There's so much investment in the idea that, if you know your rights, you'll be protected. This clearly doesn't apply to people of color.
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Sandra Bland articulated her legal entitlements as a free person in the U.S. Or, at least, what those entitlements are supposed to be.
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But knowing those rights means nothing for many people of color—and for black people in particular. Those rights can be vanished.
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The precedence for alienable rights is rooted in the Fugitive Slave Act. A person's skin color indicated the potential to suspend rights.
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For white people, these rights are just that: rights. For black people, these rights are conditional, and always subject to challenge.
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Maybe it's less about getting black people to know their rights—and more about getting everyone else to acknowledge black people have them.
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