What Was The Goal To End Segregation Under “Jim Crow?”
Photo Credit:
Since Ida B. Wells ~ Black Journalist, Civil Rights Activist, Civil Rights Movement
My Story…..My Origin…..My Future Proclamation
Louisiana Parishes ~ Under the First Amendment using the American Model of religious beliefs, school choice programs echoed a new need “To Alleviate Poverty” for Blacks in the Louisiana South in a salient in the field of education policy. The State of Louisiana collected culture expert panel data to analyze the impacts of the Louisiana Scholarship Program on racial segregation both in public and private schools. So, what was the impact needed in the Louisiana Scholarship Program on Racial Segregation In Lousiana Schools that forced Parishioners to target school voucher programs for low-income minority students?
Answer: To end segregation once echoed using a highway roadmap to Reconstruct Language and reduce racial segregation spearheaded by Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. under the Civil Rights Act.
What is the real story behind this research today?
The Civil Rights Act of 1968, enacted on April 11, 1968, was the landmark of legislation in the County of the United States that provided equal housing opportunities. The law was to make it a federal crime to “by force or by the threat of force, injure, intimidate, or interfere with anyone…..because of religion, race, color, or national origin in the Acts of Legislation signed into law after the King assassination riots by President Lyndon B. Johnson. This law not remembered by most Cynical’s in the Eastern States was earmarked by the signed Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act.
Today, this law not remembered by President Baraka Obama, commonly known as the Fair Housing Act, continued to allow prohibited discrimination to exists without protecting people in Louisiana or property owners in the State of Louisiana to seek redress. What happened to the private solutions today that sparked the Basis of this Action? The empirical evidence stated it was a parental choice (which is now a Proclamation) aided under the Acts of Legislation to desegregate efforts in Louisiana. In other words, sense experience or the acquired observation and experimentation. So does this mean under the new Proclamation, more results will be published under new empirical studies and research papers for academic or peer-reviewed journals? What happened to Union, Justice, and Confidence under the State Motto surrounding the Borders of Louisiana recently announced under the new “Blue Lives Matter” Hate Crime Bill?
What Revitalized Black Language Again?
During the Reconstruction of the Negro period when enslaved African Americans were deprived of their language later reconstructively designed using Media Slave Narratives and Interviews to reduce segregation in Voting Rights suppression, practice killings not know to most States peaked landowners to alleviate poverty by selling their stage coach deeds.
Today, in the State of Louisiana Parents Day and language revitalization is a Federal Law under Title 36 U.S. C., Section 135, on the fourth Sunday in July. The Directive was a public vote recognized by the importance of parents in the lives of their children. Since the overwhelming response to “Blue Lives Matter” in the State of Louisiana likeminded supporters can share their success and input to a New Jim Crow challenge under the United Civil Rights Councils.
As an independent media company driving to know your Black Voice across America, it is my job to raise this awareness as a Fundamental right to the general public.
What is your story? What is your region? What is your mouth worth today? Who have you influenced after your Civil Rights events spearhead America?