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Not necessarily the US; most segregation policies were local or state laws, not federal. I wouldn't call oppression of black people to be "normal". It might have been common and accepted by certain groups of people but it wasn't "normal". When I was a kid in the 50's and 60's, I was taught that racism was a low-class, ignorant, unacceptable behavior. I learned this from my family, school, TV, and the movies during that time.The oppresion of African Americans was normal until the 1960's. So it doesn't surprise me. If everyone remembers, before the 60's, the US had a very firm segregation policy.
They had the right to vote long before the 1960's. Local and state poll taxes, voter literacy tests, and local intimidation prevented many of them from registering and voting. Many of the federal desegregation laws weren't being enforced at the state levels. Remember Gov. George Wallace defying the President?Giving African Americans the right to vote and all that changed things here in the US..,
Believe me, I know how it was before the 1960's. I was alive and kicking back then. During the 50's, 60's, and early 70's, I lived in the Northeast, Southwest, Southeast, and Midwest, and I knew what was happening in my country.No offense to anyone. Just trying to show how it was before the 1960's.
The marches, the riots, the strikes, the sit-ins, the Freedom buses, assassinations, the Great Society, etc., oh, yeah.
Right on!
Sorry, :topic: