Discrimination in The New Jim Crow Essay

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    only as inferior but as less than human’” (Graff, 121). The court ruling sanctioning “separate but equal” in Plessy v. Ferguson in 1896 provided the legal groundworks for this Jim Crow system (Golash-Boza). African Americans faced barriers of racial exclusion in health, education, and housing and even today, traces of the Jim Crow era are very evident. Blacks were denied the same opportunities in health care as whites and were blamed for HIV and Aids. Furthermore, they were used as test subjects…

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    for African Americans in the United States. The Civil Rights Movement created new laws, amendments, and governmental changes to help better the lives of African Americans. However, discrimination throughout America continued through housing, mass incarceration, and zip-code profiling. The New Jim Crow is one example of how African Americans are still struggling with civil rights issues. The New Jim Crow is the discrimination in the criminal justice system of African Americans along with other…

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    I believe that African-Americans reached legal citizenship, but not fully, because of the way they were treated by white people. Black codes were laws passed in 1865 and 1866 in the former Confederate states to limit the rights and freedoms of African Americans. These terrible codes were constructed for three purposes. To limit their rights by only allowing them to marry, own property, sue in court, earn wages, and work for low skill level jobs. Southerner plantation owners wanted to get…

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    surprise you, that although the U.S is home to less than 5% of the world’s population, we have 25% of the world’s overall incarcerated population? Our country has the highest incarceration rate in the world. Michelle Alexander writes in her book, The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness, that the impact of the drug war has been astounding. In the last few decades, the U.S. population of incarcerated citizens exploded from around 300,000 to more than 2 million, with drug…

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    and the barriers that they had to overcome to simply leave this area of prosecution. The Jim Crow South was a place defined by brutal violence and inequality rivaling that of the prior years with slavery. As is evidenced by the stories of Ida Mae, George Starling, and Pershing Foster, African Americans were subjugated, and became accustomed, to lives as second class citizens throughout the entirety of the Jim Crow era. This idea of being second class citizens was…

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    the Civil Rights Movement besides World War 2. Most importantly, Blacks all over the country had been fighting for civil rights for literal decades, such as those with the NAACP. Additionally, younger Blacks had always been less willing to accept Jim Crow over generations, and those sentiments were becoming more visible in the 1950s and…

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    Among the grievances were exclusion from a hotel dining room; refusal of admission to a New York City opera; segregation to lower-quality seats in a theater; and removal from a train car set aside for white women. All of these indignities were violations of rights enumerated in the 1875 legislation. The Supreme Court analyzed these cases in view of the Fourteenth Amendment and concluded the Amendment was not designed to apply to private citizens or private organizations, but only to the federal…

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    dubbed the new Civil Rights Movement, which protests and brings awareness to police brutality against blacks and other forms of racism. Thus, this movement is inspired by the Civil Rights movement. What this movement is protesting has its roots in racism throughout history that mainly resonates from the time of Jim Crow Laws. The movement is even pointing out microaggressions which stem from America’s extremely racist past. However, white supremacism and racism, almost identical to Jim Crow…

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    Gilded Age

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    America, a new age of economic advancements and development fell upon American know as the gilded age. This time period was able to open up Americans to new innovations and a new lifestyle that followed the hardship form previous years. During the gilded age of America, the life of all American’s could be drastically changed overnight by one persons thoughts and ideas being put into place, some of the actions that affected America the most were the Dawes and homestead Acts, Jim crow Laws, and…

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    their observance of the racially discriminatory Jim Crow laws. Biracial author Thomas Chatterton Williams was raised in the suburbs of Westfield, New Jersey, where he discovered Hip-Hop culture and nearly allowed its negative influences to deter him from leading a productive life. Richard Wright developed a love for literature during his childhood and his voracious desire to read imparted in him an outlook that surpassed the limitations that the Jim Crow laws placed upon blacks Americans. Thomas…

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