Adam Shields

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The Intelligencer’s argument—that race-based regulations protected city residents from undesirable immigrants—was grounded in the concept of police powers. The core idea, widely accepted at the time, was that local government’s responsibility to secure public peace and good order was more important than its obligation to protect the fundamental rights of individuals, particularly those who were not propertied white men.
Until Justice Be Done: America's First Civil Rights Movement, from the Revolution to Reconstruction
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