22
New Civil Rights Issues

New Civil Rights Issues

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Urban Problems Despite the passage of civil rights laws in the 1950s and 1960s, racism – prejudice or discrimination towards someone because of his or her race – was still common in American society. Even if African Americans had been allowed to move into white neighborhoods, poverty trapped many of them in inner cities. Many found themselves channeled into low-paying jobs with little chance of advancement. Most did not advance beyond blue-collar workers in factories. Average income was still 55% less than whites and unemployment was typically double.

Citation preview

Page 1: New Civil Rights Issues

New Civil Rights Issues

Page 2: New Civil Rights Issues

Urban Problems

0 Despite the passage of civil rights laws in the 1950s and 1960s, racism – prejudice or discrimination towards someone because of his or her race – was still common in American society.

0 Even if African Americans had been allowed to move into white neighborhoods, poverty trapped many of them in inner cities.

0 Many found themselves channeled into low-paying jobs with little chance of advancement.

0 Most did not advance beyond blue-collar workers in factories.

0 Average income was still 55% less than whites and unemployment was typically double.

Page 3: New Civil Rights Issues

Neighborhoods

0Poor neighborhoods in large cities were overcrowded and dirty, leading to higher rates of illness and infant mortality.

0Crime increased in the 1960s as well as high school drop outs.

0All poor neighborhoods suffered from these problems but the percentage was much higher in African American communities.

0Many were angry that the civil rights movement hadn’t helped them more.

Page 4: New Civil Rights Issues

The Watts Riots

0 Five days after president Johnson signed the Voting Rights Act, a riot erupted in Watts, an African American neighborhood in Los Angeles.

0 Rumors of police brutality had started the riot.

0 It lasted 6 days and required over 14,000 members of the National Guard and 1,500 law officers to restore order.

0 Rioters burned and looted entire neighborhoods and destroyed about $45 million in property.

0 They killed 34 people and injured about 900 others.

Page 5: New Civil Rights Issues

Detroit Riot

0 More riots broke out all over the country between 1965 and 1968.

0 The worst took place in Detroit in 1967.0 Burning, looting and skirmished with

police resulted in 43 deaths and over 1,000 wounded.

0 Eventually the army sent in tanks and soldiers armed with machine guns to get control of the situation.

0 Nearly 4,000 fires destroyed 1,300 buildings, and the damage in property loss was estimated at $250 million

Page 6: New Civil Rights Issues

Kerner Commission

0 In 1967 President Johnson appointed the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders, headed by Governor Otto Kerner of Illinois, to study the causes of the urban riots and make recommendations to prevent them.

0The Kerner Commission, as it became known, blamed racism for most of the problems in the inner city.

Page 7: New Civil Rights Issues

Recommendations

0The commission recommended the creation of over 2 million inner-city jobs, the construction of 6 million new units of public housing, and a renewed federal commitment to fight de facto segregation.

0Some of the recommendations were covered in Johnsons war on poverty but with so much spending going into the Vietnam War Johnson never endorsed the recommendations.

Page 8: New Civil Rights Issues

King’s Criticism

0 By the 1960’s many African American leaders had become unhappy with Martin Luther King Jr.’s nonviolent strategy.

0 They said it had failed to address the economic issues, King agreed so he addressed the issue.

0 He decided to focus on Chicago.0 He and his wife Coretta moved into a slum

apartment in an African American neighborhood in Chicago.

0 He and the SCLC had hoped to improve the economic status of African Americans in poor neighborhoods.

Page 9: New Civil Rights Issues

Chicago Movement

0 The Chicago movement made little leeway.

0 King led a march through an all-white suburb of Marquette Park, he was met with angry mobs similar to Birmingham and Selma.

0 The Mayor ordered the police to protect the marchers and then met with King to talk about reforms to clean up the slums.

0 In theory, mortgages and rental property would be available for everyone, but in reality little changed.

Page 10: New Civil Rights Issues

Change in Tactics

0King’s failure in Chicago seemed to prove that nonviolent movement didn’t work for economic problems.

0Some leaders called for more aggressive forms of protests. 0Their strategy ranged from armed self-defense to separate

African American states.0Some organizations including CORE and SNCC, voted to

expel all whites from leadership positions.0They believed that African Americans should lead their

struggle.

Page 11: New Civil Rights Issues

Black Power

0Many young African Americans called for black power, a term that had many meanings.

0A few interpreted black power to mean that physical self-defense and even violence were acceptable – a clear rejection of King’s philosophy.

