Same Struggle, Different Day: Folks Hit Montgomery to Fight Voter Suppression
They out here tryna take away our voice, but we ain't havin' it—Montgomery stay woke.

MONTGOMERY, Ala. — Check it, fam. They thought we was gonna sit back and let 'em run over us? Nah. Folks hopped on them buses and rolled up to Montgomery this weekend, retracin' the steps of our elders. They callin' it the 'All Roads Lead to the South' rally, but real talk, it's about fightin' back against this voter suppression BS. You know how they do—tryna silence us, make it harder to vote, the whole nine.
That Supreme Court decision? Straight up garbage. Strikin' down that Black congressional district in Louisiana? That's a slap in the face to everybody who fought for our rights. Now these states, like Alabama, tryna redraw the lines so we can't even elect who we want. It's a damn shame, man.
Keith Odom, 62, came all the way from South Carolina to be a part of this. He remember the struggle, remember what our people went through just to get the right to vote. Now he worried about his grandkids, worried they gonna grow up in a world where they ain't got no voice. Can't let that happen.
The Voting Rights Act was supposed to be the game changer, right? Supposed to protect us. But they always findin' a way to chip away at it, tryna take us back to the Jim Crow days. We gotta stay vigilant, stay woke, and keep fightin'.
Young folks like Justice Washington and Kobe Chernushin out here too, showin' solidarity. Gotta give props to the youth for keepin' the fire burnin'. They understand that this ain't just about the past, it's about the future.
They wanna take us back, but we ain't goin' nowhere. We gonna keep showin' up, keep speakin' out, and keep fightin' for our right to be heard. This ain't just a rally, it's a movement. We ain't backing down. Period.

