African Americans: Overcoming Adversity

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So many people have discriminated against African Americans. Yet they still overcome adversity. This has been going on for many decades. There are so many with what we have been doing for decades. But with most problems, there usually is a solution that can back the problem up. African Americans were not treated well by others and it was very segregated. There was so much racism and not caring for them because they had a different skin color. While it has gotten better, there are some things we can do better. African Americans are still not treated equally. For example, they used not to have the same rights and were segregated, getting their families, and what people had to go through to try to overcome this adversity. African Americans didn’t …show more content…
With a law, we may be able to do even more damage and make racism not happen and even illegal to do. “African Americans won a series of legal decisions in the 1950s that ended segregation in public institutions. The most notable of these was the 1954 Supreme Court ruling in the case of Brown v. Board of Education, which resulted in black students being legally entitled to attend schools alongside white students.” “By the midway point of the 1910s, the Southern states enforced Jim Crow laws and blacks were legally unable to dine, use parks, or attend movies alongside whites. Washroom facilities, drinking fountains, and hospital wards also were segregated.”(Gale, P3, 2019) Because it shows that schools were segregated because of how someone looks, this is super racist. Also, it shows that many people don’t accept people with open arms just because they may look different than us. “When a yellow fever epidemic claimed the lives of sixteen-year-old Ida Wells's parents, she was determined to keep her brothers and sisters together. She taught in a one-room school near Holly Springs, Mississippi. She soon moved the family to Memphis to take a teacher's examination and find a better …show more content…
It has improved for decades. It still is going on and a solution needs to be found. If we want to end racism and discrimination, the best way to end it is by passing a law against it. Idia Thurston, a person who came from a public health school, said in “Promoting anti-racism in the legal system” an application of the STYLE framework says that we can check the chart to see what stage we are at and on it, there is a legal for a law against racism that would get rid of segregation. This could be beneficial to keep everyone's rights equal. (2023) If we make a law to end racism, people won't deal with it because it's illegal. If they do, they will get punished, for example getting sentenced to jail or paying a fine that will make people not do the crime. Also, Katherine Schaeffer in “Black Americans differ from other U.S. adults over whether individual or structural racism is a bigger problem” says that over 65% say that individual racism is a big problem. (2022, Schaeffer) This means that people think it's a big problem individually. If we get a law, it will stop and people can live without