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The Pros And Cons Of Segregation

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Two Steps Forward, One Step Back Civil rights activist Martin Luther King Jr., defined segregation in 1963 as “a system which forever stares the segregated in the face, saying ‘you are less than. You are not equal to.’” This statement was made decades after the 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution declared that everyone was equal and nobody could be denied their privileges of life, liberty, or property. Segregation went against everything that the 14th Amendment stood for. For many years, African American students were kept apart from white students. They were forced to go to the lesser schools - dilapidated schools without new books, cafeterias, gyms, and many more basic necessities. This was up until the ruling of Brown vs. Board of Education was announced in 1954. It stated that separate but equal was no longer constitutional, and the public schools must integrate. During the decades to follow, many individuals stood up against segregation, dedicating their lives towards integrated and equal schools. Efforts to integrate schools began in the South, but slowly moved towards the North until, in 1974, courts demanded that Boston’s Public Schools integrate. Today, while there are no laws preventing students from attending any school they want to, and despite all of the efforts that have been made in the past 60 years, public schools are still widely segregated. By looking at the integration of Boston schools in 1974 and comparing it to the state of Boston’s public

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