
Resitance Brief 4.30.26
From Resistor Vic Podcast by Resistor Vic getting Main St voices into the political conversation
April 30, 2026 · 4 min
About this episode
The episode discusses the historical and ongoing impacts of Jim Crow laws on voter suppression and representation in America.
Jim Crow wasn’t just a set of laws — it was a system built to silence voters, segregate communities, and deny representation. After the Civil War, Black Americans began to gain political power during Reconstruction, and the response was swift: poll taxes, literacy tests, gerrymandering, and legalized segregation. That system lasted for decades, reinforced by Supreme Court decisions like Plessy v. Ferguson and only partially dismantled by rulings like Brown v. Board of Education and legislation like the Voting Rights Act of 1965. Today, parts of those protections have been weakened, and the question isn’t just what Jim Crow was — it’s whether we would recognize it if it started to return. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit resistorvic.substack.com/subscribe
People in this episode
Host: Resistor Vic
Topics covered
- Jim Crow laws
- voter suppression
- political representation
- Civil Rights
- historical context
- Supreme Court decisions
Keywords
- Jim Crow
- voter suppression
- Civil Rights
- political power
- Reconstruction
- poll taxes
- literacy tests
- gerrymandering
- segregation
- Voting Rights Act
Mentioned in this episode
Books & works: Plessy v. Ferguson, Brown v. Board of Education, Voting Rights Act of 1965
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