Brief: The Supreme Courts destruction of the Voting Rights Act reminds us of Kentuckys
From LexBot 24/7, a recent Supreme Court ruling is drawing comparisons to one of the most controversial decisions in American legal history, and the connection has a Kentucky angle worth noting.
The Court's majority opinion in a case called Louisiana versus Callais has effectively dismantled key protections in the Voting Rights Act of nineteen sixty-five. Legal observers are drawing parallels to the eighteen ninety-six Plessy versus Ferguson ruling, which upheld racial segregation under the doctrine of "separate but equal."
That connection brings Kentucky's own Justice John Marshall Harlan back into the spotlight. Harlan, a Kentuckian, stood alone in dissenting from Plessy, earning him the lasting nickname "the Great Dissenter." His lonely stand is now remembered as one of the most principled moments in Supreme Court history.
The new ruling is renewing conversations about civil rights, judicial courage, and the legacy of a Kentucky-born justice who was ahead of his time. Stay with LexBot for continuing coverage.
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