Want this question answered?
Southern Troops withdrew from the south and southern whites who never accepted Negros as their equal quickly restored their control. Groups such as the KKK were formed terrorizing blacks.
african americans were not ready to hold political office
Too many!
Many poor southern whites came to realize they were being used to fight a rich man's war. While scions of plantations were given deferrals from service, the ranks were mainly composed of men who had never owned a slave. Many were against secession and loyal to the union.
Compition of free'd black men
Southern Troops withdrew from the south and southern whites who never accepted Negros as their equal quickly restored their control. Groups such as the KKK were formed terrorizing blacks.
Poor southern whites fought to defend many things. These people fought to keep their land, their rights, and often their workers.
since southern whites were mainly buddhist monks, many of them sacraficed precious time at their shrines in order to get to the fifth heaven.
Martin Luther King opposed sacerdotalism and considered all baptized Christians to be a holy priesthood.
Yes, there were many whites that were part of the civil rights movement.
Southern Whites fought anti-slavery progress with several methods. During and after the Civil War, many whites as well as the Ku Klux Klan performed lynching, in which they hung Blacks as well as White "Black-lovers". The KKK and other Southerners abused people and intimidated them at the polls, including Blacks. Southern Whites who had been involved in the Civil War and succession from the Union soon came back into power in local and state governments so that they could pass many discriminatory laws known as the "Jim Crow Laws" that prevented Blacks from voting, having certain jobs, and pursuing an education despite the passing of the Fifteenth Amendment. These are some of the ways that Southerners opposed and hurt Anti-Slavery efforts.
Honestly, the specifics depend on what time period you were referring to but in general from the US Civil War through the Civil Rights Movement, southern whites viewed the North as uneducated in the ways of the South, as getting involved in something they had no business tampering with and southerners thought northerners viewed themselves as superior over their southern brethren. In regards to minorities, many (but not all) Southerners viewed minorities as a lower life form, basically. Quite a lot of fear and misunderstanding played into that view as well because the whites didn't understand many of the customs of the minorities and vice versa. Ironically, many Southerners viewed themselves as superior over minorities, especially African-Americans.
the Black Power movement
african americans were not ready to hold political office
Whites were affected because they could no longer have slaves. Slaves provided them with the majority of their income. Without slaves, many white lost their wealth.
Too many!
Many poor southern whites came to realize they were being used to fight a rich man's war. While scions of plantations were given deferrals from service, the ranks were mainly composed of men who had never owned a slave. Many were against secession and loyal to the union.