Jim Crow Laws Essay

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    The New Jim Crow Summary

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    was passed. Sadly this is not the case. Michelle Alexander’s book called, The New Jim Crow, explains how the war on drugs and mass incarceration have created the next wave of racism and slavery. Her book is very interesting. At the beginning she talks about how this new form of slavery is based on “castes”. Michelle defines the term “caste” as, “a stigmatized racial group locked into an inferior position by law and custom”. One way that this new wave of slavery holds African Americans in an inferior

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    when these subjects go head to head with the justice system they are crushed by racial stratified laws. Alexander describes racial stratifies laws similar to a “racial caste system”. She uses the term to describe a group of people who are racially locked in an inferior position by law (12). Throughout history, the United States has been

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    prison in a similar manner to how people were treated in the Jim Crow era. One example of the new Jim Crow Era is Sonya Jennings. Sonya is a felon as well as an African American mother. She was given an eight years probation after being arrested for possession of narcotics. Since Sonya is now tagged as a felon, she does not have the right to vote, she cannot receive public welfare, and she faces job discrimination (Alexander). The Jim Crow system has been planned in America today, legalizing discrimination

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    Do We Have Civil Rights?

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    Do We Have Civil Rights? I do not think we have civil rights even after 50 years of the Civil Rights Act. We have been carrying this generational target on our back. We can never seem to get rid of it. The target gets bigger with each generation. The target developed on our back in the early 1600s. The first slaves was brought to the colony of Jamestown, Virginia in 1619. The reason behind the slavery idea was to bring economic revolution to America with growing of cash crops like tobacco. Slavery

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    Americans. During the time of the civil war and reconstruction period constitutional and social developments moderately influenced a revolution. The 13th- 15th amendments influenced constitutionally. Socially, Freedmen’s Bureau, Ku Klux Klan and Jim Crow laws countervailed a revolution. Constitutional developments influenced a revolution because of 13th-15th amendments, these amendments freed all slaves, gave African Americans civil rights and the right to vote. The fight for the 13th amendment up

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    Foner defines freedom as the ability of an individual to do as he/she wishes as long as long as the actions are within the law and respect the right of others (2). Accordingly, freedom is among the rights that are anchored in American constitution to protect the civil liberties of all Americans. Today, America is regarded as a democratic country that operates within the rule of law partly because of its respect for human rights (Romano 3). However, history shows that the freedom that African Americans

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    remember everything I’ve told you” (McKissack, 2001 pg. 4). As Tricia Ann boards the green and white city bus, she confidently walks to the back of the bus and sits behind the sign labeled, colored section. Tricia Ann recalls the first time she saw the Jim

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    the inferior race towards the White Americans, and was perceived incapable of having the same rights. Therefore, African Americans went through many struggles and unfair treatment to receive equality in the educational system. To begin, there were laws and policies regarding black education. During, the pre-Civil War era only white children were allowed to receive an education. Slaves were prohibited from getting an education that would teach them how to read and write, because it was believed that

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    Baseball is referred to as “America’s Pastime.” Many people argue it is one of the hardest sports to succeed in. Out of the four major sports in the United States, hitting a 95 mile per hour fastball is a goal only few can accomplish at a professional level. With only 750 players throughout 30 Major League Baseball (MLB) teams, the odds of making it to “The Show” are highly unlikely. To make it to the big leagues as an African American player was an even harder feat to accomplish in the mid to late

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    segregation. The segregation of African Americans and white people led to the passing of the Jim Crow laws. These laws strengthened Southern segregation. The passing of the Jim Crow laws influenced the way that people acted towards one another. Overturning the Jim Crow laws with the Voting Rights’ Act of 1965 could not reverse the effects of the segregation and racist actions. The lasting effects of the Jim Crow Laws and the Voting Rights’ Act of 1965 are prevalent in today’s society. They are visible in

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