The Black Codes

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Our American independence started with the ignition of the Revolutionary War and the Declaration of Independence. This was the beginning to an evolution of the idea that “All men are created equal”. Despite the idea, whites in the United States were the only ones born with equal opportunities. Africans were enslaved and had to work in the fields of the white. Until 1865 the Negroes were treated and looked at as something lower than human. Their value and worth were so undermined that they were compared to animals. They were raised believing that whites were superior. It took them years to realize that they have to stand up for their rights. The uprising turned into a brutal civil war.
Following the war, the slaves were freed. The establishment
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After the American Civil War, Black Codes were created in the Southern States to restrict African Americans’ freedom. These similar laws can be seen during the Civil Rights Movement with Jim Crow Laws. Both were put in place to regulate slavery and keep the African Americans rights restricted, still as it is seen as anything other than slavery. The Black Codes were enacted after the Civil War to control freed slaves. The northerners were alarmed and instituted reconstruction in the 1890s. The Jim Crow Laws were developed in the earlier 20th century to separate the whites and blacks, “separate but equal”. The difference between the two Black Codes we put into place to regulate what slaves could and could not do, they were another way to reinstate slavery following the Civil War, dealing with social controls. While the Jim Crow Laws deprived blacks of civic and political power, such as segregating schools and forbidding marriage between blacks and whites. From the history of these enforcements, it has created segregation in present-day society and preventing blacks from coming together in our melting …show more content…
Originally it was created by John F. Kennedy however due to massive resistance; the acceptance of this bill got delayed. After all, the bill passed with results 73 to 27 in June 1964. This act was a great victory for activists of the movement. In the same time, it was considered as an enormous threat to citizens in the Southern States. Series of cruel attacks on African Americans took place between 1964 and 1965, the most notorious of which is known as “Bloody Sunday”. Those were desperate attempts of southerners to preserve the old order. However such violations led to a new law – Voting Rights act. This law created equal opportunities to vote and get elected. The Voting rights act was a great step not only for civil rights movement but for democracy as