The Modern Struggle for Civil Rights

Chapter 16 analyzes the historical context of Civil Rights and evaluates how many have been gained or lost with time. The chapter begins by discussing the struggle for freedom amid the Civil war.  In school, young students often learn that the ‘slave South’ was the only place of true discrimination for enslaved African-Americans and that the ‘free North’ was a promise land or heaven for freed slaves. On the contrary, the ‘free North’ was not as free as many people think. Although African-Americans were free from slavery in the North, black people still were denied complete equality. suffrage for people of color and women. “In many places outside the slave South, African Americans were denied entry into certain occupations, required to post bonds guaranteeing their good behavior, denied the right to sit on juries, and occasionally threatened and harassed by mobs when they tried to vote or to petition the government.” [1]

The chapter then goes on to discuss the modern struggle for civil rights among people of color, women, and members of the LGBTQ community. It is no hidden secret that the United States government had struggled with Civil Rights from the very beginning. Today, some lack of human rights have been because of a lack of the separation between Church and State and others have been because of systematic oppression that has yet to be eradicated. For example, in regards to same-sex marriage, laws were not passed nation-wide to legalize same-sex marriage until two years ago in June of 2015. Much of the debate over same-sex marriage can be narrowed down to a struggle between the Church and State. Unofficially, the United States is a Christian country. As such the government often reflects ideals and values established in the Christian faith. Same-sex relations is condemned in the Bible, so it is no surprise that rights for same-sex couples was often denied in American society.

The lack of rights for people of color and women can often be associated with institutional and systematic discrimination. For people of color, institutional practices such as redlining and gentrification have left public schools today just as segregated today as they were in 1968 towards the end of the Civil Rights movement. [2] Practices such as redlining and gentrification have effectively segregated cities across the country. This segregation is reflected in the demographic of student in local public schools. Neighborhoods are often divided based off party lines which strongly reflect racial groups. This segregation not only divides students, but also creates a disparity in economic resources given to each school. This disparity reignites the false narrative of separate but equal; this leaves some schools extremely underfunded and unable to buy basic supplies for students while some schools are able to fund specialty programs and buy advanced technology for students.

For women, one of the most explicit results of systemic oppression is the gender wage gap. Women today make an average $10,800 less than men and earn an hourly wage of 79 cents to every man’s dollar. [3] This inequality can largely be contributed to the historic relationship between men and women. Throughout American history women have been seen as socially inferior to men; women did not have jobs outside of the home on a major scale until World War II when factories opened up jobs to women while men were away at war. Although there have been great strides toward improving Civil Rights for historically oppressed minorities and broadening the realm of rights to new and growing minorities, the government will never be able to successfully implement Civil Rights until it has fully eradicated the subliminal oppression that implicitly underlines many laws yet explicitly discriminates minorities.

  1. Greenberg, Edward S.; Page, Benjamin I.. Struggle for Democracy, The, 2014 Elections and Updates Edition (Page 497). Pearson Education. Kindle Edition.
  2. http://www.politifact.com/truth-o-meter/statements/2015/jun/25/hillary-clinton/american-schools-are-more-segregated-they-were-196/
  3. http://www.businessinsider.com/gender-wage-pay-gap-charts-2017-3

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