No, the primary beneficiaries of these laws are whites. One of the clearest stipulations that outlines this concept is the regulation regarding the care of children: "[n]othing in this act shall be construed as applying to nurses attending children of the other race.” This regulation creates the fiction of equality, not genuine equality itself. For, in actuality, this regulation applies only to the care of white children by Black nannies. It is a ludicrous act of conscious injustice to claim that Whites and Black are equal in any of the regulations enforced on railroad cars. “Separate but equal” is only equal for those in power, the beneficiaries of such acts, it cannot and will not uphold the Thirteenth, or Fourteenth Amendment. The equal protection clause established by the Fourteenth Amendment, becomes a continuation of the Thirteenth Amendment, in that it establishes and expands the rights of Blacks. Yet, in denying that segregation violates both the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Amendment, in that we willfully withhold the full protection of the rights guaranteed by the most fundamental document to American ideals of basic …show more content…
Thus, due to the overt evidentiary nature of inequality, it must be taken into account when considering both the effects and legality of segregation. In disregarding the effect of the lived reality of equality, the Court has violated both the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments. The Court has disregarded due process. The infringement of due process, must inherently be a violation of the