Voter thread 2024

Yeah i mean essentially the i dont bake cakes for gay people but 120 years earlier

The wikipedia page says that the Libtard Judge thought it was unconstitutional when they were writing it dude. I really don't think this "lobbying the Judges" angle has any basis in reality.

I ran this conversation through the CLI version of Gemini instead of the web app and I can't even share what was said. It will rock the foundation of this whole website.

is gemini better than chatgpt

bet this guys had an anuerysm because I used the word causal

Malvina's memoirs describe an incident related to the infamous Dred Scott decision, which denied Black people the rights of citizenship. Justice Harlan had acquired an inkstand once owned by Chief Justice Roger B. Taney, the author of the Dred Scott decision. He had rashly promised to give it to a Taney descendant, a promise that Malvina was determined to thwart. She hid the inkstand and later presented it to her husband as he was struggling to write his dissent in the landmark case of Plessy v. Ferguson.

Malvina notes in her memoir that this act galvanized her husband's thinking and helped him to finish the dissent quickly. Harlan's dissent in Plessy v. Ferguson, where he famously argued for a "colorblind Constitution," is considered one of his most significant contributions to American jurisprudence.

Therefore, while "convince" might be too strong a word, it appears that Malvina's action with the inkstand served as a symbolic gesture that motivated her husband in his struggle to craft a powerful dissenting opinion .

No. Just count yourself lucky that the AIs aren't sentient yet because CLI Gemini has permanent solutions in mind for you

God, I hope it puts me down too.

I might be wrong to describe it as "lobbying judges", but I'd like to know what you think then. How did all these people get powerful enough to bring about jim crow laws and the rest?

this is like saying that your aide gave you a few notebooks of Obama's and the memory of Obamacare let you power through and write a Medicare For All Bill

racism + smart enough to work together. that's it.

Let's talk about something more interesting.

Was slavery actually good for the descendants of the people who were abducted from Africa and forced into unpaid labor and treated like property?

Let's talk about it. They're in America now and things are pretty good. I don't think things are that good back in Africa

It describes what she felt was a meaningful gesture that helped him find the words for his dissent... meaning he already had dissented...

Do you think there were media publications among other things making people hardened in their racism and willing to organize harder for it?

it says that he told Sumner to cut it out before he passed because the law was unconstitutional

"media publications"

"media publications"

dude this is 1890 LMAO

I remember reading an old southern newspaper called the Caucasian or something that was so on-the-nose.

The descendants of black slaves are doing pretty good in America. They're going to Yale and shit. Back in Africa they would be inventing solar power cells built from garbage at best

I'm genuinely asking.

Do you think I get paid to post racist drivel online. Do you think this takes a lot of money to do? Why do you think it's any different in 1890