• southsamurai@sh.itjust.works
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    5 months ago

    The line is when the work is about a specific crime. It’s why convicted persons can’t write a movie or book about their crime and sell it. A song would be no different.

    But you and I can write whatever kind of crime story we want. I actually do, I’m two books deep in a supernatural mystery series. If I had been convicted of anything at all, that should have no bearing on my first amendment rights, until and unless I’m trying to profit from that crime. Me writing about murder and violence is not the fullness of me as a human being.

    If this guy writes a song about shooting a pig before going back to jail, it is a song, and nothing more. He’s already open to surprise inspections of his person and property to discover if he has illegal goods, including firearms. By being a felon on parole, possession of those type of things is grounds for his parole to be revoked. While I would consider it dubious at best, should his lyrics point towards a potential plan of action, the state already has recourse to prevent bad acts.

    That recourse can be used after release of the track just as well as before, without any need to interfere in his first amendment rights, or his livelihood.

    Writing a song is not a bad act, period. One can debate if writing a bad song is a bad act, but that’s a separate subject lol.

    Tbh though, I have problems with the way parole works in general, and the imprisonment of non violent criminals as well. So I do have bias here. It doesn’t really factor in much, but it is there. As parole is supposed to function currently, this specific restriction steps outside of the intent and purpose of parole, so it isn’t just me griping about the state of the justice system as it is. This is an unusual decision on the part of the officials involved.