Political Significance Of Race Essay

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A hierarchy began to develop in America as soon as the first American colony was established. This hierarchy, developed by whites to justify their actions, divided humans into different groups depending on factors of skin color, and different cultural norms, and has always positioned Whites on top and Blacks on bottom. All other racial groups began to fall into intermediate positions as their populations became more prominent. In the US the most prominent racial divide is not between Blacks and Nonblacks but, Whites and Nonwhites. This is seen in the introduction of nonwhite groups to the American society; and the continued oppression of nonwhites in a white political and social atmosphere. The vast separation between whites and nonwhites can …show more content…

Starting with methods, such as, pool taxes and literacy tests, cunningly denying individuals their right to vote or convey their political voice continues in America today. Saito in the article “The Political Significance of Race” describes the effects that redistricting and gerrymandering can have on a community, by using the decennial census as a “unique opportunity to examine the relation between race and politics because the 1965 Voting Rights Act requires the recognition and protection of the political rights of ethnic and racial minorities” (120). Redistricting is the redrawing of districts, block by block supposedly to ensure each district has about the same number of people, and to guarantee that each voter has an equal political say. Redistricting can determine which political party is in power in each district by deliberately ensuring the district is drawn to include the people who support a specific party. This is called gerrymandering, the manipulation of district lines to protect or change political power. This can be used as a strategy to dilute the political voice of minority groups by conveniently drawing the lines to minimize their

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