The Acceptance of Blacks in White America

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The Acceptance of Blacks in White America From America's birth with the signing of the Declaration of Independence there have been few movements that have affected as many people as the Civil Rights movement. In a world where blacks were always seen as inferior, any other notion or conception of blacks was highly untolerated. Since Abraham Lincoln had freed the slaves in 1886, there had been no discernable change in the state of racial affairs in America. Not until Brown v. Board of Education ruled that schools should be integrated was anything done for help the plights of blacks. Even after Brown, the South met the changes with fierce and violent resistance. When CORE started their freedom rides, the activists were brutally beaten time and again by Southern whites opposed to change in their way of life. For many whites these were welcome changes that finally address the issue of racism and civil rights for all, but for the large population in the South the government telling them what to do did not sit well at all. These feelings of unrest caused many reactions from whites and blacks alike, but for whites in America these changes would rest deeply for years to come. Blacks have struggled to gain acceptance since they first were encountered with the injustice and inequality that dwelled in our country. However, whites had so repeatedly cut them down that most blacks were so far beaten into submission that hope for a better life seemed gone. The South could not stand having the government come and interfere in their affairs, and were willing to protest the government's decisions by not protecting activists. Then with the Montgomery bus boycott, all blacks finally had a cause to rally in support for. Rosa Parks sparked the beginning of the Civil Rights movement, and there were a mass population of blacks to join in. To go along with the determined blacks there were many whites from all levels that were willing to fight for equality. But blacks would not be deterred by these acts of hate; they weren't going to sit back and take it anymore. Racism affected nearly every aspect of life in America, and activists worked very hard in the face of violent resistance to combat some of the largest issues. To begin, sit-ins inspired by the Greensboro Four "achieved impressive results.

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