Thurgood Marshall

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Today in the United States, we have an integrated public school system and Americans that are in school right now, regardless of either education level, attend school and learn with individuals with different ethnic background. However, this hasn’t always been the case. Before 1954, schools were separated, many states, especially southern states, actually had laws that required schools to have separate facilities for students that were white and for students that were black. This was during a time in our country’s history that had a very different mind set than what we have today: a mindset that saw segregation and separation as an idea that was okay. Discrimination and racism was an everyday occurrence and was a very common attitude that blinded …show more content…

At the end of the day, Thurgood Marshall was able to win his case that became famously known as, Brown v. Board of Education. A previous court case, Plessey v. Ferguson, would be overturned and the idea of separate, but equal would no longer be relevant. Essentially, Plessey v. Ferguson decided that because of the thirteenth amendment; equality through before the law could be met through separated facilities. Now, after the decision from Brown v. Board of Education, the interpretation of the fourteenth amendment now guaranteed equal protection under the law and ruled that separate facilities, that were decided upon and based off of race, were unequal. Thurgood Marshall winning this case changed our country’s history and helped define and shape what we have today in 2015. This provided a more equal opportunity for the African American people to study and become scholars, to work and join powerful and world renowned labor force, and to, overall, become successful and achieve their idea of the American …show more content…

IT’s unfortunate, really it is, but it’s just what happens with some serious change. I referred to this on a past discussion board and I still find it relevant with this situation: our culture has shifted to a mindset, and attitude, that desires and requires immediate gratification. It has been 61 years since the decision that was made with Brown v. Board of Education. Granted that is a long time, but we must consider the history and how long it really takes for something like this to change. The last time that we obtained that statistic, it was 2007, it has been eight years since we last gathered new data. I’m willing to bet that the number has dropped again. In all honesty, the key to significant change is patience and time. African Americans have come a long way in our nation’s history. The change will come, but it’s not going to happen over night. If we stay active within in the issue and have a high degree of patience as we push for change, it will take less time. But, I’ve noticed that in the past, with other issues, once we’ve gotten the change in legislation we tend to do just give up on the topic all together. I think of it like Baseball and Jackie Robinson. Jackie Robinson was an amazing baseball player. He’s in the hall of fame, not because he’s African American, but because he was an incredible second basemen and an absolute menace for pitchers to deal with when he was on

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