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BootinUp

(51,566 posts)
Sat May 2, 2026, 11:07 AM Saturday

The John Crow Era

Excerpt

Enter John Roberts. In John Roberts’ rarified and insulated world, it was easy to pretend that racial discrimination had ceased to exist. After all, he had attended private a Catholic boarding school and saw no discrimination there, Nor did he see any evidence of discrimination at Harvard Law School or the Harvard Law Review, where his intelligence and education allowed him to succeed, as he assumed was his birthright.

After clerking for then Associate Justice William Rehnquist, Roberts began to work for the Reagan administration, where he was shocked to learn that Congress believed it was still necessary to enforce the ancient guarantees of the 15th Amendment. As a baby lawyer, Roberts dedicated his life to ensuring that the guarantees of the 15th Amendment would be eviscerated by declaring that race could not be considered in remedies designed to fight racial discrimination

Roberts joined the fraternity of clueless white men who were born on third base and assumed they hit a triple. Having never seen, much less experienced, discrimination of any sort, he turned the 15th Amendment on its head: Any race-based remedy was itself a violation of the prohibition against denying the right to vote on the basis of color or race.

To be clear, I am not writing as a historian; the above is laden with sarcasm and righteous anger, but see generally Brennan Center for Justice, Chief Justice Roberts’s Vendetta Against the Voting Rights Act.

Here’s my point: The anti-voting artifices of the Jim Crow era employed the fiction that voting requirements like literacy tests, poll taxes, and property ownership were race-neutral. They were not. Their intent and effect were to discriminate.

https://open.substack.com/pub/roberthubbell/p/the-john-crow-era

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The John Crow Era (Original Post) BootinUp Saturday OP
Anyone that lived in the South prior to Civil Rights knows that discrimination was the intent walkingman Saturday #1
Roberts is typical of the racist right. J_William_Ryan Saturday #2
Love the title malaise Saturday #3

walkingman

(11,097 posts)
1. Anyone that lived in the South prior to Civil Rights knows that discrimination was the intent
Sat May 2, 2026, 11:29 AM
Saturday

and it was justified with a "separate but equal" philosophy which was just a mask for the deeply engrained social belief that white people were superior.

I grew up in that era and it was real - looking back almost unbelievable poverty by minorities right in front of my eyes.

J_William_Ryan

(3,547 posts)
2. Roberts is typical of the racist right.
Sat May 2, 2026, 12:13 PM
Saturday

The wrongheaded belief that racial discrimination is a thing of the past – it is not.

And the wrongheaded belief that as a consequence, measures to counter racial discrimination are no longer needed, anachronisms of the past.

The truth is that racism, bigotry, and hate are alive and well today; the damage caused by Jim Crow, black codes, and segregation remain; and that Republicans are now free to disenfranchise voters of color for political gain is a manifestation of the racism and hate that exists today.

malaise

(297,554 posts)
3. Love the title
Sat May 2, 2026, 12:35 PM
Saturday

Here’s why
"John Crow" is the Jamaican name for the turkey vulture (Cathartes aura), a common scavenger bird. Culturally, it symbolizes death, ugliness, or evil, frequently used in Jamaican, or Patois, as an insult (e.g., "dirty John Crow&quot .

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