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Why Do We Violate Jim Crow Laws

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Jim Crow was a racial caste system that operated mostly in southern states. These laws were more than any anti-black laws, it was the way of living. Jim Crow laws, in the U.S. ordered by Southern states. The Supreme Court ruling of 1896 in the Plessy v. Ferguson case that separated facilities for blacks and whites were legitimately encouraged by the passage of discriminatory laws that wiped out the advances made by blacks during Reconstruction. Under Jim Crow, African Americans were now considered to be a U.S citizen which means that they should have been seen as equal to those of the white race, but unfortunately African Americans were still demoted to the status of second class citizens which granted the right that whites were superior to …show more content…

If you were to violate the Jim Crow laws you would end up in jail, whereas violating the Jim Crow etiquette you will be killed. The most notorious aspects of Jim Crow violence was to be lynched. The act of lynching was a public and heartless, murder that mainly occurred in the South where the hatred for Blacks ran deepest. Most of the victims of the Lynch-Law were hung or shot, while some were burned, beaten with clubs, or mutilated. In accordance to white supremacy it has been stated that a good Negro is one who has his hat in hand and their eyes are looking at the ground while in the presence of any white man. Anything would have gotten an African American killed under the laws of Jim Crow etiquette such …show more content…

Four generations of African Americas lived through this system of isolation from the whites. The Jim Crow system emerged towards the end of the historical period called Reconstruction; a time when Congress had authorized laws intended to order relations between Southern whites and free blacks, also to bring the secessionist states back into the Union. The white southerners felt deeply threatened by increasing claims of African Americans for social equality and economic opportunity. In response, white-controlled state legislatures passed laws designed to rob blacks of their civil rights and prevent blacks from socializing with whites in public places. Majority of American states imposed segregation through "Jim Crow" laws. Many states could inflict legal punishments on people for affiliating with members of another race. The most common types of laws banned intermarriage and demanded business owners and public establishments to keep their black and white clientele divided. One main reason for the rise of Jim Crow was that African American males were granted voting rights in 1870 (15th amendment). White southerners now know that African Americans have some sort of political power and they are a little less powerless to the laws of Jim Crow. There was also an economical reason for the rise of Jim Crow, when the south succeeded from the union, the north gave them a penalty by taking away many southerner's jobs and

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