Jim Crow Laws
Introduction: This paper is designed to give an opinion about how I feel about the Jim Crow Laws and how they affected America but I have decided that giving facts of the case and then expressing my opinion is the best way to go about this. A. How does it affect society today? B. How do the effects still show today? B. How does this case affect students today? Conclusion: Thanks too the Jim Crow Laws this can all be achieved. Now people are united, segregation has ended blacks and whites can live hand-in-hand daily. Also people, have the right to do as they wish, as long as it is within a reasonable stature. Society is finally maturing toward togetherness. This paper is designed to give an opinion about how I feel about the Jim Crow Laws and how they affected America. I have decided that giving facts of the case and then expressing my opinion is the best way to go about this. I will express facts, opinions; and try not to offend anyone. After the Civil War, most Southern states passed the anti-African American legislation. The Jim Crow Laws legalized seg
Society today has well adjusted to the idea of segregation, although there are still minor mishaps with racial problems, things are usually amazingly peaceful considering only 47 years ago there was a law that was passed which ended segregation. The small racial disputes that occur today are just the after affects of society those short years ago. After time progresses things will become easier and problems with racism will fade. They will always exist but not to the degree they did in the 50's. Hopefully one day racism will be a word that is heard only in a history paper, racial slurs will be a thing of the past, and people will live in peace. Until that day comes, people have to live with people, their attitudes, and hope that the people you interact with on a daily basis aren't prejudice, liars, or thieves. The case of Plessy vs. Ferguson ruled that "separate" facility for blacks and whites were constitutional as long as they were "equal." The "separate but equal" doctrine was quickly extended to cover many areas of public life, such as: restaurants, theaters, restrooms, and public schools. In the Brown v. Board of Education decision, the "separate but equal" doctrine was repealed. The Supreme Court, ruled on a unanimous dec
Some common words found in the essay are:
Abraham Lincoln, Crow Laws, Supreme Court, African Americans, Board Education, II Segregation, crow laws, jim crow laws, Jim Crow, Outline Introduction, jim crow, War Southern, blacks whites, separate equal, Brick Road, segregation blacks whites, segregation blacks, blacks whites live, opinion feel, hand-in-hand daily, daily people, people wish, whites live hand-in-hand, wish reasonable, live hand-in-hand daily,
Approximate Word count = 835
Approximate Pages = 3 (250 words per page double spaced)
|