I know itâs hard to believe, but America used to be a fucked up place.
America used to be so racist that communities throughout the U.S. during the Great Migrationâyou know, the movement of Blacks from the South to other parts of the countryâwould prohibit Blacks from living there by deeming those places âWhites Only.â
Suggested Reading
Well, now that America is working on a rebrand and a collective push by white people who are tired of hearing about how racist America was and still is, lawmakers are finally looking to remove restrictive covenantsââa tool used by developers, builders and white homeowners to bar residency by Blacks, Asians and other racial and ethnic minorities.â
According to the Associated Press, the covenants reportedly became unenforceable, but any Black person will tell you that there are still places where Black people canât live. But we arenât ready for that conversation.
From AP:
David Ware, a corporate attorney, was working on a Master of Laws degree in human rights and social justice in 2019 when he first learned about such covenants. That prompted him and his father Fred, a genealogy buff who is now 95, to go through a deed for the family home from 1942, the year it was built. Both men are white.
âSure enough, there was this blatant race-based covenant â only white people can use or occupy the property,â said David Ware, who dug further and found 248 properties in the same Connecticut town of Manchester with racially restrictive covenants. The list includes many homes in his fatherâs neighborhood, which, unlike some historically restricted communities in the U.S., has become racially and ethnically diverse over the years.
Under Connecticutâs new law, which passed both chambers of the General Assembly unanimously, the unlawfulness of such covenants is codified in state statute and homeowners are allowed to file an affidavit with local clerks identifying any racially restrictive covenant on the property as unenforceable. The clerks must then record it in the land records.
âObviously, most homeowners have no idea that these covenants … actually exist and theyâre in their deeds,â Washington state Rep. Javier Valdez, a Democrat from Seattle, said during a floor speech in March, AP reports. âI think if they knew that these restrictions existed in their documents, even though theyâre not enforceable, they would want to do something about it.â
On July 25, a law took effect in Washington that tasks the University of Washington and Eastern Washington University âwith reviewing existing deeds and covenants for unlawful racial or other discriminatory restrictions and then notifying property owners and county auditors. The law also includes a process for striking and removing unlawful provisions from the record.â
AP notes that several states have introduced bills that would allow property owners to address the restrictive covenants. One bill in California would redact âany illegal and offensive exclusionary covenants in the property recordsâ as part of each sale before they reach the buyer.â
In Minnesota, a law signed in 2019 âallows residents to fill out a form seeking to clarify that the restrictive covenant is ineffective, and subsequently discharge it from the property.â
Rep. Jim Davnie, a Democrat from Minneapolis, told AP that while the language is not enforceable, new homeowners donât want âdated racist stainsâ on their homesâ titles.
Which is fine for the detractors of Critical Race Theory. Just donât talk about it, because apparently Americaâs racist history doesnât bother them; itâs the conversation about it thatâs just too much to handle.
Â
Straight From
Sign up for our free daily newsletter.