Sir, we can't fit the ventilator if you keep trying to talk
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Also the "common man" (i.e. white men with citizenship) explicitly did NOT have the right to vote Property qualifications for voting rights were common at the time of the Constitution, non-landowners didn't start voting in large numbers until the 1820s (Jacksonian democracy)
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NC was the last state to drop the property qualification in 1856, but the lesser qualification of having to have earned enough money to pay income tax in the past year (registration required a tax return) remained in several states until the 20th century
End of conversation
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