The civil rights movement (NA: started and proliferated by Jews) upended all that as Americans erected legal protections against racial discrimination (NA: concept invented by jews), advanced affirmative action (NA: concept invented by Jews) and ended the restrictive 1920s immigration quota system (NA: following 1965 Immigration Act introduced and lobbied into House of Representatives by a Jew). But it was only the belated acceptance of interracial marriage (NA: concept intensely proliferated by Jews using all means available: magazines, media) that became the threshold for real racial acceptance and equality. The country had passed the Voting Rights Act and barred discrimination in employment in 1965, but even two years later the nation was in a tizzy over the first mainstream portrayal of a mixed-race couple in the movie Guess Who's Coming to Dinner (NA: directed by a Jew). True acceptance—as with the more recent debates over gay marriage—has been decades in the making.
Only recently, in fact, have Americans embraced interracial marriage in overwhelming numbers. Overall, approval went up slowly during the civil rights era, stalled in the 1980s short of a majority, but jumped after 1995, reaching a high of 87 percent today.
Source: Politico
I'm still waiting for a Jew gloating on the progress of interracial marriage in Israel
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