- 
But even after African Americans begin 
 to be a part of the political process,
 
- 
the state legislators of the south 
 passed more and more and more
 
- 
restrictive measures which 
 were effectively designed
 
- 
to criminalize Black life. 
- 
To make it impossible for any 
 African American man
 
- 
who didn't live under the explicit
 protection of some white landowner
 
- 
to not be in violation of 
 some law at almost all times.
 
- 
And the kinds of things we're talking
 about are absurd to modern ears
 
- 
but it was a crime in the south for a 
 farm worker to walk beside a railroad.
 
- 
It was a crime in the south to speak
 loudly in the company of white women.
 
- 
It was a crime to sell the products 
 of your farm after dark
 
- 
almost anywhere in the south. 
- 
There were reasons, there were sort of
 odd logics behind almost all of these
 
- 
almost all of these laws and
 none of them said that they
 
- 
applied excursively to African Americans
 but overwhelmingly they were
 
- 
only ever enforced against 
 African Americans because
 
- 
the explicit intent, and when I say
 the intent was explicit, it was.
 
- 
In the constitutional convention 
 of Alabama in 1901 when
 
- 
a new constitution was passed
 which effectively ended all Black
 
- 
participation in political life 
 and public life in Alabama,
 
- 
the discussions around the drafting
 of these laws were very open
 
- 
about the intention of to make it
 impossible for Black men
 
- 
to participate in mainstream 
 America life in any meaningful way.
 
- 
But the most powerful,
 the most damaging
 
- 
of all of these laws were 
 the vagrancy statutes
 
- 
where in every southern state, 
 it became a crime, or you became
 
- 
a criminal if you could not prove at any 
 given moment that you were employed.
 
- 
What white southerners then discovered 
 was that this was also an extraordinarily
 
- 
effective way of intimidating 
 African Americans away from
 
- 
the new civil rights they'd obtained
 as a result of the 13th amendment
 
- 
and the end of the Civil War. 
- 
These laws passed to force them 
 back into labor also intimidated them
 
- 
away from the political process
 or could be used to intimidate them
 
- 
away from the political process. 
- 
And so by the end of the 19th century,
 on the basis of these two strategies
 
- 
of white southerners, enormous populations
 of African Americans had been returned to
 
- 
a state of de facto slavery and 
 had been effectively pushed
 
- 
completely, entirely out of the 
 political process and they
 
- 
would not return for six decades.