Miscegenation in a sentence as a noun

No, what Brendan helped pass was worse than anti-miscegenation laws.

It's tough to say how I'd feel if Brendan Eich had donated to an anti-miscegenation campaign.

In fact, the many Western values have already spread beyond the West, leading to miscegenation of cultures.

Would you have accepted this as a valid argument back when anti-miscegenation laws were in effect?

"'Television' is one of the most recent offspring of linguistic miscegenation.

A few decades ago it would be as if you were writing checks to an anti-miscegenation organization.

Many opponents of miscegenation are revolted by the "mutts" produced by interracial couples and believe that they will pollute the "pure" races.

Jim Crow, anti-miscegenation laws and hopefully anti-gay marriage laws etc.. could not have been ended without the 14th amendment and the Bill of Rights.

It's far more accurate to compare it to the 60s, when people demonstrated against Jim Crow laws, segregation, and anti-miscegenation laws.

I think it's true that a simple inequality argument likewise doesn't apply in the case of anti-miscegenation laws.

Japanese and Chinese Americans have faced lots of historical obstacles, from anti-miscegenation laws to internment camps.

The differences between anti-miscegenation statutes and Prop 8 are superficial at most.

It may be an unavoidable side-effect though, it seems like anytime social norms are challenged - gay marriage, ERA, miscegenation, universal suffrage, school integration, etc, there are people who take those challenges as a personal attack rather than a societal reform.

Miscegenation definitions

noun

reproduction by parents of different races (especially by white and non-white persons)

See also: crossbreeding interbreeding