The Digital Green Book — Reference Plates No. 1 & 2

The Architecture of Exclusion

A timeline of the laws, statutes, court rulings, and government actions that decided who could own each American revolution — 1662 to the present day.

Edition No. 1 • MMXXVI • For Free Distribution — Never Sold

Every date on this timeline is a public act — passed by a legislature, signed by an executive, ruled by a court, or printed in an agency manual. Nothing here was hidden when it happened, and nothing here is hidden now. Read in sequence, the entries show a structure repeating across four centuries: a new engine of wealth appears, and the law decides who may hold its deed. Do not take this document’s word for any of it: every entry carries a source link to the statute, ruling, agency record, or scholarship behind it — primary and reputable material you can verify yourself. The page itself works offline; the links open whenever you are connected.

How to read the marks Entries marked Gate are exclusionary instruments. Entries marked Interrupt are the counter-levers — moments the cycle was broken, proof that it can be. Entries marked Marker are context: the breakthroughs and turning points the laws responded to.
Show:
1662 – 1877

The First Enclosure

The agricultural revolution — where the American playbook was written.

1662

Partus sequitur ventrem — Virginia

Status follows the mother: the doctrine that converted human beings into a self-reproducing, inheritable capital asset.

1705

Virginia Slave Codes

Consolidated enslaved people as property and barred Black people, enslaved or free, from testifying against whites. Copied across the colonies.

1740

South Carolina anti-literacy law

Criminalized teaching enslaved people to write — the first gate on the information layer. Virginia and most Southern states expanded the model after 1831. Every later revolution has its version of this law.

GateStage 3 — EnclosureSource: Equal Justice Initiative ↗
1793

The cotton gin — and the Fugitive Slave Act, same year

The breakthrough and the tightened gate arrive together. The gin multiplied cotton output fiftyfold; federal law extended the property regime into free states.

1850

Fugitive Slave Act of 1850

Federal commissioners were paid a higher fee for ruling a person enslaved than free — a neutral adjudicator made financially interested in one outcome.

1851

California Land Act

Forced every Mexican-era land grant guaranteed by the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo (1848) through years of federal litigation. Legal costs and squatter-friendly administration transferred most Californio land within a generation — enclosure by procedure.

1857

Dred Scott v. Sandford

The Supreme Court declared Black Americans held no rights the law was bound to respect — the enclosure stated in its purest form. An 1858 ruling then barred enslaved people from receiving patents.

1862

Homestead Act

Ultimately distributed roughly 246 million acres, overwhelmingly to white families — by one estimate, up to 46 million living adults descended from its beneficiaries by 2000. Facially open; administered as the engine of one community’s middle class.

GateStage 4 — AdministrationSource: National Archives (full text) ↗
1865

Special Field Order No. 15 — granted, then revoked

Roughly 400,000 acres set aside for freedpeople in forty-acre plots; some 40,000 settled by June. President Johnson revoked it that fall and returned the land to former Confederate owners — the largest attempted Black asset transfer in U.S. history, reversed in months.

InterruptGateThe interrupt that was overturnedSource: Freedmen & Southern Society Project (order text) ↗
1865

The Thirteenth Amendment’s exception clause — and the Black Codes

Slavery abolished “except as a punishment for crime.” Vagrancy statutes and pig laws industrialized the exception into convict leasing, while the Black Codes locked in labor contracts enforceable by arrest. Rewritten race-neutral under federal pushback — with identical results.

1866

Southern Homestead Act

Nominally opened 46 million acres to freedpeople. Hostile land offices, swampland, no capital, and local violence held completed Black claims to a few thousand before repeal in 1876. Open in name, unreachable in practice.

GateStage 4 — AdministrationSource: Encyclopedia of Arkansas (CALS) ↗
1877

The Compromise of 1877

Federal troops withdrawn; Reconstruction ends. The administration of the South returns to the creditors’ neighbors.

1882 – 1932

Jim Crow’s Legal Architecture

The industrial revolution’s wealth rules, written by governments the excluded could not elect.

1882

Chinese Exclusion Act

Thirteen years after Chinese crews built the western transcontinental railroad, federal law barred their community from the country. California’s Alien Land Law (1913) then barred “aliens ineligible for citizenship” from owning farmland. Labor in; ownership barred; presence expelled.

