Racism is Here to Stay in America

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I grew up knowing my great-great grandma who was born in 1906. She would tell me about how she grew up when I was a child. She would tell me about how her family went through racism at its prime. She was the lightest member out of her family almost blending in with the whites. Therefore, she had to go to town to sell their food to the markets because it was too dangerous. She told me about hangings and murders that went unsolved, but everyone knew who did it. She taught me that my skin color had more importance than I knew at then. When she passed away, I remember holding a poem she wrote never forget who you are. I learned that the world consisted of ignorance, hatred, and no honor. In the 1960s, the Civil Rights Movement made the white society come to accept the black community. The Supreme Court has prepared laws making the minorities’ equal. These laws do not change the views of who is dominant in this country. I believe racism is here to stay because through the teachings in this world, whites are dominant and minorities are not.
Let me introduce the words that have put this country to shame. Racism means the ill will toward other races and expresses that ill will in speech or action (Zack, 2006). Prejudice means injury or damage resulting from some judgment or action of another. Stereotype means a derogatory idea about all members of the group, regardless of individual difference (Zack, 2006). These three words have existed for a long time throughout history causing mayhem within the races only leading to institutional racism. Institutional racism means formal practices and traditions in social organizations that harm some racial groups or deny them the same opportunities as other racial groups (Zack, 2006). Therefore, an e...

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...of black ancestry or nonwhite ancestry has a special kind of imperfection on mixed races (Zack, 2006). Hence, Obama lives by his black ancestry; regardless, he is seen as an imperfection of his mixed racial heritages. He takes in the aspect of ethnicity. This leads to my other reason his strong beliefs into the black culture. He has married a full African-American woman even though raised by a white woman. He celebrates his love for black history by throwing festivities. He learned his black culture and with his physical traits. He can be accepted to the community as a black president.

References
Cone, J. (1991). Introduction In Martin & Malcolm & America: Dream or a Nightmare (pp. 1-18).
Yamato, G. (n.d.). Something about the subject makes it hard to name. In Race and Racism (pp. 90-94).
Zack, N. (2006). Thinking about race. (2nd ed.). Thomson Learning, Inc.

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