Quotes of All Topics . Occasions . Authors
Segregation is not exclusion.
It's good that segregation is over.
What is our greatest enemy? Segregation.
There is no scriptural basis for segregation.
The stage is the last bastion of segregation.
Segregation is not humiliating but a benefit...
Segregation has no place in the education system.
Vouchers lead to competition, not re-segregation.
America preaches integration and practices segregation.
Segregation never brought anyone anything except trouble.
Forced integration is just as wrong as forced segregation.
Segregation now, segregation tomorrow and segregation forever!
I never knew about racial segregation until Martin Luther King.
In so many ways, segregation shaped me, and education liberated me.
Segregation, in a sense, helped create and maintain black solidarity.
Segregation is a problem not just in my country but in every country.
Racial segregation has come back to public education with a vengeance.
It never occurred to me that I was not going to challenge segregation.
Back when they supported segregation, Lott and Thurmond were Democrats.
The policies enacted during segregation are still being felt in Birmingham.
My family was a poor farming family, and we lived under absolute segregation.
The legal battle against segregation is won, but the community battle goes on.
We stand for the segregation of the races and the racial integrity of each race.
Only time, education and plenty of good schooling will make anti-segregation work.
This whole segregation between famous people and other people is complete rubbish.
I've never said that you should have segregation of the school system or any other.
Segregation is the adultery of an illicit intercourse between injustice and immorality.
Slavery was legal. Japanese interment was legal in this country. Segregation was legal.
My uncertainty disappeared. Segregation is evil, and I cannot, as a minister, condone evil.
When you live under the power of terror and segregation, you can't ever start a work of art.
Being so closely related to the South, barbecue was part of segregation and helped defeat it.
In America, there is no racial segregation. I'm not sure I'm quite familiar with this phrase.
There should be no segregation. Everyone should be united, and everyone should be seen as equals.
We didn't have any segregation at the Cotton Club. No. The Cotton Club was wide open, it was free.
The organizers and perpetuators of segregation are as much the enemy of America as any foreign invader.
We know that segregation is evil. We know that the sickest children should not go to the worst hospitals.
We do not show the Negro how to overcome segregation, but we teach him how to accept it as final and just.
Segregation has never been a shadowy, impossible-to-pin-down conspiracy. It's been an American way of life.
Young people think Rosa Parks just sat down on a bus and ended segregation, but that wasn't the case at all.
As a matter of history, the Fourteenth Amendment was not understood to ban segregation on the basis of race.
The whole reason for Jazz at the Philharmonic was to take it to places where I could break down segregation.
We've come a long way from the days where there was state-enforced segregation. But we still have a way to go.
I concede that segregation can allay social tensions immediately, but it further debilitates us in the long run.
Segregation is that which is forced upon an inferior by a superior. Separation is done voluntarily by two equals.
I, like many members of my generation, was concerned with segregation and the repeated violation of civil rights.
I grew up in North Carolina being told that the Bible approves slavery and segregation, that it was the will of God.
I feel that segregation is totally unchristian, and that it is against everything the Christian religion stands for.
Racial segregation in the South not only separated the races, but it separated the South from the rest of the country.
In this country, there is a segregation of Black Turks and White Turks. Your brother Tayyip belongs to the Black Turks.