1887

Dawes Act

Broke Native nations’ communal land into individual allotments and declared the “surplus” open to settlement — transferring roughly two-thirds of tribal land within five decades. Enclosure executed as reform.

1890

The Mississippi Plan

Poll taxes, literacy tests, and understanding clauses — the disenfranchisement toolkit. Louisiana’s 1898 grandfather clause followed: over 130,000 registered Black voters in 1896; fewer than 1,500 by 1904. Capturing the ballot captured the administration itself.

1896

Plessy v. Ferguson

Separate-but-equal constitutionalized — the legal architecture of the segregated industrial city.

1910

The Flexner Report

A private quality reform adopted as de facto accreditation closed five of America’s seven Black medical schools, throttling the Black physician pipeline for a century.

1921

Tulsa — and the ordinance after the fire

Greenwood destroyed with municipal participation; insurers denied claims under riot exclusion clauses; the city then attempted to block rebuilding through fire-code ordinance. Destruction, followed by neutral administrative obstruction of recovery.

GateStage 4 — AdministrationSource: Tulsa Historical Society & Museum ↗
1927

Buck v. Bell — and the Radio Act, same year

The Supreme Court blessed eugenic sterilization statutes administered disproportionately against Black, Latina, and Native women into the 1970s. The same year, the Radio Act nationalized spectrum under a federal licensing regime — the first era whose core asset was allocated by government list.

GateStage 3 — two theaters at onceSource: Justia — 274 U.S. 200 ↗
1929

Mexican “Repatriation” drives begin

Through 1936, between 400,000 and nearly two million people of Mexican descent removed — a large share U.S. citizens — as industrial unemployment rose. The Bracero Program (1942–64) later imported the labor back, without a path to ownership. The excluded community as a dial.

1932

The Tuskegee study begins — U.S. Public Health Service

A federal program observed Black men with syphilis for forty years, withholding penicillin after it became the standard cure. Exposed 1972; apologized for 1997.

1934 – 1968

The Neutral-Language Era

Not one racial word in the statutes; racial results to the decimal.

1934

National Housing Act — the FHA and its Underwriting Manual

The federal government invented the modern mortgage and administered it as a whites-only program: HOLC risk maps shaded Black neighborhoods red, and roughly 98% of FHA-insured loans from 1934–1962 went to white borrowers. The land-patent office of the industrial city.

GateStage 4 — AdministrationSource: Mapping Inequality (HOLC maps) ↗
1935

Social Security Act — the occupational carve-out

Excluded agricultural and domestic workers — roughly 65% of Black workers nationally. The Wagner Act, the same year, gave unions federal power without barring racial exclusion; the FLSA (1938) repeated the carve-outs.

1942

Executive Order 9066

Japanese American incarceration — roughly 120,000 people removed by executive order, with property losses never fully recovered. Government intrusion at its most explicit; the remediation act came 46 years later.

1944

The GI Bill — as administered

Drafted race-neutral; routed through local banks and VA offices at Southern chairmen’s insistence. Of the first 67,000 GI Bill mortgages in the New York/New Jersey suburbs, fewer than 100 went to nonwhite veterans. Mississippi, 1947: two of 3,200+.

1946

Hill-Burton Act

Financed the postwar hospital build-out — and carried the only explicit separate-but-equal authorization in twentieth-century federal law. Struck down in Simkins v. Moses H. Cone (1963).

1948

Shelley v. Kraemer

Racially restrictive covenants ruled judicially unenforceable — a genuine interrupt, worked around for years by FHA practice. Interrupts require enforcement, or they become paper.

InterruptPartial interruptSource: Justia — 334 U.S. 1 ↗
1949

Housing Act — “urban renewal”

Cities cleared “blighted” areas — overwhelmingly communities of color — for redevelopment. Baldwin’s arithmetic: renewal meant removal.

1956

Federal-Aid Highway Act

Routing discretion sat with state highway departments just as redlining maps had marked which neighborhoods were “blighted.” Overtown. Rondo. Tremé. Black Bottom. On the order of a million people displaced, compensated at redlined valuations. One era’s Stage 4 set the appraisal; the next era’s Stage 4 executed the taking.

