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Supreme Court and Pornography


Though McCarthy himself was revealed to be a fraud and bully, revelations aided by the blooming technology of television, McCarthyism, or the communist witch hunt, did not end with him. The nation was forever fearful of communists in positions of governmental, academic, and media power. This experience revealed, not only, the fear the American public had for those who would challenge the existing system, but, it also, explained the fear those had for speaking their mind.
             Although the 1950's were overwhelmingly conservative, the decade was not without change, especially in the field of race relations. The Civil Rights movement, encouraged by the goals of WWII, which sought to destroy the racist policies of Nazi Germany, came to prominence during Eisenhower's administration and made tremendous strides toward equality. In 1954, the US Supreme Court, led by Chief Justice Earl Warren, ruled in the case of Brown v. Board of education of Topeka Kansas, that, contrary to a former decision of the court (Plessy v. Ferguson, 1896), segregation was "inherently unequal". Although the court ruled in strong language, it did not do so in terms of enforcement, and President Eisenhower, a Texan, was weary to use his power to do so. As a result, responsibility fell upon the black and northern white youths to effect a real change. They did so by following Martin Luther King's philosophy of passive, non-violent, civil disobedience. This resulted in countless sit-ins and other demonstrations, such as the Montgomery Bus Boycott, where the segregationist "Jim Crow" laws of the South were challenged and largely overturned. Despite this radical change in regard to race relations few other changes in the structure of American society occurred. This is perhaps, no more clear, than in the strict roles followed within the American family.
             The "Nuclear Family", as it was known, consisted of a working father, a homemaking mother, and their 2.


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