The history of the growth of equality
for African Americans in America has been one of great accomplishments followed
by many small gains and many set backs as well.
The outlawing of slavery did not instantly make all blacks equal with
whites in America. It took many
subsequent legal actions as well as hundreds of social efforts, big and small,
to slowly make the progress we have seen today.
But even in this day and age, in a new century, there is an ongoing
battle against racism. It seems we need
leadership to guide society to true equality as much now as ever in our
history.
The abolition of slavery only began
the long hard struggle for African American culture to become a true part of
what it means to be an American. That is
because even though the legal definition of slavery had been thrown down, the
attitudes and cultural systems in place to keep the races separate and to deny
black people rights equal with whites had to be addressed one by one.
Slowly over the decades, we have seen
big changes but many came at a great cost.
From the legal granting of the right to vote to African Americans to the
civil rights movement to school desegregation, each step forward came with
resistance, great difficulty and significant sacrifice from leaders and
ordinary citizens alike to make each step toward true equality a fact.
Of all the efforts to “level the
playing field”, none has been more controversial than the Affirmative Action
program. In its beginning, it was
intended to be a supplement to the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Over time it had become clear that despite
removal of laws that enforced segregation or discrimination, there seemed to be
a natural segregation in the work place that was keeping African Americans from
getting a fair chance at jobs because of the prejudices of an employer, even if
that prejudice was not officially recognized in the company charter.
There were two significant executive
orders that made affirmative action a reality.
The first was Executive Order 10925 signed by President Kennedy on March
6, 1965 which was the first law to make mention of the phrase. This was followed by much more sweeping Civil
Rights Act which was signed into law by President Johnson. Together these laws attempted to correct by
legal means the disparity of opportunity that existed in the workplace for
people of color by instituting a system of quotas that employers had to meet to
satisfy federal affirmative action minority employment levels.
But as is often the case when the
government attempts to impose right attitudes via legislation, these laws often
created as many problems for minorities as they cured. Nevertheless as the application of the quota
systems began to become widespread, it did open many doors for African
Americans that would not have opened due to racial prejudice and silent
segregation that was keeping the African American community from reaching its
economic potential.
In truth, nobody really liked this
kind of imposed fairness system. For
whites, they felt the sting of an artificial system of judgment that was
sometimes called “reverse discrimination”.
While there was some justice that the white community got a taste for
what it felt like to loose out on opportunity due to the color of your skin, it
did not help the country in our goal of growing together to become one “color
blind” community.
Affirmative action was a mixed blessing for
the African American community. While it
did its job in the short term to opening doors that were closed due to racism,
it is not the ideal solution. That is
because it did not fulfill Dr. King’s vision of a world where a man is judged
not by the color of his skin but by the content of his character. We can hope that we will grow to that point
as a culture and look back on affirmative action as an unfortunate but
necessary provision to help us grow and mature as a truly integrated culture.
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