Kevin Maness

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The “publick danger” posed by free Blacks that rattled Monroe most, however, focused on something even more frightening than violence. Hope. Uncomfortably coexisting with the elegiac “we hold these truths” was America’s foundational belief that “God intended the African for the status of slavery.”27 That Blacks could actually be “free,” therefore, sent a strong, unwanted signal to those entrapped in human bondage.
The Second: Race and Guns in a Fatally Unequal America
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