This section contains 1,314 words (approx. 5 pages at 300 words per page) |
CSO and ANMA
Summary: The fight for civil rights during the sixties was a separation between to camps - liberal and conservative --reflecting the political climate during the era. Regardless of which group a family of Mexican Americans aligned themselves with, any movement towards greater civil rights improved national awareness of the deplorable conditions of race relations and was a step forward in consolidating the Latino vote.
Los Angeles was the place to find work if laboring was all you knew. Not speaking a word of English, but able to labor in the fields of California's various crops, Mexican immigrants flocked to Los Angeles. Los Angeles quickly became a Mecca for Mexicans wishing to partake of the American dream establishing themselves and creating families. The American dream, however, became just a dream as harsh unequal assessments by white Americans placed Mexican-Americans at the bottom of the social, economic, and political ladders. Whites believed that Mexican immigrants and Mexican-Americans had no place in their society: a place shared by many minorities (Del Castillo 7). Mexican immigrants and Mexican Americans in Los Angeles were at a great disadvantage despite their great numbers. No representation existed for the minorities.
During the tumultuous sixties and seventies, civil rights and especially the rights of minorities came into sharp focus in the...
This section contains 1,314 words (approx. 5 pages at 300 words per page) |