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Prejudice in the early 20th century

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Prejudice in the early 20th century
Prejudice in the 1930-40’s
. A wise man, Robert Staunbach said “Discrimination is a disease.” Many people consider the 1930’s to be a terrible time of prejudice, especially to some violent extremes. Between racism, sexism, and social prejudice, discrimination levels were about the highest America has ever seen. Prejudice in the early twentieth century was a very big problem because nobody was treated likewise. Men and women, Whites and Blacks, they were all the same, but at the same time, all were different. In the fight with different types of predisposition, sadly, the majority won the battles, and even today, the war rages on.
Slavery was introduced in 1619 when the first African American Slaves were transported to the early settlement of Jamestown, Virginia. Slavery was practiced throughout the American colonies in the 17th and 18th centuries. African American slaves aided in building the economy of the new nation. The invention of the cotton gin in 1793 by Eli Whitney was first created upon the idea that the rate of slavery in America would decline, but much to his dismay, it only solidified the importance of slavery in the South’s economy. In America’s Westward expansion, along with the growing intolerance of slavery in the North, tensions started to be created and everyone’s blood started to boil, creating the start of the civil war. Even though the Union victory free the nations slaves; about four million at the time, but the legacy that it left behind continued to impact the rest of American history. From the unrestrained years of Reconstruction to the Civil rights movement around 1960.
African Americans were slaves for an extended period of time. They were beaten, tortured, and were forced to do strenuous work instead of gaining the freedom that they deserved. They weren’t paid to do the tasks that they did for the community and their owners that “bought” them. Contradictory to the freedom that they had earned through the civil war, they had to do

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