American African Truimph Massive Resistance

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American African Truimph Massive Resistance

Politics and the power of the people have been around probably since   civilization started.   There is no wonder that politics and powerful   people were involved in the "massive resistance".   They both had a   positive and negative impact on the civil rights of the African   Americans.   The African Americans made some success in the 1940's of   receiving some of those civil right only to be slapped in the face with   the resistance they experience starting in 1950's.  

  The "massive resistance" was caused by the southern segregationist   seeing the African Americans as an inferior race. # "Massive resistance"   covers many aspesic of the African Americans lives. The most common ones   you hear of are the bus and school segregation.   A few more were   segregated drinking fountains; white nurses not allow to work on African   American, restaurants, amateur baseball, and textbooks. # When the   African Americans went against the state rights they were confronted   with imprisonment, violence, and other demeaning treatment by the   segregationist as well as the local government.  

  A bus boycott all started when Rosa Parks refused to sit in the African   American area of the bus. She was then arrested and the bus boycott was   started and led by Martin Luther King and Ralph Abernathy. # The cities   official tired of the boycott, agreed to integrate the buses. This was a   crucial victory for the civil rights movement. The African Americans   received inferior education because they were bused to all black   schools. NAACP's counsel Thurgood Marshall concluded that segregation   violated the citizenship rights guaranteed by the 14th amendment. He   took it to the supreme courts and the Plessy versus Ferguson ruling   overturned. The courts now stated that segregation was a violation of   the 14th amendment. The whites still refused to ingrated the white   schools with African Americans. In Little Rock Arkansas, the Governor   went as far as to call in the National Guard to keep the African...

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  • Submitted by: AllFreeEssays
  • Date Submitted: 06/12/2008 03:07 PM
  • Category: Social Issues
  • Words: 472
  • Pages: 2
  • Views: 214
  • Popularity Rank: 10634

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