
10 signposts from the U.S. race journey —
The 1964 Civil Rights Act and the 1968 Fair Housing Act: Landmark legislation that ended legalized segregation and had impact far beyond race.

10 signposts from the U.S. race journey —
The 1965 Voting Rights Act: After its passage, African-Americans flocked to the polls and reshaped the political environment.

10 signposts from the U.S. race journey —
The inner city riots of the 1960s and the rise of the Black Power Movement: Spurred white flight and helped to shift black ideology, hastening growing impatience with pace of progress.

10 signposts from the U.S. race journey —
The assassination of Martin Luther King Jr.: The murder removed a master strategist, a strong moral voice and someone who appealed to blacks and many whites, all during the advent of black militancy

10 signposts from the U.S. race journey —
The Arab oil boycott and the rise of OPEC: These ended a period of prosperity in which whites felt happy and economically safe enough for many to support some efforts aimed at helping blacks.

10 signposts from the U.S. race journey —
The Milliken decision: Supreme Court struck down a busing plan and effectively brought most cross-district school integration to a halt.

10 signposts from the U.S. race journey —
The crack epidemic and the war on drugs: Young black men were killed at soaring rates as gangs fought to control drug trade; black families crumbled as parents abandoned their children.

10 signposts from the U.S. race journey —
The OJ trial: Racial Rashomon effect -- blacks and whites looked at the same phenomena and came to diametrically opposed conclusions about the evidence, the police, the verdict and whether justice was served.

10 signposts from the U.S. race journey —
The immigration wave: The influx of immigrants from Asia and Latin America has created a new landscape, and may mean whites may be in the minority by the middle of the century

10 signposts from the U.S. race journey —
The election of Barack Obama: Showed the progress blacks have made, but race is still a factor even if some say the election means the United States no longer needs anti-discrimination measures.