Across the country, especially here in Florida, police “anti-trafficking” operations and local code enforcement raids are being celebrated as “rescues.” But for the people most often targeted, especially BIPOC and migrant sex workers, these raids lead to arrest, criminal charges, family separation, and, for many, deportation. What gets framed as protection is, in practice, punishment.
International Day for the Abolition of Slavery – The Ongoing Call To End Slavery Globally
What many Americans don’t know is that the U.S. still engages in legalized slavery.
The Thirteenth Amendment abolished slavery “except as punishment for a crime,” creating a system that continues to exploit incarcerated people through forced labor, coercive working conditions, and the denial of basic human rights. That clause has shaped an entire system where incarcerated people can be forced to work for little or no pay in conditions that mirror the exploitation our country claims to have ended. This practice did not emerge accidentally. It grew directly from post–Civil War strategies designed to re-enslave Black people through convict leasing, racialized policing, and the expansion of prisons.
International Day for the Abolition of Slavery is an opportunity to examine how these systems operate today. Prison labor remains a multibillion-dollar industry. People behind bars grow food they cannot eat, fight wildfires they will never be hired to fight, manufacture goods they cannot afford, and perform the labor that keeps state institutions running without basic protections. Refusal to work can lead to solitary confinement, loss of visitation, and the removal of essential supports. Calling this anything other than slavery obscures the truth.
Abolitionist movements have spent decades documenting how forced labor in prisons deepens racial and economic inequality. They remind us that ending slavery requires transforming the structures that rely on punishment, exploitation, and control. Real safety grows from access to housing, healthcare, education, disability support, and community care. When people have what they need, systems built on coercion lose their power.
International Day for the Abolition of Slavery is not just about the past. It is a reminder that freedom remains an unfinished project.
Further Reading
“American Slavery, Reinvented” The Atlantic
“Captive Labor: Exploitation of Incarcerated Workers” American Civil Liberties Union
“Prison Labor: Where ‘Dead-End’ Jobs Meet 21st Century Slavery” The Appeal
Marshall Project — Slavery tag & reporting The Marshall Project
Associated Press investigation — “Prisoners in the US are part of a hidden workforce linked to hundreds of popular food brands” AP News
“Captive Labor” series Inquest
The Sentencing Project The Sentencing Project
Intersex and Transgender Day of Remembrance
Each November, we honor both Intersex Day of Remembrance (November 8) and Transgender Day of Remembrance (November 20), which call us to remember those whose lives have been lost to gendered violence, medical abuse, and state neglect.
For intersex people, remembrance means exposing the often-invisible harms of medical gatekeeping, forced surgeries, and erasure. Intersex Day of Remembrance began as a memorial for activist Herculine Barbin, whose 19th-century diaries became a rare surviving testimony of intersex experience. Today, it reminds us that intersex people continue to face pathologization, sterilization, and institutional violence under systems that enforce binary sex and gender norms.
Transgender Day of Remembrance recognizes the disproportionate violence faced by Black and Brown trans women, migrants, and sex workers. Each year, hundreds of trans and gender-diverse people are murdered worldwide, and many more experience daily harassment, police violence, housing insecurity, and denial of healthcare. These deaths are not isolated or accidental, they are the direct result of systemic oppression, racism, misogyny, and transphobia.
This day also affirms the resilience and brilliance of trans communities, who continue to organize, create, and build networks of care despite the violence surrounding them. Gender justice cannot exist without trans and intersex liberation, and honoring their lives means working toward a world where all people can exist safely, authentically, and with autonomy over their own bodies.
Take Action
Support intersex and trans-led organizations:
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