The situation of the black people in the 1960 's The situation of the black people in the 1960' s was more difficult than ever, economic problems were getting worse. Many black people live in a Jewish quarter like "Wat" in Los Angeles where there are many drug problems. The riot also became more frequent due to police brutality. Blacks are increasingly convinced that white officers are using riots as an excuse to intimidate and threaten local people. They also believe that judges are highly racist. One of the main problems is that black people can not vote unless they do IQ tests, and Caucasians can not do it.
Progress was seen in key areas. In the 1960's and 1970's, black K-12 students improved their math and English test scores. Blacks are twice as likely to acquire a university degree. In the early stages of the poverty war, black income increased and the poverty rate of blacks sharply declined from 42% to 31%. But this policy is strongly opposed to realistic and potential emergence of black's excellence. This strong reaction is as old as great society itself. During the Reagan era, harmful court decisions and legislation played a role in promoting the progress of black people. Schools are currently divided by race, but they are also divided by income. Higher education has become unreachable due to the exhaustion of aid and the surge of black student debts. Investment in the low income group has never been an important priority of the nation because it has been stable (or stagnant) over decades
By the late 1960s racial discrimination and exploitation in housing, education, and employment expanded black poverty and exhausted their economic vitality. But the state elected to fund the creation of the prison industrial park, not investing in public goods and private goods to revive the surplus school and the poor employment market. In doing so, the legislators built a network of big racially biased prisons, courts and law enforcement agencies, and 50 years later these networks robbed millions of black lives and freedoms.
Blacks are destroying their own history. From 1920 to 1950, blacks lost 19 million acres of land. Furthermore, in the 1960s, 40% of blacks own their own businesses, and today less than 7% of blacks own their own businesses. What has changed? Perhaps the government's aid will be the greatest excuse; but I know the rules of the game, what has not changed. Therefore, as long as the black people do not learn to comply with the rules of the game, the distance of wealth continues to expand, the situation of blacks does not change. While the pure nature of their socio-economic situation is a group of people destined to live like beggars, they are present as criminals unless they break through now. .. .. They can hang up and they pass by.