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Garrett A on February 26, 2008, 10:23 AM

As much as the electoral college is a bad system, the population of African Americans in the North increased from 11% to 40% since 1920. This is called the Great Migration.

The TRUE legacy of slavery is less voting representation than the housing apartheid that was created by the FHA during the 1930s through 1960s. Today, communities are still residentially segregated due to white flight to the suburbs during the 1950s. This means worse education, public housing, and poorer black communities.

Another problem was the economic system of sharecropping that replaced slavery. Many slaves did not stop working the cotton fields until the cotton gin. So until the 1940s and 1950s they remained uneducated and poor, until forced out of work by the cotton gin spurring the later half of the Great Migration.

The true legacy of slavery is in the community. Poverty and lack of public housing and education are the most pressing problems, not just possible underrepresentation in electing a president, which between Democrat or Republican doesn't make a huge difference for the lower income black family. As Al Sharpton said, "We've been riding this Donkey [Democratic Party] for as long as it would take us."

True change will not come from electoral reform. It must start with residential integration. Both middle income whites and lower income blacks sharing the same neighborhoods, housing, and educational systems. This would insure true equal opportunities and end the system of apartheid that has existed in America since the end of slavery.

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Garrett A on February 26, 2008, 3:23 PM

As much as the electoral college is a bad system, the population of African Americans in the North increased from 11% to 40% since 1920. This is called the Great Migration.

The TRUE legacy of slavery is less voting representation than the housing apartheid that was created by the FHA during the 1930s through 1960s. Today, communities are still residentially segregated due to white flight to the suburbs during the 1950s. This means worse education, public housing, and poorer black communities.

Another problem was the economic system of sharecropping that replaced slavery. Many slaves did not stop working the cotton fields until the cotton gin. So until the 1940s and 1950s they remained uneducated and poor, until forced out of work by the cotton gin spurring the later half of the Great Migration.

The true legacy of slavery is in the community. Poverty and lack of public housing and education are the most pressing problems, not just possible underrepresentation in electing a president, which between Democrat or Republican doesn’t make a huge difference for the lower income black family. As Al Sharpton said, “We’ve been riding this Donkey [Democratic Party] for as long as it would take us.”

True change will not come from electoral reform. It must start with residential integration. Both middle income whites and lower income blacks sharing the same neighborhoods, housing, and educational systems. This would insure true equal opportunities and end the system of apartheid that has existed in America since the end of slavery.


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