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Desegregation started in what part of American culture? Baseball Importance of Jackie Robinson ■ The first African American to integrate Major League Baseball in 1947 with the Brooklyn Dodgers ■ This leads to Truman desegregating the Military and re-launches the Civil Rights Movement after WWII Early stuff ■ Randolph ■ FDR & Civil Rights – Defense Industries ■ Truman and Civil Rights – De segregation of military ■ Who created the NAACP? – WEB Dubois ■ After sports, what was the 2nd area of integration? – Public schools ■ De Jure vs. De Fact – De Jure – by law – De fact – by fact ■ Which amendment was used to challenge segregation? – 14th By 1950, the United States was a segregated society: Jim Crow laws White flight throughout the to the suburbs left South created African Americans a segregated society in poor inner cities (de jure segregation) (de facto segregation) The modern Civil Rights movement began in 1954 with the Supreme Court decision Brown v Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas The NAACP took the lead Their strategy was to in civil rights; Segregated use lawsuits to challenge schools became their that segregation violated primary target the 14th Amendment Brown vs. Board of Education th 14 Amendment, Section 1 All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the state wherein they reside. No state shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any state deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws. Brown v Board of Education in 1954 ■ NAACP lawyer: Thurgood Marshall – 14th Amendment : Even“equal” schools, if separate, imply that black children are inferior to whites ■ Chief Justice Earl Warren stated that segregation violated the “equal protection clause” of the 14th Amendment ■ Overturned Plessy vs. Ferguson ■ Eisenhower first left integration up to states – Baltimore, St Louis, & Washington DC integrated quickly – Many southern states resisted. Resistance to Brown “The people of Georgia will not comply with the decision of the court… We're going to do whatever is necessary in Georgia to keep white children in white schools and colored children in colored schools." The “Little Rock Nine” ■ Little Rock Nine- were 9 African-Americans who integrated Little Rock Central H.S. – Arkansas Gov Orville Fabus called in the National Guard to prevent integration ■ President Eisenhower had to send in the Air Force to protect them from angry whites Little Rock Nine What is going on here? The for Civil Rights outside of the court system ■Rosa Parks ■MLK’s economic boycott of the Montgomery bus system –Results: 1) integration fo city busses, 2) rise of MLK as a civil rights leader Southern Christian Leadership Conference (1957) ■ The SCLC was formed to use activism & non-violent protest to bring an end to segregation ■ The SCLC soon overtook the NAACP as the leading civil rights group in America The SCLC was based on peaceful resistance & Christian love: “We will meet your physical force with soul force. We will not hate you, but we will not obey your evil laws. We will wear you down by pure capacity to suffer.” Martin Luther King’s non-violent approach inspired other groups to act In 1960, students from NC A&T led a sit-in at a segregated lunch counter in Greensboro, NC The “sit-in” movement led to the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) Non-violent resistance training, Atlanta 1960 Freedom Rides! ■ In 1961 “Freedom Riders” rode buses throughout the South to test whether integration orders were being enforced ■ Freedom riders faced arrest & violence but exposed the lack of enforcement of desegregation laws in the Deep South Birmingham March (May, 1963) ■ Birmingham: “most segregated city in America.” ■ MLK’s strategy – peaceful rallies, boycotts, and marches ■ Extreme violence used against protestors – Use of tv – public outrage over police brutality – made it obvious the government was going to have to step in. ■ MLK Jailed – “Letter from a Birmingham jail” (in response to white leaders who believed King was pushing too fast towards civil rights) Birmingham Police commissioner Bull Connor used violence to suppress the demonstrations Among those watching the violence on TV was President John F Kennedy who committed to a national civil rights act to end discrimination “I Have a Dream Speech” (wordle) “I Have a Dream” Speech ■Aug, 1963. King’s most famous speech given in Washington D.C., it calls for a future of racial harmony and peace Civil Rights Legislation (part I) ■ Civil Rights Act (1964) This law signed by President Johnson banned discrimination of any kind in any park, restroom, library, theater, and public building in America – inspired by King’s “I have a dream” speech ■ Problem – most southern states were still using literacy tests and poll taxes to prevent blacks from voting. The Voting Issue ■ Freedom Sumer – In 1964, white & black college students took part in Freedom Summer to help register African American voters in Mississippi – 3 killed by KKK & police ■ Selma Alabama March – Police violence at Selma convinced President Johnson to push for a new federal voting law Civil Rights Legislation (part II) ■ Voting Rights Act (1965): Banned literacy tests & sent federal voting officials into the South to protect voters – Voter turnout & registration increased among black citizens – African Americans elected black politicians for the 1st time since Reconstruction ■ Civil Rights Act (1968) – Ended discrimination in housing. SCLC Founding Goal Original Tactics Later Tactics Original Membership Later Membership Philosophy SNCC Founded by MLK Jr. and other ministers and civil rights leaders Founded by African American college students with $800 received from the SCLC To carry on nonviolent crusades against the evils of second-class citizenship To speed up changes mandated by Brown v. Board of Education Marches, protests, and