0To most, including Stokely Carmichael, the leader of SNCC in 1966, the term meant that African American should control the social, political, and economic direction of their struggle.

Page 12: New Civil Rights Issues

Culture

0 Black power stressed pride in the African American cultural group.

0 It emphasized racial distinctiveness rather than assimilation. Showing pride in their racial heritage.

0 They did this by adopting new Afro hairstyles and African-style clothing.

0 Some also took African names. 0 In universities students demanded African

and African American studies be part of standard curriculum.

0 Dr. King did not agree with the philosophy of Black Power.

Page 13: New Civil Rights Issues

Malcolm X

0 By the early 1960s Malcolm X had become a symbol of the black power movement.

0 He was born Malcolm Little, he had a hard childhood and adolescence and drifted into a life of crime.

0 In 1946 he was convicted of burglary and sent to prison for 6 years.

0 In prison he began to educate himself and play an active role in prison debate society.

0 He joined the Nation of Islam, commonly knows as Black Muslims, who were led by Elijah Muhammad.

Page 14: New Civil Rights Issues

Nation of Islam

0Black Muslims do not hold the same beliefs as mainstream Muslims.

0The Nation of Islam preached black nationalism.

0Like Marcus Garvey in the 1920s, Black Muslims believed that African American should separate themselves from whites and form their own self-governing communities.

Page 15: New Civil Rights Issues

National Attention

0 Shortly after joining the Nation of Islam Malcolm little changed his name to Malcolm X.

0 He declared that his true name had been stolen from him by slavery, and he would no longer use the name white society gave him.

0 Black Muslims tried to become as self-sufficient as possible.

0 They did not advocate violence but they did advocated self-defense.

0 Malcolm X’s criticism of white society and the mainstream movement gained national attention for the Nation of Islam.

Page 16: New Civil Rights Issues

Assassination

0 By 1964 Malcolm X had broke with the Black Muslims.

0 Discouraged by scandals involving the Nation of Islam’s leader, he went to the Muslim holy city of Mecca in Saudi Arabia.

0 After seeing Muslims from many races worshiping together he decided an integrated society was possible after all.

0 When he returned he continued to criticize the Nation of Islam and because of this organization members shot and killed him in February 1965

Page 17: New Civil Rights Issues

Followers of Malcolm X

0Malcolm X’s ideas influenced a new generation of militant African American leaders who also preached black power, black nationalism, and economic self-sufficiency.

0 In 1966 in Oakland, California, Huey Newton, Bobby Seale, and Eldridge Cleaver organized the Black Panthers

Page 18: New Civil Rights Issues

Black Panthers

0 The Black Panthers believed that a revolution was necessary in the United States, and they urged African Americans to arm themselves and prepare to force whites to grant them equal rights.

0 The leaders called for an end to racial oppression and control of major institutions in the African American community, such as schools, law enforcement, housing, and hospitals.

0 Eldridge Cleaver, who served as minister of culture, expressed these ideas in him book Soul on Ice

Page 19: New Civil Rights Issues

The Last Movement

0By the late 1960s the civil rights movement had fragmented into dozens of competing organizations and ideas.

0Dr. King decided to do another March on Washington to encourage the president to take action on the economic issues. (The Poor People’s Campaign)

0He asked the government to commit billions of dollars to end poverty and unemployment in the United States.

Page 20: New Civil Rights Issues

Martin Luther King Jr. Killed

0 On April 4, 1968, as he stood on his hotel balcony in Memphis , Dr. King was assassinated by a sniper.

0 His death set off both national mourning and riots in more than 100 cities.

0 The Reverend Ralph Abernathy, who had served as a trusted assistant to Dr. King for many years, led the Poor People’s Campaign in King’s absence.

0 The demonstration however, did not achieve any of the major objectives they had hoped for.

Page 21: New Civil Rights Issues

Civil Rights Act of 1968

0 In the wake of Dr. King’s death, Congress did pass the Civil Rights Act of 1968.

0The act contained a fair-housing provision outlawing discrimination in housing sales and rentals and gave the Justice Department authority to bring suits against such discrimination.

Page 22: New Civil Rights Issues

The End

0Dr. King’s death marked the end of an era in American History.0The Civil Rights movement continued but it lacked the unity he

had given it. 0Under his leadership, and with the help of tens of thousands of

dedicated African Americans, many of whom were students, the civil rights movement transformed American Society.

0Although many problems remain to be solved, the achievements of the civil rights movement in the 1950s and 1960s dramatically improved the lives of African Americans, creating opportunities that had not existed before.