Monday, May 20, 2019

Lasting Effects Slavery Has Had on African American Culture

During the colonial period earlyish American settlers came up with the idea to bring African natives overseas to America and use them as slaves. The dust coat man was higher up than the inkiness man in society at the time because of the show of his skin. Americans consider this the biggest blight on our history. The shame of this period in our history still continues today for many an(prenominal) whites, but many blacks still feel angry and oppressed. With the election of our first black president, we are real showing how anything is possible here in America and that it doesnt matter what color or ethnicity you are.Sla genuinely in the end came to an end in 1865. By this time slaves were escaping and fleeing north where many people were against thrall. African American learner Michael Eric Dyson once said The effect of slavery continues to exert its brutal influence in the untold sufferings of millions of usual folk. Basically Dyson is saying that slavery has and still is c urrently effecting everyday people today specifically blacks. If you were to point through any city today I believe that the effects of slavery are very clear in housing, jobs, and schooling.The white man is still known as the high-class while the black man still struggles. Take a drive through the ghettos and projects and most of the people you will translate are minorities including African Americans. In The Ethnic Myth, Stephen Steinberg writes, ghettos are nothing less than the dishonorable eternal sleep of slavery. Many scholars blame slavery for the pathologies in the black community such as homelessness, single-parent households, and youth violence. much radical views claim, Slavery is a constant reminder of what whites in America might do. Now I wouldnt go as far as Mr. Steinberg and say that ghettos are nothing less than the shameful residue of slavery, but they do resemble, in a small way, how life was around slavery. or so argue that African heritage was passed on, through the generations as one form of rebellion against then onerousness brought by slavery. African American finis today is make up of religion, music, family and art, and it is a fact that African American culture has influenced white culture in many shipway.One of the most historical cases in African American history is Brown v. Board of Education in 1954. Basically this case is a integrating of several different cases from Kansas, South Carolina, Virginia, and Delaware. Several black children sought admission to semipublic schools that required or permitted segregation based on race. The plaintiffs alleged that segregation was unconstitutional under the Equal Protection clause of the 14th Amendment. In all but one case, a three judge federal regularise court cited Plessy v.Ferguson (an earlier well-behaved rights case that segregated races on trains) in denying relief under the disperse but meet doctrine. On appeal to the Supreme Court, the plaintiffs contended that segregated schools were not and could not be made equal and that they were therefore deprived of equal protection of the laws. This case broke the first segregation bar in African American history. The base issue of the case was that is the race-based segregation of children into separate but equal public schools constitutional? The final ruling of this case was No.The race-based segregation of children into separate but equal public schools violates the equal protection clause of the 14th amendment and is unconstitutional. This made lead way for the future black and civil rights activists such as Martin Luther fairy Jr. and Rosa parks. Slavery caused this whole debate and if we never had anyone project up for their rights, this whole world would be a mess. Martin Luther King Jr. once said religious belief is taking the first step even when you dont see the whole staircase Martin Luther King Jr. ived by what he said and looking at his life you can see that he took many blind st eps towards the dark all for civil rights. He changes society in ways only imaginable and led a life of love, peace, and protest. It cannot be disputed that slavery has affected our culture today, both black and white. Although 145 years may seem like a long time, the wounds of slavery on America are not yet healed and our country is still young and the going of time will bring change, as it historically does. We can only hope that all of us as a country work towards a future as one without oppression.

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