The Story
Is the U.S. Constitution, in relation to its national minorities, a true social contract, or did it mark the consolidation of an unwritten, unspoken antisocial contract that even to this day submerges the rights of American national minorities to historic, cultural and socioeconomic recognition as founding peoples of the United States of America?Dr. Kly views the AfricanAmerican minority problem within the context of an historically evolved American problematic of white nationalism, which is used to subject American minorities to what may be called domestic colonialism. This places the American minority problem within the context of the ongoing dissolution of colonial empires, and the exercise by emergent nations of the right to self determination.
Description
Is the U.S. Constitution, in relation to its national minorities, a true social contract, or did it mark the consolidation of an unwritten, unspoken antisocial contract that even to this day submerges the rights of American national minorities to historic, cultural and socioeconomic recognition as founding peoples of the United States of America?Dr. Kly views the AfricanAmerican minority problem within the context of an historically evolved American problematic of white nationalism, which is used to subject American minorities to what may be called domestic colonialism. This places the American minority problem within the context of the ongoing dissolution of colonial empires, and the exercise by emergent nations of the right to self determination.













