The Black Panthers focused on protecting African Americans from white violence rather than ending segregation
the African american society is able to vote. we now have a African american president for 4 more years. we are now accepting African american in our society. Before we were all completely isolated but now we mingle and we realized that African Americans are amazing people. i am not an African american but this is my view of how our opinions have changed about African americans
W.E.B. Du Bois and Booker T. Washington had fundamentally different approaches to improving the condition of African Americans. Washington advocated for vocational education and economic self-reliance, emphasizing gradual progress and accommodation to segregation. In contrast, Du Bois called for immediate civil rights, higher education for the "Talented Tenth," and active political engagement to challenge systemic racism and achieve social equality. Du Bois believed that only through demanding civil rights and political power could African Americans secure true equality.
Garvey wanted African Americans to return to Africa, while the NAACP wanted African Americans to have civil rights at home. Garvey felt that equality was impossible in the United States, while the NAACP fought for equality. Garvey was opposed to integration, while the NAACP fought for integration.
well WEB Du Bois said that the African Americans needed to get a liberal arts education to compete in American society and then demanded civil rights, but Booker T. Washington said that the African Americans needed to get a trade type of an education to fit into the society and that civil rights would come with time.
u got to live
The Black Panthers focused on protecting African Americans from white violence rather than ending segregation
he encouraged african americans to educate themselves and get a better lifestyle
because there like that
African Americans were still treated with discrimination and prejudice, so they served in racially segregated units.
the African american society is able to vote. we now have a African american president for 4 more years. we are now accepting African american in our society. Before we were all completely isolated but now we mingle and we realized that African Americans are amazing people. i am not an African american but this is my view of how our opinions have changed about African americans
the African american society is able to vote. we now have a African american president for 4 more years. we are now accepting African american in our society. Before we were all completely isolated but now we mingle and we realized that African Americans are amazing people. i am not an African american but this is my view of how our opinions have changed about African americans
Discrimination against African-Americans in the North was often less overtly violent than in the South, where Jim Crow laws enforced strict segregation and institutional racism. In the North, discrimination took the form of social and economic exclusion, such as redlining, limited job opportunities, and restrictive housing practices, which created de facto segregation. While Southern discrimination was legally sanctioned and deeply rooted in the culture, Northern discrimination was more subtle and often masked by a facade of progressivism. However, both regions shared the commonality of systemic racism and inequality.
The abolitionists differed in their views towards African Americans because some of them wanted to end slavery. Some of them wanted to continue slavery, and some of them wanted to send them back to Africa while others didn't.
it differs because we americans dont draw with shape patterns and they do and they use many different colors and landscape
How did the beliefs of W.E.B. Dubois and Booker T. Washington differ in how African Americans should achieve equality?
Garvey wanted African Americans to return to Africa, while the NAACP wanted African Americans to have civil rights at home. Garvey felt that equality was impossible in the United States, while the NAACP fought for equality. Garvey was opposed to integration, while the NAACP fought for integration.