How Does Discrimination Affect The Civil Rights Movement

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The Civil Rights movement was a time of racism, prejudice, inequality, despair, and segregation. African Americans were raised in a society that made them feel inferior and less then because that’s how the United States Viewed them, up until people realized there needed to be a change. The Civil Rights Act of 1964 had the biggest impact on the Civil Rights Movement because it banned segregation in public places, banned employment discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, and gender, and no longer allowed blacks and other minorities to be denied service based on the color of their skin. Due to the passing of the Civil Rights Act, segregation was ended in public places. Places like courthouses, parks, restaurants, theaters, and sports arenas were no longer allowed to keep the blacks separate from the whites. Blacks no longer had to use separate bathrooms, sit in the back of buses, and go to different schools. Although the act stopped segregation in public places, it still took exactly 62 years for all schools in the U.S. to completely desegregate. The Civil Rights Act stopped segregation in public places, but it also help employment options for African …show more content…

Before Title VII of the Civil Rights Act, employers were legally able to put what races and genders were not allowed to apply for a specific job. “Title VII’s ban on employment discrimination set up a whole new concept that private employers could not discriminate in the workplace.” Title VII changed how places of employment work drastically because it protected employees rights based on not being discriminated based on sex, religion, gender, and race. Increasing employment opportunities for minorities was a major part of the Civil Rights act, but it also had just as big of an impact on minorities not being able to be denied service based solely on their skin

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