Can i sit ex's stuff outside and call him to pick it up he has been told to for 10 days?
yes if it is your property.
What is the difference between a gay person's individual rights and the public good?
Denying basic civil rights to gay people does not add anything to the public good. However, extending equal civil rights to everyone improves the quality of life for all.
What civil rights activists used interstate buses to protest segregation at terminals?
The Freedom Riders.
"Black separatism is the only way to true equality."
What are the separate but equal laws for slaves?
There were no "separate but equal" laws for slaves. Slaves were considered unequal and were treated as such.
The laws requiring racially "separate but equal" public accommodations are called Jim Crow laws, and developed in reaction to the Civil War and Reconstruction. After the slaves were emancipated, the United States ratified the Thirteenth, Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments to the Constitution, outlawing slavery, attempting to create equal protection for African-Americans, and granting African-American men the right to vote. Many white people opposed equality for former slaves, and felt threatened by the new social order. Jim Crow laws were a desperate attempt to keep African-Americans "in their place," because many whites considered them inferior.
Can you be denied a copy of a signed statement?
It depends on what kind of statement it is, who owns it, and what your interest is in it.
What steps had to be taken to make schools integrated?
To achieve school integration in the United States, several key steps were necessary, starting with landmark legal rulings like Brown v. Board of Education in 1954, which declared racial segregation in public schools unconstitutional. Following this, federal legislation, such as the Civil Rights Act of 1964, was enacted to prohibit discrimination in education. Additionally, various methods, including busing and redistricting, were employed to facilitate the mixing of students from different racial backgrounds. Community engagement and ongoing advocacy were also critical in promoting and maintaining integration efforts.
No, not for violations of motor vehicle regulations.
When are some American people denied their rights?
When someone fails to get naturalized (a way of becoming a citizen if immigrating here). You can lose them as an american if you leave and decide to. But we americans have unalienable rights that can't be taken away.
Unless of course you have been convicted of a felony. Inmates in the US have very few rights, and those are difficult to defend, or prove have been violated.
Do police in Michigan read Miranda rights?
Yes, police in Michigan read Miranda rights. Reading Miranda rights is a national precedent. This means that all police in the United States read them.
How were the Black Panthers and Martin Luther King similar?
Both fought for rights of Black citizens. Both played important roles in the civil rights movement. Both fought for equality, challenged police brutality, conducted protests and tried to help oppressed Blacks through community actions. Both attracted the attention of the FBI and J. Edgar Hoover and since Hoover's behind the scenes activities and personal hatreds have been revealed over the years some historians believe that may have inaccurately tarnished both in the early years of their movements.
What is the notwithstanding clause?
The notwithstanding clause allows the Canadian federal government or a provincial legislature to enact legislation to override several sections of the charter that deal with fundamental freedoms, legal rights and equality rights, such as the freedom of expression, freedom of assembly, and freedom from unreasonable search and seizure.
The Southern Christian Leadership conference
Roy Bryant, with his half-brother J. W. Milam, murdered a 14 year-old boy named Emmett Till after they found out he had been speaking with Roy's wife Carolyn.
After hearing about the conversation, Roy and J.W tracked down Emmett, dragged him out of the house where he was staying, threw him into the back of a pickup truck, and drove away. Over the next several hours they beat him brutally and eventually shot him.
Emmett's swollen and badly disfigured body was found a few days later. Bryant and Milam were arrested and tried for the murder but acquitted. The defense argued that the body was not that of Till (it was, but it was so badly disfigured and swollen from the time it spent in the water after Bryant and Milam dumped it that it was not simple to identify it initially) and speculated that Till was still alive. A local Mississippi newspaper even reported that Till was being hidden by his relatives or perhaps returned to Chicago for safety. Two witnesses to at least some of the beatings were locked up by the local sheriff before they could speak with the prosecutors or testify in the trial; the prosecution apparently didn't even know about them during the trial. The jury was all-white in an area known for rampant racism. There is at least one report from some years after the trial that at least some of the jurors were certain of Bryant and Milam's guilt but felt that the death penalty or life imprisonment were too much for a white person for killing a black person and that the only other verdict Mississippi law permitted was acquittal. This is partly contradicted by other reports that they acquitted because they felt that the prosecution had failed to prove that the body was that of Emmett Till.
The next year Bryant and Milan were paid between $3600 and $4000 for an interview with Look magazine. They both admitted to the murder but felt justified. Despite their confessions, they were protected from being prosecuted again by "double jeopardy". After the confession, Bryant was ostracized by his former friends and his shop (where Till spoke with his wife) went bankrupt because people (especially African-Americans) boycotted him and banks refused him loans to plant crops. Although he eventually found someone to make a personal loan to him to plant some cotton, local African-Americans refused to work for him and he had to pay higher wages to white workers. He moved to Texas and worked as a welder until he went mostly blind. His wife (the one he killed Till for speaking to) divorced him. He eventually moved back to Mississippi and opened a new store but was convicted in 1984 and 1988 of food stamp fraud. He retracted his confession but stated, in a 1985 interview "if Emmett Till hadn't got out of line, it probably wouldn't have happened to him." He died of cancer in 1994.
The murder of Emmett Till and subsequent acquittal of the perpetrators was one of the factors leading to the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1957 which allowed the U.S. Department of Justice to intervene in local law enforcement issues when civil rights were being compromised.
Can you drive to pay bills on a restricted license?
A restricted license means something different in each state. Typically, a restriction refers to the type of roads that can be driven on, or the time of day that the driver can operate a vehicle (daylight only) to ensure safety. If driving to pay bills does not violate the specific restriction, then it would be legal.
What event is considered to be the catalyst for the passage of civil rights act of 1964?
The event that is considered to be the catalyst for the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 was the Supreme Court's decision in Brown v. Board of Education in 1954. The Supreme Court declared that segregation in schools was unconstitutional.
You should confess to your mother and come up with a plan to reimburse her.
She could report the theft to the police, but it is unlikely, especially if it is the first time you've stolen from her.