If what happened to Tonya happened to a white little girl, there would be no trial of what her father did to protect her. A white man would do the same for his daughter, and he would not get punished as much as Carl Lee. If any punishment was given to a white male for protecting his own daughter, it would be seen as impossible in the South. Both of the quotes connect by showing how biased the justice system was in the past. Judges only look at one color and one side of the story. In this case, the judge makes it very difficult to have a fair trial when only believing one side of the court case. African Americans had a hard time being seen for who they really were because of all of the stereotypes that were being pressured into them. In the novel The Other Wes Moore, Wes talks about how we are expectations of what others want us to be. “We will do what others expect of us,” Wes said. “If they expect us to graduate, we will graduate. If they expect us to get a job, we will get a job. If they expect us to go to jail, then that’s where we will end up, …show more content…
Wes Moore standing his own ground while racism had a big role in the world showed what it took to look past those stereotypes for African Americans. A time similar to this is when Atticus in To Kill A Mockingbird tells his daughter Scout how she should look at an African American no different than she looks at anyone else. Atticus makes his point about racism to Scout early in the book when he says, “You never really understand a person until you consider things from his point of view...Until you climb inside of his skin and walk around in it” (Lee 30). Racism prevents truly seeing and understanding people of color as full human beings with their own perspectives and lived experiences. Black people were denied their humanity and individuality in the South throughout history. These books really point out how systemic racism can create barriers that make it harder for some people to succeed, no matter how hard they try. No matter what the truth was, the colored people would always be seen as guilty. In A Time To Kill and To Kill A Mockingbird, both the book and movie support how everyone should get a chance and be seen as the