That means that people base their opinions of people on the color of their skin.
Sin is the answer to your question. We are different but not better than anyone else. It is not wrong to want to be separate from people you are different from. But you can't be in God's will and hate anyone!
The Supreme Court decided that the state governments could legally separate people of different races as long as the separate facilities were equal.
In the early 1960's people with the different skin colour (Blacks and Whites) where treated differently. They had also had to use different public facilities. For example, Blacks couldn't eat in the same restaurants, drink out of the same drinking fountains, or use the same bathrooms as Whites. Blacks were lived in ghettos while Whites were moving into richer suburban areas. Many did not have a chance to vote. Blacks and Whites usually went to separate schools. President John F. Kennedy helped change this unfairness by developing the Civil Rights Act of 1964. The Civil Rights Act of 1964 banned segregation in the US schools and public places. It also started the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.
"Separate but equal" is a legal doctrine observed in the United States from the end of Reconstruction until the famous Supreme Court case Brown v Board of Education.The doctrine came about after Reconstruction in response to the 14th Amendment's direction that states may not deny the equal protection of the laws to people in the state. Specifically concerning schools, states were permitted to segregate the races as long as they provided facilities for non-whites that were "equal" to those provided for whites.The doctrine was confirmed in the 1896 Supreme Court decision in Plessy v Ferguson, and overturned in the 1954 case Brown v Board of Education.Before and during the civil rights movement, African-Americans and whites where separated, but were supposed to have access to the same quality of facilities. Whites rationalized this was acceptable treatment that would keep them from having to interact with African-Americans, whom they saw as inferior and undesirable. In reality, the mere fact of segregation ensured African-Americans could never be seen as equal, and the lower quality of facilities and services they received both reinforced this idea and demonstrated the legal doctrine's hypocrisy.
During 1928-1948 in the US, there were laws that treated black people poorly. Black people had to use separate facilities and could not mingle with white people.
When the black and white people lived on separate sides the blacks lived on the east end and the whites lived on the the west end.
in 1998 Soon after Blacks were emancipated from slavery, every State enacted some law or another to " keep Black people in their place ". From separate public facilities, to schools, to miscegenation laws, which dictated inter-racial marriage was forbidden , there were an abundance of such laws , large and small in scope that continued to be an impediment to the progress of Blacks in Society.
That means that people base their opinions of people on the color of their skin.
segregation (or apartheid in some places)
yes. In South Africa there was an system to separate blacks from whites. they had separate areas in which they would do the same thing but one place was for blacks another for whites. e.g a tap there would be a wall separating two areas a tap for blacks a tap for whites. this was called the "apartheid" system.
The end of slavery did not automatically result in equal treatment for blacks and whites. Institutionalized racism and discrimination persisted in various forms, including segregation and Jim Crow laws, which enforced separate facilities for blacks and whites. It took many more years of struggle and activism to achieve greater equality in society.
racial segregation was a way of life back in the 1880-1900. the white people didn't want to have the same rights as black people.Segregate means to keep separate. So racial segregration is a philosophy or policy that keeps people of different races separate from each other.As late as the 1950's, some places in southern US had separate facilities for blacks(negroes) and whites. They did not share the same resturants, hotels, churches and many other things.
They seperate by social such as school, blacks an whites couldnot be in the same school.
Sin is the answer to your question. We are different but not better than anyone else. It is not wrong to want to be separate from people you are different from. But you can't be in God's will and hate anyone!
The Supreme Court decided that the state governments could legally separate people of different races as long as the separate facilities were equal.
Because this was the highest level of education for blacks. if they had more professional people graduating with degrees there would be more blacks available to serve and defend other blacks seeing that the whites often time didnt.