Jim Crow Law: Discrimination Against The Black Community

495 Words1 Page

Caitlyn Andrada Ms. Petitt English 12 March 10 2017 Discrimination Against the Black Community In 1954 many believed that with the eradication of Jim Crow Law, that racial discrimination would come to a halt, unfortunately those sixty three years without Jim Crow did not set black americans on the fast track towards equality. Black-Americans continued to be subject to violence. To say minorities still face discrimination is an understatement. People of color are subject to racial profiling, brutality, misrepresentation, bias perpetuated through mass media, as well as being denied certain rights and opportunities. The racial prejudice towards Black-Americans in the black community has started to condition black youth to harbor feelings of discrimination towards one another.. Though African Americans have gained many rights through protests, revolution, and support from other marginalized communities, racial discrimination and prejudice remain problematic aspects of American society. …show more content…

In that same year his murderers were acquitted, even though being white southerners they faced no real threat of conviction (Equal Justice Initiative)Those cases of violence, or at the time, lynchings were continued, unpunished, and socially accepted well into the 60’s. To be lynched was not just to be hung but to be beaten, shot, stabbed, sexually assaulted, or burned by members of the community. (“100 Years Of Lynchings” 1998) Though not in the same form, people of color continue to face discrimination in the form of misrepresentation, police brutality, as well as racial

Open Document