While reading the "Separated Past: Growing in Separated South" page, the author details the details of his life at Wade Village. Several things are watching in the process of this book, but McLaughlin can tell the story of his past and hear little about reading what I can say. But sometimes he was brought up to treat the "black man" who faded. McLaughlin is also very respected, and from time to time he seems to envy some of the blacks he contacted.
In the 1950s, Melton A. McLaughlin's small hometown greeted past in Wade, North Carolina. This is a detailed story of his childhood story in the southern countryside, racist everyday life era. McLaughlin believes that racial discrimination will not be challenged in the southern countryside. Because of the personal experience I had to face when he grew up in the southern countryside I thought this argument was effective, and he explained this in detail. When McLoughlin grew, he knew that the treatment of Caucasian is very different from the treatment of Negro, and he did not think about anything. Although blacks and whites were asked to work together in the village, he noticed that everyone played a different role based on their ethnicity. Some of these roles are that blacks always enter from the back door of the house, opening the doors for white people, washing clothes for white people, and taking care of all white work. usually
In his novel "Independent Marauder" McLaughlin remembered his memory and interaction with his early black community and he grew up as a white man. This book explains the reality of apartheid in the USA by showing true discrimination and ethnic separation in Wade Town of the 1950s. The first person who truly influenced the narrator's racial interpretation was Bobo, a longtime friend. - All men should be considered equal. However, there are people who think that they are superior to others. In the past 50 years, South Africans have been isolated by apartheid, a system that separates South Africans based on their skin color. The aim behind this system is to separate colored people from white people and to support the power of the White minority against many black people.
In 1949, Oklahoma University entered the African American George McLoughlin Ph.D. However, this requires that he be separated from other students, for white students and eating at different times on the table. McLaurin said these behaviors were abnormal and had an adverse effect on his academic pursuit. McLaughlin hired a national association to promote Thurgood Marshall and the National Colored People's Procedure Law Advocacy Education Fund to discuss his case, and the final case eventually was handed over to the US Supreme Court. In the opinion issued on the day of the decision with Sweet, the court stated that the behavior of the university concerning McLaughlin had an adverse effect on his learning abilities and instructed them to stop them immediately.