Library/PT 151/Sec 1/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

Shelley v. Kraemer (1948) said state courts could not enforce racially restrictive covenants—private promises in property deeds that barred people of a certain race from living there. The Court said that when a judge enforces a private agreement the court is acting like the state, so enforcing race-based covenants would violate the Constitution’s rule that people must be treated equally. But that idea could force many private agreements to follow constitutional rules whenever people want a court’s help, so other courts mostly refused to keep using it and still enforce many contracts that a law could not impose. Critics also note the Court treated the racist covenants themselves as legal, which failed to condemn their harmful content.

Logic Breakdown

Approach: Find the author's thesis in the opening and concluding remarks. The author concedes Shelley is "justly celebrated" but then immediately disputes the Court's legal reasoning: 'the stated legal rationale for the Shelley decision has nevertheless proven to be problematic.' The conclusion reinforces this critique: 'The legal rationale behind the Shelley decision thus failed to target the genuine problem...'.

Passage Stimulus

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1.

The primary purpose of the passage is to

Correct Answer
A
The passage's main purpose is to question the reasoning behind Shelley v. Kraemer. The author begins by acknowledging the decision's beneficial outcome ('is justly celebrated') but quickly states that 'the stated legal rationale for the Shelley decision has nevertheless proven to be problematic.' The middle paragraphs explain and critique the Court's 'attribution' rationale and note its troubling implications (it 'threatened to dissolve the distinction between state action... and private action') and that courts did not follow that approach. The final paragraph underscores that the Court's reasoning missed the real issue ('The legal rationale behind the Shelley decision thus failed to target the genuine problem'). Together, these elements show the passage is primarily aimed at questioning the Court's legal reasoning.
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