Wednesday, March 18, 2026

The Alabama Solution

Slavery is alive and well in the United States of America. If you have seen the 2016 Netflix documentary 13th, which explores the history of incarceration in the U.S., then you will know what I’m talking about. Roughly 60% of those in prison are non-white (Black, Indigenous, Hispanic, Asian), while these groups make up only about 40% of the U.S. population. There are private companies running clothing manufacturing operations using what is essentially slave labour. Since that documentary came out, I don’t think anything has changed—based on the evidence presented in The Alabama Solution. In fact, if you are unfortunate enough to find yourself incarcerated in the state of Alabama, things are far worse than they were in 2016. But now, the prisoners have cellphones. The Alabama Solution tells the story of a 2022 statewide prison strike led by three individuals: Robert Earl Council, Melvin Ray, and Raoul Poole. The conditions these prisoners endure are horrendous—flooded areas, filth, rats. They are unfit for human beings. The documentary also focuses on Sandy Ray, who is seeking justice for her son, Steven Davis, who was beaten to death by a prison guard. Conditions in these prisons were (and are) so bad that the DOJ (Department of Justice) threatened to take control from the state. However, Alabama Governor Kay Ivey insisted it was an Alabama problem that required an “Alabama solution.” That “solution” was to build three giant mega-prisons, funded in part by diverting money from the education budget. This is a tough watch, but it’s an important one. It was nominated for Best Documentary at this year’s Oscars—rightfully so. Films like this shouldn't just inform, they should provoke. Because what's shown here isn't broken - it's functioning exactly as intended. And that should terrify you. Catch it streaming on Crave/HBO or rent it from Movies ’N Stuff when available.


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