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editor   Sylvia Cochran
BellaOnline's Civil Rights Editor
 

Jim Crow Laws Then and Now

Jim Crow laws are a dirty episode in American politics that bears remembering for the fact that a repetition will be inevitable otherwise. Conceived in the South in 1876 and in effect for almost 90 years, they embraced a “separate but equal” form of treatment for African Americans and Caucasian Americans.

The most obvious and well remembered expressions of this travesty were establishments with two different water fountains – one for black patrons and one for the white customers – and also the establishment of black versus white schools, houses of worship, and hospital wards – to name but a few examples.

At this point in time Jim Crow laws have been abolished and with the landmark court case of Brown v. Board of Education, the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the inception of the Voting Rights Act, it would appear on the surface that progress has finally managed to blow the soothing sand of time over the egregious wrongdoing that plagued this great nation for so long.

For reasons which may yet elude rational explanation, the very fact that discrimination has been sought to become eradicated appears to have led to different forms of voluntary Jim Crow-esque segregation:
The hang-up with still treating Americans as separate but equal when it suits a special interest group but ferociously equal only when it does not is stunning. Does it spell a gradual return to Jim Crow philosophy?

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