The impossible Louisiana Literacy test given to black people in the south in order to register to vote in the 1960s.
The impossible Louisiana Literacy test given to black people in the south in order to register to vote in the 1960s
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The rest of the test:
I don't understand the first one
Just draw a circle around the 1.
This is why voting tests are a good idea and should be brought back
This is pretty easy if you arent under 50 iq,
Lets bring this shit back
MAGAidiots would fail in droves
>1. Draw a line around the number or letter of this sentence.
I doubt that it's correct to consider "1." as a part of the sentence. So the sentence itself doesn't contain any numbers. It's very confusing.
this is easy as fuck
It doesn't say "in this sentence" it says "of this sentence". Its not that hard
Can i vote now?
You failed
NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
You missed the 26 in the last one.
>Draw a line around
How can you draw a line around something? If it curves it's no longer a line.
Illiterate spotted:
dictionary.com
in number five you're supposed to circle the t in "the alphabet" since that's the first letter of "the alphabet".
of course, if you had done that, then the answer would be to circle A, since it's the first letter of the alphabet, and since you're argentinian and therefore not white, the correct interpretation of the question will always be the one that you didn't use.
>It doesn't say "in this sentence" it says "of this sentence"
Maybe I don't get it but does "of this sentence" mean "the letter or number that belongs to this sentence"? And no number apparently belongs to the sentence so it's a tricky question.
>blacks rioted and protested for years because of this
>A thin continuous mark, as that made by a pen, pencil, or brush applied to a surface.
You were saying???
It's context dependent. On its own it could refer to both itself and to the thing to which it belongs.