demonstrations throughout the South, using churches as bases Sit-ins at segregated lunch counters all across the South; registering African Americans to vote, in hopes they could influence Congress to pass a voting rights act Registering African Americans to vote, in hopes they could influence Congress to pass a voting rights act Freedom rides on interstate buses to determine if southern states would enforce laws against segregation in public transportation African American and white Adults African American and white college students Same as original membership African Americans only; no whites Nonviolence Started Nonviolet, but moved to militancy and violence; “black power” and African American Pride. Other Civil Rights Leaders ■Malcolm X – Nation of Islam – Argued at first for armed selfdefense (not non-violence) but changed after trip to Mecca. Other Civil Rights Leaders (“Black Power”) ■ Stokely ■ Black Panthers Carmichael – Formed by – Leader of SNCC Huey Newton and Bobby Seal – Started the to protest “black power” police brutality movement in Ghettos – Stopped allowing whites into the SNCC. Other major social movements Environmental Movement Women’s Rights Latino Rights ■Mexican American groups worked to improve the lives of “Chicanos” ■César Chávez organized the United Farm Workers & helped gain better pay, union recognition, & better working conditions for farm laborers. ■Grape boycott for better labor conditions. “Brown Power” Pink Power •Betty Freidan began the modern women’s movement by publishing Feminine Mystique in 1963 •Co-founded National Organization for Women to protest discrimination and promote equal rights. Pink Power ■ Feminists demanded an Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) to ban sexism ■ The ERA was defeated in the 1970s by conservatives & anti-ERA women Other Pink Power initiatives ■ Roe v. Wade (1973) – abortion rights. ■ Title IX – outlawed sexual discrimination in education programs. Green Movemenet ■In 1962, biologist Rachel Carson published Silent Spring exposing the dangers of pesticides on the environment –Environmental Movement – Environmental Protection Agency –Earth Day (April 22) Warren Court Cases Giddeon v. Miranda v. Wainwright Arizona (1966) (1963) Must be informed If someone cannot of your rights, afford an attorney, Affirmative including Legalized abortion up one will be provided protection against action and to a certain point in for them selfreverse incrimination a pregnancy discrimination Roe v. Wade Regents of Univ. of (1973) Cal. v. Bakke (1978) In the 1970s, Nixon adopted a policy of détente It was aimed at easing Cold War tensions In 1972, Nixon visited China to normalize diplomacy and exchange ideas of science and culture As tensions with China eased, Nixon sought to end tension with the Soviet Union SALT or Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty, limited the amount of anti-missile systems In 1969, Nixon and Leonid Brezhnev signed SALT Nixon • Watergate – CREEP broke into DNC headquarters • Nixon participated in the coverup. • 1974 – Nixon resigned to avoid impeachment Gerald Ford (1974 – 1977) ■ Ford grants Nixon a Presidential pardon on Watergate; people are angry ■ Ford is president during a recession and can’t deal with the high unemployment and gas prices ■ Spiraling inflation and energy crisis. ■ Camp David Accords – agreement between Israel & Egypt ■ Iran hostage crisis – Carter let the Shah of Iran visit – Revolutionaries got mad and took over the US embassy in Teheran (capital of Iran). – Captured 54 captives for 444 days. Jimmy Carter Ronald Regan (1981-1989) • Conservative! • Reganomics / “Supply Side” economics / “trickle down” theory – reduce taxes on weatlhy, who will then create jobs for the rest of us. • Massive amounts of spending on the military – Strategic Defense Initiative (SDI) – protection against missiles. “I will appoint the first woman to the Court” – Reagan during Presidential election of 1980 Sandra Day O’Connor became the first woman to become a Supreme Court Justice in 1981 ■ Administration officials sold weapons to Iran––an enemy of the United States–– and then violated more laws by using the profits from those arms sales to fund a rebellion in Nicaragua fought by rebels called the Contras (a Spanish nickname for “counter-revolutionaries”). Details of this scandal are still largely unknown to the public. ■. Iran Contra Scandal Collapse of the USSR ■Reagan’s plan was to force the U.S.S.R. to keep up in an arm’s race, which would bankrupt the Soviet Union. We won because we could outspend them. ■Michael Gorbachev establishes better relations with the U.S. ■The collapse of the Soviet Union marks the end of the Cold War in 1991 In 1989, George H. W. Bush was elected president In 1990, the United States led a war against Iraq after it invaded Kuwait This conflict became known as the First Gulf War, codenamed Operation Desert Storm The entire conflict lasted about 100 hours, until a ceasefire was agreed upon Bill Clinton ■ North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA)- this created a free trade zone between the U.S., Canada and Mexico – Opponents believed we would lose too many jobs to Mexico. – Supporters believed it would open up markets. Clinton’s impeachment ■ Cause of impeachment – improper use of money from real estate deal & lying under oath about scandal in office. ■ Acquitted by Senate. George W. Bush ■2000 Election – Bush v. Gore –Gore won popular vote, but Bush won Electoral vote. 9/11 ■Response: –Patriot Act – Made it easier to search private records. –Department of Homeland Security – deals with terrorist threats and natural disasters. Operation Enduring Freedom (2001) Invasion of Afghanistan (whose Taliban controlled government had been harboring Al-Queda). Part of the War on Terrorism Operation Iraqi Freedom (2003) ■Invasion of Iraq (leader Sadaam Hussein) for having WMDs. Turns out, they didn’t have any.