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Edited on Wed Nov-05-08 07:24 PM by Boojatta
Anyway, there are already a variety of restrictions on minors. The one-drop rule used to affect anyone having merely a single remote ancestor of "the wrong" ancestry. Similarly, a small share of ownership by minors could be a basis for imposing tight restrictions on a company.
Edited to add: I know of no case where a one-drop law was ruled unconstitutional on the grounds that the demands imposed by the law were out of proportion to the amount of ancestry. However, perhaps you could cite a case and add to my knowledge. My understanding is that the key change has been to altogether do away with discrimination based on ancestry. Of course, this has involved both nation-wide and state-level efforts. For example, there has been political activism including civil disobedience, federal law enforcement against opposition by state-level officials, appeals in court, etc.
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