” Stevenson said. “They were just outnumbered.” Stevenson insists there is hope for a better world. It comes in understanding our history, and its narrative, telling the stories that affect Black and White people alike. When we really know our past, we’re more likely to pick a better future. Read more at the column linked above or in bio #alabama #civilrights #CollegeFootball #DEI #equaljusticeinitiative

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