1964

Civil Rights Act — then the Voting Rights Act (1965)

The ballot gate of 1890 finally dismantled by federal statute and federal enforcement — the administration recaptured, ninety years on.

1965

Medicare — the purchasing-power lever

Hospital payments conditioned on desegregation compliance. Hospitals across the South desegregated in months, achieving what a decade of litigation had not. The single most successful equity intervention in this history: public money, attached to an access condition.

1968

Fair Housing Act

The door to the suburbs opened — after three decades of federally underwritten appreciation had been distributed. The Late Door, on schedule.

1978 – 2019

The Post–Civil-Rights Gates

No statute required: licenses, capital discretion, deployment maps.

1978

FCC minority tax certificate

Created after the FCC acknowledged minorities owned fewer than 1% of broadcast stations. Minority ownership grew for seventeen years — until Congress repealed the certificate in 1995, and the 1996 Telecom Act’s consolidation priced small owners back out. Gains inside someone else’s licensing regime are revocable.

1987

Toxic Wastes and Race

The landmark study’s finding, replicated since: race — more than income — was the strongest predictor of hazardous facility siting. The energy economy’s burden side, mapped.

2013

Shelby County v. Holder

The Voting Rights Act’s preclearance formula struck down; state-level ballot rules retightened within years. The 1965 interrupt, partially re-gated.

GateInterrupt rolled backSource: Justia — 570 U.S. 529 ↗
2019

Federal testing documents face-recognition disparities

Government evaluation confirmed significantly higher error rates on darker-skinned faces — while deployment concentrated in policing and screening. Deployed on communities before deployed for them: the digital era’s signature gate.

2022 – 2026

The AI Enclosure

For the first time, the gate is visible while it is being installed.

2022

Advanced-chip export controls begin

Elaborated through the mid-2020s diffusion rules: compute allocation established as a national-security instrument — the government deciding, country by country and firm by firm, who may possess the means of AI production. The land office, staffed before most knew there was land.

2026

June — Executive order: pre-release review of frontier models

A framework under which developers provide their most capable models for government review — up to thirty days — before release to trusted partners.

GateStage 3 — EnclosureSource: Forbes, June 29, 2026 ↗
2026

June 12 — Commerce export directive on frontier models

Citing national security, all foreign-national access to the two newest frontier models suspended — forcing the developer to disable them for every customer, American ones included.

GateStage 3 — EnclosureSource: NPR, June 27, 2026 ↗
2026

June 26–27 — The trusted-partner lists

A new frontier model family launched to a small, government-vetted partner group; days later, the earlier ban partially lifted — for a named list of American companies, by letter from the Commerce Secretary. The government now decides, company by company, who operates the frontier. When the gate is a government list, the list inherits every prior exclusion — because qualification is defined in terms only past winners can meet.

Now

The open question — the fork

The Medicare precedent is live: the same power now gating models could condition access, procurement, and licensing on equity terms. Whether Stage 3 hardens into the old design or bends to the counter-lever will be decided by who is organized, credentialed, and present when the rules are drafted.

InterruptStage 2 — the window, still open
What the sequence proves Four centuries, one design: the gate changes its costume — code, covenant, map, license, list — and the discretion changes its office, but the sequence holds. It is not an accident, and it is not a conspiracy: every entry above was public the day it was issued. The pattern has depended on one thing only — the excluded discovering it a generation too late. This plate exists so that, this time, it is read in the window.

Plate I is the diagnosis. This plate is the prescription — and it holds itself to the same evidentiary standard. The historical record is not a record of helplessness: it is a record of repeated, documented wealth-building under hostile law. Sixteen million acres by 1910. Greenwood. The largest Black-owned business in America built on customers white insurers refused. A Black union beating the Pullman Company. A hospital system desegregated in months. These are not inspiration — they are case law for the fix. For every stage of the gate, history shows a proven counter-move, with names and dates attached.

How to read the clocks Moves marked Start Monday are individual and community moves executable this year, with no one’s permission. Moves marked Organizing Clock run on longer timelines and require coalition. Start where no permission is needed; build toward the rest.
1

Enter the Window in Numbers

Against Stage 2
The proof

The Chicago Defender. Robert Abbott’s paper was banned across the South — so Pullman porters carried it hand-to-hand on the trains, and it told Black Southerners, explicitly, that the industrial window was open in the North. Six million people moved between 1916 and 1970: mass window-entry, driven by owned media on a trust network.

