BLACK DISCRIMINATION The African American group is the ethnic group that I belong to. During the years of 1450- 1750, Africans immigrated against their will by the Europeans for the slave trade in Nor

BLACK DISCRIMINATION The African American group is the ethnic group that I belong to. During the years of 1450- 1750, Africans immigrated against their will by the Europeans for the slave trade in Nor

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BLACK DISCRIMINATION

AFRICAN AMERICAN, DISCRIMINATION, UNITED STATES

The African American group is the ethnic group that I belong to. During the years of 1450- 1750, Africans immigrated against their will by the Europeans for the slave trade in North America. Africans and their descendants endured harsh treatment, such as slavery, extreme physical and mental abuse, human exploitation, etc. When the Civil War began in 1861, African-Americans join the Union army to help fight for the civil rights for all men as stated in the Constitution. Even after all their contributions and when the war ended, African-Americans still faced prejudice and racism by not having the right to vote, prohibited from being educated, commute freely, forbidden to testify against an European-American, cannot disobey orders, or unable to leave a job without permission. Traveling alone could cause African-American to be arrested as well as sentenced to forced labor, etc. African-Americans had to suffer through segregation and the Jim Crow laws that displayed discrimination of a large magnitude against African-Americans that were just as harsh as slavery. During the era of the Jim Crow laws,

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BLACK DISCRIMINATION

AFRICAN AMERICAN, DISCRIMINATION, UNITED STATES

The African American group is the ethnic group that I belong to. During the years of 1450- 1750, Africans immigrated against their will by the Europeans for the slave trade in North America. Africans and their descendants endured harsh treatment, such as slavery, extreme physical and mental abuse, human exploitation, etc. When the Civil War began in 1861, African-Americans join the Union army to help fight for the civil rights for all men as stated in the Constitution. Even after all their contributions and when the war ended, African-Americans still faced prejudice and racism by not having the right to vote, prohibited from being educated, commute freely, forbidden to testify against an European-American, cannot disobey orders, or unable to leave a job without permission. Traveling alone could cause African-American to be arrested as well as sentenced to forced labor, etc. African-Americans had to suffer through segregation and the Jim Crow laws that displayed discrimination of a large magnitude against African-Americans that were just as harsh as slavery. During the era of the Jim Crow laws,