The HIGH Price of Integration: Understanding the Minds of Our Oppressors #AhmaudArbery #MichaelBrown
The HIGH Price of Integration: Understanding the Minds of Our Oppressors #AhmaudArbery #MichaelBrown
The HIGH Price of Integration: Understanding the Minds of Our Oppressors #AhmaudArbery #MichaelBrown
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In August 1939, African-American attorney Samuel Wilbert Tucker organized the Alexandria Library sit-in in Virginia (now the Alexandria Black History Museum).
In 1942, the Congress of Racial Equality sponsored sit-ins in Chicago, as they did in St. Louis in 1949 and Baltimore in 1952. The Dockum Drug Store sit-in in 1958 in Wichita, Kansas, was successful in ending segregation at every Dockum Drug Store in Kansas and a sit-in in Oklahoma City the same year led the Katz Drug Stores to end its segregation policy.
Six years had passed since the landmark Supreme Court decision Brown vs. The Board of Education declared segregation in public schools unconstitutional — separate facilities were inherently unequal, argued Chief Justice Earl Warren — but Southern states (and even some cities in the North) clung desperately to their traditions of racial exclusion. Challenging Jim Crow through the legal system was a gradual, piecemeal process, and large numbers of Americans were growing impatient.
Fifty years after the passage of the Civil Rights Act, black individuals still earn 20 percent less than their white counterparts for doing the same job, and are twice as likely to live in poverty conditions, a Vanderbilt researcher says. In her brief, “Are African Americans Living the Dream 50 Years After Passage of the Civil Rights Act?,” Murry notes improvements in regards to increased earnings in black households (up 500 percent since 1964), and the rise of black individuals to positions of power in business, politics and entertainment (notably Oprah Winfrey and Barack Obama).
Overall, however, race-based disparities in the education, employment, income, health and life expectancy stubbornly persist.
“It is clear that despite the progress made in many arenas of life, African Americans are still burdened by the legacy of slavery, segregation and discrimination,” Murry said. “In fact, it may be that the dramatic successes of a minority of blacks have made it harder for Americans to recognize the continuing disparities and injustices facing the remainder.”
African American children remain at a greater risk for problems associated with growing up in poverty, she said. “This helps explain why African Americans are disproportionately affected by chronic illnesses, such as cancer, heart disease, and diabetes, and, because of lack of access to quality health care, are more likely to die from these illnesses and diseases,” she said.
“Incarceration rates among African American males are three times higher than 50 years ago and the disparity between incarceration rates for African Americans and whites has continued to grow,” she said. “African American males are more likely to be arrested and receive longer sentences for nonviolent drug crimes than whites committing similar or more serious offenses.”
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