--- Nathan Newman <nathanne at nathannewman.org> wrote:
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "andie nachgeborenen"
> <andie_nachgeborenen at yahoo.com>
> >As for legislative history, to take as analogy, we
> >know as well pretty much beyond a any doubt that
> the
> >framers of the equal protection clause did not
> >support, and i=did not intent the 14A to support,
> >integration in schools or public accomomdations.
>
> This is flat wrong.
>
> The very people who enacted the 14th Amendment also
> enacted the 1875 Civil
> Rights Act, which required the integration of public
> accomodations.
>
> They would have included schools as well, since they
> had a majority of
> House and Senate members in support, but filibusters
> by the opposition
> blocked including integration of the schools in that
> 1875 Bill.
>
> But the Radical Republicans who passed the 14th
> Amendment were quite
> radical.
>
> Unfortunately, the quite conservative Supreme Court
> gutted the
> Reconstruction laws and licensed lynchings and Jim
> Crow across the South.
>
> We'd be far better off if the Supreme Court actually
> did pay attention to
> legislative intent in passing the 14th Amendment.
>
> Corporations wouldn't be people under the law and
> Reconstruction wouldn't
> have been ended by judicial fiat.
>
> Nathan Newman
>
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