The window is a numbers game. One founder entering does not shift the pattern; a community entering does.
The move now

Mass AI adoption while near-frontier capability is still a subscription away — taught through churches, barbershops, classrooms, and professional networks, carried on the same trust graph the Defender rode. This kit is the vehicle.

Start Monday
2

Build on What Cannot Be Gated

Against Stage 3
The proof

When white banks redlined, Maggie Lena Walker chartered St. Luke Penny Savings in 1903 — the first American woman of any race to charter a bank. North Carolina Mutual (1898) built an insurance giant on the customers white insurers refused. When the Flexner Report closed five Black medical schools, Howard and Meharry became the parallel pipeline that produced most Black physicians for half a century. Chinese hui and Caribbean susu circles moved capital entirely outside gated banking.

Excluded demand is a market — and parallel institutions turn the exclusion itself into a moat.
The move now

Open-weight models on owned hardware. Owned data. The application layer. Direct customer relationships. Assets no trusted-partner list can license, throttle, or revoke.

Start Monday
Maggie L. Walker — National Park Service ↗  
3

Defend the Deed

Against the loss that follows the win
The proof

Black America built sixteen million acres — and lost ninety percent, largely through heirs’ property, partition sales, and missing legal armor. Greenwood was built — and the attack came through insurance clauses and a fire ordinance. The 1978 broadcast gains were built — and repealed in 1995. Building was never the failure mode; undefended retention was. The fix has receipts too: the Federation of Southern Cooperatives (1967) and Fannie Lou Hamer’s Freedom Farm made retention — titles, wills, cooperative structure — the work itself, and today’s heirs’-property reform statutes trace straight back to that work.

The boring paperwork is the fortification: entities, titles, wills, IP assignments, data contracts, succession plans.
The move now

Every tool, dataset, and business built under Moves 1 and 2 gets its legal armor the same season it is built — not after it becomes worth taking.

Start Monday
4

Capture the Administration

Against Stage 4
The proof

Charles Hamilton Houston’s litigation sequence — Murray (1936), Gaines (1938), Sweatt (1950), Brown (1954) — was a twenty-year engineered campaign to retake the courts as an administrative lever. It worked. Medicare (1965) is the purchasing-power version: public money conditioned on desegregation, and a hospital system opened in months. The Voting Rights Act (1965) is the ballot version — it is how the administration of the South changed hands.

Discretion lives at the point of enforcement — so the counter-move is presence at the point of enforcement.
The move now

Get on the lists: contracting credentials, compliance posture, consortiums that split the qualification cost. Get into the rulemaking: comment periods, advisory boards. And demand the Medicare condition — equity terms attached to every public AI dollar, with statutory permanence written in.

Organizing Clock
Brown v. Board — Justia 347 U.S. 483 ↗  Voting Rights Act — National Archives ↗  
5

Organize the Chokepoint You Occupy

Against Stage 5
The proof

A. Philip Randolph and the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters. The Pullman Company had made Black men its service caste — which meant Black men occupied a chokepoint of the transportation economy. Twelve years of organizing (1925–1937) won the first contract between a Black union and a major American corporation.

The extraction position is also a leverage position.
The move now

Communities are inside the AI economy as data producers, annotators, and culture engines. Collective data licensing, creator coalitions, and annotation-labor organizing are the Brotherhood’s play, run on the training corpus.

Organizing Clock
6

Own the Narrative Channel

Against the Cover Story
The proof

The Defender again — and Victor Hugo Green’s Green Book itself: thirty years of editions (1936–1966), distributed on trust, teaching navigation of a hostile system in real time. A community with its own channel cannot be narrated out of its own history.

Whoever owns the channel decides whether the Cover Story lands.
The move now

Owned, copyable, platform-independent teaching — this document, this kit, and every edition after it.

Start Monday
The formula, in one line Enter in numbers. Build on what cannot be gated. Defend the deed the season you build it. Capture the administration. Organize the chokepoint. Own the channel. Nothing in this formula petitions at the gate, nothing waits for remediation — and every element carries a receipt. History’s honest caveat is built in at Move 3: what is won and left undefended gets taken back. Defend as you build.