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Social Harm And Discrimination In The 1960's

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The Civil Rights Movement caused a lot of social harm and discrimination in the 1960s to African Americans. The act was signed by President Lyndon Johnson on July 2nd, 1964, making it known that this will be done in Kennedy’s honor because it was the right decision. Johnson says “Let us carry forward the plans and programs of John Fitzgerald Kennedy—not because of our sorrow or sympathy, but because they are right” (Johnson Union Speech). President Kennedy was the one who gained the amount of voters and a high percentage of African American support with high expectations. Johnson was the one who outlawed discrimination and segregation in public areas on any basis of race, sex, color, and religion. He enabled public school education, public bathrooms, and voting. …show more content…

1964 was exactly sixty years ago, today there has been a change with racism and unfair hatred towards minorities. Even though this law was passed didn't mean life was totally great after that, there were still ways people were trying to find ways to get away with segregation and being prejudiced. A big group that was a part of that was the Ku Klux Klan, they were hate organizations that wanted to mentally and physically abuse African Americans at night. So although this act was passed and it caused unification with society, it still wasn't enough. During the Civil Rights Movement, regardless of the struggle to pass the Act, it brought positive outcomes but also with Black Codes and Jim Crow Laws that had brought problems and bigger opportunities for African Americans to seek growth, finding it with the Freedman Bureau having been overturned with segregation and

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