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Leaving aside why you think that the statement, "blatant, intentional racial discrimination is wrong" is "belittling", I said three things in response to your query:
You never engaged with #3 at all. Your only response to #2 was to claim that in this particular instance, on this particular street, the rationalization supposedly turned out to be well-founded, but you in no way addressed whether my argument is valid in general. As for #1, I was stating the current broad societal consensus that "blatant, intentional racial discrimination" is wrong. That doesn’t mean that you or anyone has to agree with it, nor that it is correct. But you haven't attempted to refute it, nor even claimed that you disagree with it. All you have done is avoid the issue by claiming that it is a "non-response."
Hence, it seems to me that you are the one who is engaging in little effort.
no, what was belittling was providing zero explanation or support and simply asserting the other user "didn't have a leg to stand on" with respect to a specific policy decision
which was why I asked for one and provided the results of the decision and its effects which you implicitly denied or at least heavily downplayed
the Shelley house on Labadue street isn't an example on a particular street, but the entire square miles area which had engaged in these sorts of explicitly racist covenants, which is discussed in the decision itself and makes up part of the rationale for the feds banning state governments enforcing such private contracts, and which is why I asked if you had ever been to the area
I didn't say he "didn't have a leg to stand on." I said "you probably don't have much cause to be angry."
I don’t understand your reference to the rationale. The rationale is that there is a seller who wants to sell to a black buyer, and would have done so " but for the active intervention of the state courts, supported by the full panoply of state power", and that therefore the enforcement of the contract was state action which brought it under the prohibition of the Equal Protection Clause.
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