How Did Jim Crow Laws Affect The Civil Rights Movement

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Throughout human history, people have been subject to unnecessary and oftentimes unlawful prejudiced attitudes. The American Civil Rights era was no different; African Americans fought for desegregation, equality and an end to systematic racism. Three of the most powerful elements in the fight to end Jim Crow laws was the unity of the African community, the will to fight for equality and the ability to organize. With the help of Federal Government leaders such as John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson, civil rights leaders and the African American's, citizen's were able to catapult the United States into the necessary changes in equality. The 1950's post world war era was a tumultuous time for many Americans, especially so for African American men. These same men who were allowed to fight and die for the country they'd come to love, but were not afforded the opportunities to live, work and eat with the white men they fought beside. This signaled a time in which black civil rights leaders such as Malcolm X, Martin Luther King Jr, Stokley Carmichael, and the Black Panthers made their voices heard. The cumulative goal of the civil rights leaders was complete desegregation, the achievement of equality and an end to the Jim Crow Laws, not to mention unfair housing standards, voting …show more content…

The objectives were to cause dramatic public disruptions while drawing public attention to the injustices and gaining the sympathy and support of the public (Kenneth). This was achieved by sit ins, bus boycotts, and lunch counter demonstrations, to name a few. Strategies to achieve their goals ranged from education in basement churches, homes, and schools to distribute information, gather support, collectively congregate and urge their fellow African American's to join in the fight

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