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How did the Jim Crow laws fortify and perpetuate, or continue, racial discrimination in the United States?



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Jim Crow laws were laws passed in the Southern states in the US after the era of Reconstruction. These laws perpetuated racial discrimination because they resulted in segregated public facilities. For example, Jim Crow laws lead to separate schools, churches, parks, bus stops, restaurants, and movie theaters for black and white citizens.

These segregated facilities continued to promote racial discrimination, as the facilities for black American citizens were inferior to those for white citizens. This was especially true when it came to public schools.

Even though the Amendments enacted after the American Civil War signified a big step to put a halt on racial discrimination against black people (The 13th, the 14th, and the 15th), The U.S. would still have a long way to go before putting an actual stop on discrimination, because a few years later after these amendments were enacted, there were also enacted a series of laws that promoted racial segregation and discrimination in the United States, called the Jim Crow laws.

These laws prohibited African American to attend and be in certain places where White people were and required them to use separate facilities instead. Racial segregation was common in neighborhoods, restrooms, building entrances, elevators, cemeteries, amusement-park, cashier windows, churches, hospitals, jails, public schools, public park, etc. And even though these facilities were supposed to be "equal" for both races, they were never equal as the black's facilities were inferior, poor and mediocre.

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