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Jesse Jackson Civil Rights Activist Summary

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Jesse Jackson, a Civil Right Activist, once proclaimed,"Racism as a form of skin worship, and as a sickness and a pathological anxiety for America, is so great, until the poor whites -- rather than fighting for jobs or education -- fight to remain pink and fight to remain white. And therefore they cannot see an alliance with people that they feel to be inherently inferior." In other words, Jesse Jackson is saying that racism is a sickness that is affecting many people. People want their race to be superior over others, and rather than using their time for jobs and an education, they want to make sure their race is ruling. Because of this, they can't see that the opposite race is coming together and will rise against those who are prejudice. …show more content…

The Jim Crow Laws were a series of rigid anti-black laws throughout the southern states. These laws follow a belief that whites were superior to blacks (Jim Crow Museum: Origins of Jim Crow 1). Jim Crow was rooted from an African American culture song and made sure that blacks used different schools, prisons, transportation, telephones, housing, bathrooms, and even games. Whites and blacks were never allowed to marry and black were not allowed to vote (American Historama 1). Many states could impose legal punishment if a person with a different race were to consort with a white (Jim Crow Laws 1). To constantly remind blacks that they were not welcome, signs were placed almost every with a similar meaning, “stay in your place” (American History 1). According to Civil Rights - Jim Crow Laws, these are some examples, “Alabama - All passenger stations shall have separate waiting rooms and separate ticket windows for the white and colored races,” and “Georgia - The officer in charge shall not bury any colored persons upon the ground set apart for the burial of white persons.” Because blacks were being mistreated, they started to travel to find a better life, known as the American Great Migration (Boundless 1). The Jim Crow Laws show how maltreated the blacks were. To conclude, The Jim Crow Laws affected the lives of many

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