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Ask AI (Kagi):

When did people get changed to persons in US constitutions?

Quick AnswerQuick Answer

The United States Constitution has consistently used the term "People" since its inception in 1789, beginning with the Preamble's declaration, "We the People". The term "persons" also appears in the original text, for example, in discussions regarding representation that included "three-fifths of 'all other persons,' a euphemism for slaves".

There is no record of a change from the term "people" to "persons" in the U.S. Constitution. However, the Fourteenth Amendment uses the term "persons" in its definition of citizenship, stating that all "persons" born or naturalized in the United States are citizens

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101 sats \ 4 replies \ @Lux 11 May

I forbid everyone to study the meaning of the word person.
It's dangerous to our democracy and against the interests of our comp.. khm our great nation

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if you do not write that on a piece of a napkin it doesn't have any authority as a law.

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1 sat \ 2 replies \ @Lux 11 May -11 sats

If you repeat it enough times it's mandatory