Ketanji Brown Jackson reminded us all that the “vision of the Founders” so often divinized by small-government conservatives was radically modified by the Civil Rights Amendments enacted during Reconstruction. ed_kilgore writes
Edmund LaCour had the temerity to say that the 14th Amendment’s guarantee of equal protection under the lawhis state from considering racial justice when designing congressional districts as required by the Voting Rights Act of 1965. Far from providing for “color blindness” in the operations of government, Jackson countered, the members of Congress who wrote the 14th Amendment were adamant about the need for race-conscious remedies for past discrimination.
She read out a quote from the legislator who introduced the amendment, and went on to explain that the 14th Amendment was enacted to give a constitutional foundation to the Civil Rights Act of 1866 that was “designed to make people who had less opportunity and less rights equal to white citizens.”
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