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Rating: Summary: rewrite government mandated racism & segregation Review: This is a very good book, but it needs more information about how government schools started the problem that Brown ended. When government began socializing schools in the late 1800's, it expanded government-mandated racism. Brown v Board of Education stopped government's massive racism imposed on everyone in government schools. The book let's the government say that its raining, after peeing on everyone's head. Even the Pledge of Allegiance (1892) was written by a bigot who was a self-proclaimed national socialist and advocated that government should operate all schools. The government forced children to attend segregated schools where they recited the Pledge using it's original straight-arm salute. The book doesn't attempt to quantify the monstrous impact of socialized schools teaching racism for so long. It is fortunate that the Constitution prevented government churches, or the same tragedy would have resulted. In addition to ending government's racism, Brown should have ended government schools. As libertarians say: The separation of school and state is as important as the separation of church and state.
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