NYTimes: Why Did Racial Progress Stall in America?

Why Did Racial Progress Stall in America? nyti.ms/3mLsoVG

 This article discusses 2 major trends that started at the end of Reconstruction until today.   I came of age at the peak of the “we” curve and have witnessed its decline over my adult life time.
Many in my generation see the decline from “we” to “I” as  our generation’s lost opportunity.  Our youthful vision of a better fairer America has been consumed by greed and I hate.
We can only hope that future generations do better.

“It was Black Americans’ undaunted faith in the promise of the American “we,” and their willingness to claim their place in it, against all odds, that won them progress between the end of Reconstruction in the 1870s and the end of the civil rights movement in the 1970s. Collectively, these migrants and their children and grandchildren steadily narrowed the Black-white gap over those years.

Image

“Big” Lester Hankerson during a voter registration push outside the Longshoreman’s Hall, Savannah, Ga., 1963.

Credit…Fred Baldwin

In the last half-century, however, that collective progress has halted, and many who fought so hard for this progress have now lived to see it reversed. U.W. Clemon, an African-American lawyer who won a precedent-setting Alabama school desegregation case over 40 years ago — and recently took up a remarkably similar legal battle in the same county — summarized the historical arc well, saying ‘I never envisioned that I would be fighting in 2017 essentially the same battle that I thought I won in 1971.'”

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