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How We Got Our Antiracist Constitution

Canonizing Brown v. Board of Education in Courts and Minds

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How We Got Our Antiracist Constitution

By: Jesse Merriam
Narrated by: Larry Wayne
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About this listen

Over the past decade, several American cities have been rocked by race riots. With each passing year, a new racial agenda emerges—from police defunding to education reform to reparations—inciting more and more division and radicalization along racial lines. What started all of this? The roots of this pathology run much deeper than the recent symptoms suggest.

The civil rights revolution unleashed an assault on the US Constitution, and the sacralization of that revolution, marked by the canonization of Brown v. Board of Education (1954), has transformed our constitutional order. A system once rooted in local self-governance and natural rights now operates along new moral axes, entirely foreign to the American way of life.

The choice is increasingly obvious: Either the traditional American order, or the new civil rights regime will prevail.

©2025 Jesse Merriam (P)2025 Black Hills Audiobooks
Freedom & Security Judicial Systems Law Politics & Government
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